Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22101.
Teacher rec’d result first. 99th percentile.
TypicL dcum - had to add this non relevant info, right?
While people don't seem to be reporting scores in this thread, it is common on the AAP forums that people report the score as well as receiving the information. Most people posting or reading these threads are interested in AAP or have kids in AAP so most people are not put off by people posting scores. The expectation is that kids scores are going to be high. IAAT scores need to be in the 91rst percentile or higher to be considered for Algebra 7 H. Kids need NNAT or CogAT scores in the 98th percentile or higher to be in-pool at many schools. The actual scores are a data point not a brag.
While the actual scores for the abilities testing (NNAT, COGAT) are an important data point when requested in a post (such as, "please list your child's scores," or "what were your kid's stats?"), the information on any child's results on the IAAT are completely irrelevant because the percentile on the IAAT the school system looks for, as it relates to Algebra 1 readiness, is constant. It is the same every year.
Oh, and no, what you said (bolded) is NOT common except by braggers. What is common, is to answer what is asked. Just admit you wanted to say it.
My kids are older and well beyond this point, so this is absolutely not jealousy.
You seem to be the person who began needlessly hurled childish insults on page 1 of this thread.
But the bolded part of your reply indicates you do not have any personal stake, or meaningful reason, for being in this thread - let alone trying to derail it with insults.
Why are you still here?
I’m not the person on page one. What insults did I hurl? I stayed a fact - that the actual score isn’t helpful or requested in this thread and putting it down is for you, no one else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22101.
Teacher rec’d result first. 99th percentile.
TypicL dcum - had to add this non relevant info, right?
While people don't seem to be reporting scores in this thread, it is common on the AAP forums that people report the score as well as receiving the information. Most people posting or reading these threads are interested in AAP or have kids in AAP so most people are not put off by people posting scores. The expectation is that kids scores are going to be high. IAAT scores need to be in the 91rst percentile or higher to be considered for Algebra 7 H. Kids need NNAT or CogAT scores in the 98th percentile or higher to be in-pool at many schools. The actual scores are a data point not a brag.
While the actual scores for the abilities testing (NNAT, COGAT) are an important data point when requested in a post (such as, "please list your child's scores," or "what were your kid's stats?"), the information on any child's results on the IAAT are completely irrelevant because the percentile on the IAAT the school system looks for, as it relates to Algebra 1 readiness, is constant. It is the same every year.
Oh, and no, what you said (bolded) is NOT common except by braggers. What is common, is to answer what is asked. Just admit you wanted to say it.
My kids are older and well beyond this point, so this is absolutely not jealousy.
You seem to be the person who began needlessly hurled childish insults on page 1 of this thread.
But the bolded part of your reply indicates you do not have any personal stake, or meaningful reason, for being in this thread - let alone trying to derail it with insults.
Why are you still here?
Anonymous wrote:
Right. But in order to take Algebra, you need a strong foundation. If you get a certain number of questions correct, you have or do not have that foundation. How you score locally or nationally compared to other kids really should not matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I was the one that asked the question and then went and checked after I asked. It definitely says percentile. That seems really odd to me to determine whether a kid is ready for algebra off a percentile instead of a straight percentage. Anyone know why they do that?
The test is nationally normed and not based on local percentiles. If the test is properly normed, then it shouldn't matter whether FCPS uses a percentile cutoff or a raw score cutoff.
I don't know the full correspondence scale, but I have one data point from a previous year. My DC got 56/60 (about 93%), which was 98th percentile. If you want the full score report, you have to make a formal request for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I was the one that asked the question and then went and checked after I asked. It definitely says percentile. That seems really odd to me to determine whether a kid is ready for algebra off a percentile instead of a straight percentage. Anyone know why they do that?
The test is nationally normed and not based on local percentiles. If the test is properly normed, then it shouldn't matter whether FCPS uses a percentile cutoff or a raw score cutoff.
I don't know the full correspondence scale, but I have one data point from a previous year. My DC got 56/60 (about 93%), which was 98th percentile. If you want the full score report, you have to make a formal request for it.
Anonymous wrote:
I was the one that asked the question and then went and checked after I asked. It definitely says percentile. That seems really odd to me to determine whether a kid is ready for algebra off a percentile instead of a straight percentage. Anyone know why they do that?
Anonymous wrote:We haven’t got the result yet. Marshall pyramid. Anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22101.
Teacher rec’d result first. 99th percentile.
TypicL dcum - had to add this non relevant info, right?
While people don't seem to be reporting scores in this thread, it is common on the AAP forums that people report the score as well as receiving the information. Most people posting or reading these threads are interested in AAP or have kids in AAP so most people are not put off by people posting scores. The expectation is that kids scores are going to be high. IAAT scores need to be in the 91rst percentile or higher to be considered for Algebra 7 H. Kids need NNAT or CogAT scores in the 98th percentile or higher to be in-pool at many schools. The actual scores are a data point not a brag.
While the actual scores for the abilities testing (NNAT, COGAT) are an important data point when requested in a post (such as, "please list your child's scores," or "what were your kid's stats?"), the information on any child's results on the IAAT are completely irrelevant because the percentile on the IAAT the school system looks for, as it relates to Algebra 1 readiness, is constant. It is the same every year.
Oh, and no, what you said (bolded) is NOT common except by braggers. What is common, is to answer what is asked. Just admit you wanted to say it.
My kids are older and well beyond this point, so this is absolutely not jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22101.
Teacher rec’d result first. 99th percentile.
TypicL dcum - had to add this non relevant info, right?
While people don't seem to be reporting scores in this thread, it is common on the AAP forums that people report the score as well as receiving the information. Most people posting or reading these threads are interested in AAP or have kids in AAP so most people are not put off by people posting scores. The expectation is that kids scores are going to be high. IAAT scores need to be in the 91rst percentile or higher to be considered for Algebra 7 H. Kids need NNAT or CogAT scores in the 98th percentile or higher to be in-pool at many schools. The actual scores are a data point not a brag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it is the percentile that matters. Kids need to be in the 91rst percentile on the IAAT.
I was the one that asked the question and then went and checked after I asked. It definitely says percentile. That seems really odd to me to determine whether a kid is ready for algebra off a percentile instead of a straight percentage. Anyone know why they do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:22101.
Teacher rec’d result first. 99th percentile.
TypicL dcum - had to add this non relevant info, right?
Anonymous wrote:No, it is the percentile that matters. Kids need to be in the 91rst percentile on the IAAT.