Anonymous wrote:Tracking and ability grouping are dirty words in public schools. Have you ever heard a teacher use those word publicly lately? They would be crucified by their principal.
It's differentiated instruction and it doesn't happen in most schools for high level students. It's an impossible task for teachers with 28 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
hairsplitting. those sound the same to me. still not convinced. if aap were ability grouping there are many kids in gen ed who would be in AAP and vice versa.
Continuing the Discussion of Ability Grouping
http://tip.duke.edu/node/803
Tracking, Ability Grouping and the Gifted
http://www.giftedpage.org/docs/bulletins/PageBulletinTracking.pdf
NAGC Position Paper: Grouping
http://www.nagc.org/uploadedFiles/Information_and_Resources/Position_Papers/Grouping.pdf
In Search of Reality: Unraveling the Myths about Tracking, Ability Grouping, and the Gifted
http://media.hoover.org/sites/default/files/documents/0817928723_85.pdf
Here's a quote from the first article:
Fiedler: With tracking, students are typically assigned full-time to groups according to presumed ability, prior achievement, or teacher observations. Students are often locked into tracks and labeled “low,” “average,” or “high.” Often they cannot move between tracks during a school year or from one school year to another, leading to a castelike system that can cause discrimination against students in the “low” tracks and that can exclude them from learning opportunities.
AAP sounds like tracking to me.
Absolutely, positively, 100%. This describes AAP in a nutshell.
Ability grouping is a method by which teachers group and regroup students according to common needs for intellectual challenge and type of instruction. The grouping can be a self-contained class, a subgroup within a classroom, or a cluster of students that moves between classrooms. Placing students of similar ability together makes sense and allows for the most effective use of educational resources, including the teachers themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
hairsplitting. those sound the same to me. still not convinced. if aap were ability grouping there are many kids in gen ed who would be in AAP and vice versa.
Continuing the Discussion of Ability Grouping
http://tip.duke.edu/node/803
Tracking, Ability Grouping and the Gifted
http://www.giftedpage.org/docs/bulletins/PageBulletinTracking.pdf
NAGC Position Paper: Grouping
http://www.nagc.org/uploadedFiles/Information_and_Resources/Position_Papers/Grouping.pdf
In Search of Reality: Unraveling the Myths about Tracking, Ability Grouping, and the Gifted
http://media.hoover.org/sites/default/files/documents/0817928723_85.pdf
Here's a quote from the first article:
Fiedler: With tracking, students are typically assigned full-time to groups according to presumed ability, prior achievement, or teacher observations. Students are often locked into tracks and labeled “low,” “average,” or “high.” Often they cannot move between tracks during a school year or from one school year to another, leading to a castelike system that can cause discrimination against students in the “low” tracks and that can exclude them from learning opportunities.
AAP sounds like tracking to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
hairsplitting. those sound the same to me. still not convinced. if aap were ability grouping there are many kids in gen ed who would be in AAP and vice versa.
Continuing the Discussion of Ability Grouping
http://tip.duke.edu/node/803
Tracking, Ability Grouping and the Gifted
http://www.giftedpage.org/docs/bulletins/PageBulletinTracking.pdf
NAGC Position Paper: Grouping
http://www.nagc.org/uploadedFiles/Information_and_Resources/Position_Papers/Grouping.pdf
In Search of Reality: Unraveling the Myths about Tracking, Ability Grouping, and the Gifted
http://media.hoover.org/sites/default/files/documents/0817928723_85.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
hairsplitting. those sound the same to me. still not convinced. if aap were ability grouping there are many kids in gen ed who would be in AAP and vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
hairsplitting. those sound the same to me. still not convinced. if aap were ability grouping there are many kids in gen ed who would be in AAP and vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Because it is ability grouping, not tracking.
Anonymous wrote:So how is rhe FCPS AAP program different from tracking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my god...that response was so predictable. In therapy for your narcissisum?
What is predictable? Why would I need therapy? FWIW, my brother in-law died young, leaving behind 2 young children, and we are all so thankful that he was always involved, overly-involved, in his daughters' lives. You best believe that I will do everything for my children. Whether that means parent referring and/or appealing. It really in no way affects you or your children - as I am following the set guidelines as put forth by FCPS.
Parent they way you wish, and don't judge others for doing what they feel is right AND what is currently the protocol.
Well said. I don't know why some (just a few) very vocal posters worry so much about how other people raise thir kids. It's really creepy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my god...that response was so predictable. In therapy for your narcissisum?
What is predictable? Why would I need therapy? FWIW, my brother in-law died young, leaving behind 2 young children, and we are all so thankful that he was always involved, overly-involved, in his daughters' lives. You best believe that I will do everything for my children. Whether that means parent referring and/or appealing. It really in no way affects you or your children - as I am following the set guidelines as put forth by FCPS.
Parent they way you wish, and don't judge others for doing what they feel is right AND what is currently the protocol.