Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm OP I think the general consensus of this thread is that your comments did nothing to show the quality of the magnet has not been watered down.
This.
Was thinking the same. But people see what they want to be true.
Anonymous wrote:PARCC scores of 5. Typo!
Anonymous wrote:Umm OP I think the general consensus of this thread is that your comments did nothing to show the quality of the magnet has not been watered down.
Anonymous wrote:Just to let all those parents know who criticized the magnet selection not being fair as many high performing kids from CES centers did not get selected, raw scores were requested, data were shared, and law suits were threatened, MAP- M scores of most of selected kids range from 250-294. Math counts try outs are competitive and still have high flyers from sixth grade though the selection criteria of these sixth graders was based on cogat and not traditional way, science class is serious business with lots of hands raised to answer teacher’s questions on a specific topic discussion. I don’t see these kids being any less smart (than those who did not make it to the magnet and parents cried foul).
Just sharing my observations as I see similar threads popping up about this year’s selection to middle school magnets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Firstly, I am not sure how you determine "many students", unless you are a county administrator. Your sampling of 5, 10, even 20 students is negligible.
Secondly, this is why the county has multiple tests. My kid is at a highly competitive with who I am sure are highly competitive students who likely are accused of cheating the system by DCUM. He reports that he is always the last 2-3 to finish, and even with that, he finishes in the first block of hour they provide him. So I think you are exaggerating this entire concept of many kids in the county taking DAYS to be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Firstly, I am not sure how you determine "many students", unless you are a county administrator. Your sampling of 5, 10, even 20 students is negligible.
Secondly, this is why the county has multiple tests. My kid is at a highly competitive with who I am sure are highly competitive students who likely are accused of cheating the system by DCUM. He reports that he is always the last 2-3 to finish, and even with that, he finishes in the first block of hour they provide him. So I think you are exaggerating this entire concept of many kids in the county taking DAYS to be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Firstly, I am not sure how you determine "many students", unless you are a county administrator. Your sampling of 5, 10, even 20 students is negligible.
Secondly, this is why the county has multiple tests. My kid is at a highly competitive with who I am sure are highly competitive students who likely are accused of cheating the system by DCUM. He reports that he is always the last 2-3 to finish, and even with that, he finishes in the first block of hour they provide him. So I think you are exaggerating this entire concept of many kids in the county taking DAYS to be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot pause in the middle of a question.
Actually you can. You just don't finish it and then come back the next day and resume. In our school many students took days to finish the test. Not that it matters one way or another, except make some students think that they are competitive when they are not. The way many standardized tests are set up - SAT, ACT, APs - you are supposed to be able to answer a set amount of questions in a given finite time. Many students who score high in MAP in MCPS are doing poorly on these standardized exams because they have not really mastered the content and concepts. Perhaps we need to give all of them IEPs for life? Being an MCPS student is a disability at times, is it not?