Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people don't prep for the test. Maybe 10% prep. It might be 50-60 % in some ethnic groups, but not in the majority of households in FCPS.
For example, Anglo-European?
I don't know. I don't see test prep books in Giant, Wegmens, or Whole Foods....
Anonymous wrote:
On the AAP application. Parental form. Talk about how DC prepped for the test. How smart they were for that. See how well it goes. If you are not willing to admit it, you know you are cheating.
+1. I agree with this. If you are OK with test prep, please include it on the form.
I am also ok with sex-prep should I also include this on the AAP form to see how well it goes?
Anonymous wrote:Most people don't prep for the test. Maybe 10% prep. It might be 50-60 % in some ethnic groups, but not in the majority of households in FCPS.
For example, Anglo-European?
They are available in the checkout lines of the asian grocery stores asshole.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know. I don't see test prep books in Giant, Wegmens, or Whole Foods....
My, you are intelligent looking for books in a food store. Don't bother with test-prep. You are hopeless.
I don't know. I don't see test prep books in Giant, Wegmens, or Whole Foods....
On the AAP application. Parental form. Talk about how DC prepped for the test. How smart they were for that. See how well it goes. If you are not willing to admit it, you know you are cheating.
It is not my objective as a parent to educate bumbling AAP bureaucrats about the neurophysiology of intelligence and the various and sundry ways neural axon connections form in the developing brain via numerous stimuli (including reading, problem solving, and test-prepping exercises). These individuals do not have the capacity to understand the milieu and the underlying mechanistic cell-to-cell crosstalk laying down pathways of human intelligence. This would be a pure waste of my time and effort. Therefore, I will not use the AAP application process for this effort as you suggest.
So you admit your kid is cheating. Nice.
If the questions being studied in advance are so similar that only a few words have been changed, it is essentially the same as seeing the test itself.
Someone who has studied the questions on several practice tests is exhibiting a different kind of intelligence than someone who can look at a puzzle or problem for the first time and solve it quickly. It illustrates one area of intelligence to be able to study and memorize how to solve a type of problem; the person who looks at problem s/he has never seen before and solves it quickly and easily is exhibiting a different area of intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:Most people don't prep for the test. Maybe 10% prep. It might be 50-60 % in some ethnic groups, but not in the majority of households in FCPS.
For example, Anglo-European?
Anonymous wrote:On the AAP application. Parental form. Talk about how DC prepped for the test. How smart they were for that. See how well it goes. If you are not willing to admit it, you know you are cheating.
It is not my objective as a parent to educate bumbling AAP bureaucrats about the neurophysiology of intelligence and the various and sundry ways neural axon connections form in the developing brain via numerous stimuli (including reading, problem solving, and test-prepping exercises). These individuals do not have the capacity to understand the milieu and the underlying mechanistic cell-to-cell crosstalk laying down pathways of human intelligence. This would be a pure waste of my time and effort. Therefore, I will not use the AAP application process for this effort as you suggest.
On the AAP application. Parental form. Talk about how DC prepped for the test. How smart they were for that. See how well it goes. If you are not willing to admit it, you know you are cheating.
+1. I agree with this. If you are OK with test prep, please include it on the form.