Anonymous wrote:This year, I will teach three sections of LIV (middle school). They currently have 32, 31, and 26 students. My other classes, both general education, currently have 30 and 29 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, that's not the case. In most LLIV schools, the LLIV classes are filled out with pupil-placed students to even out the class sizes across grades. Parents would be livid if the AAP class was smaller than the other classes.
I would guess that Centers are different because AAP and GenEd/PBL are essentially treated as two different programs within the same school, so they probably try to ensure all AAP classes are the same size and all GenEd/PBL classes are the same size.
Last year at my school, the AAP class was 16. Gen ed was 27. But there just weren’t more kids who could be reasonably placed in AAP. The center schools really do muck things up by pulling so many students away with parents thinking the centers are superior. Funny though that I’ve met several AAP teachers who have taught at the center and at the local and they find the quality of education and expectations of students to be much higher at the local level IV schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, that's not the case. In most LLIV schools, the LLIV classes are filled out with pupil-placed students to even out the class sizes across grades. Parents would be livid if the AAP class was smaller than the other classes.
I would guess that Centers are different because AAP and GenEd/PBL are essentially treated as two different programs within the same school, so they probably try to ensure all AAP classes are the same size and all GenEd/PBL classes are the same size.
Last year at my school, the AAP class was 16. Gen ed was 27. But there just weren’t more kids who could be reasonably placed in AAP. The center schools really do muck things up by pulling so many students away with parents thinking the centers are superior. Funny though that I’ve met several AAP teachers who have taught at the center and at the local and they find the quality of education and expectations of students to be much higher at the local level IV schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, that's not the case. In most LLIV schools, the LLIV classes are filled out with pupil-placed students to even out the class sizes across grades. Parents would be livid if the AAP class was smaller than the other classes.
I would guess that Centers are different because AAP and GenEd/PBL are essentially treated as two different programs within the same school, so they probably try to ensure all AAP classes are the same size and all GenEd/PBL classes are the same size.
Last year at my school, the AAP class was 16. Gen ed was 27. But there just weren’t more kids who could be reasonably placed in AAP. The center schools really do muck things up by pulling so many students away with parents thinking the centers are superior. Funny though that I’ve met several AAP teachers who have taught at the center and at the local and they find the quality of education and expectations of students to be much higher at the local level IV schools.
Anonymous wrote:Our local level IV is way too big, most of the kids there are level III that go to Gen ED for math. Some general ed kids come in for math but the AAP class is much larger than the general classes. Not great for AAP teachers.
Anonymous wrote:No, that's not the case. In most LLIV schools, the LLIV classes are filled out with pupil-placed students to even out the class sizes across grades. Parents would be livid if the AAP class was smaller than the other classes.
I would guess that Centers are different because AAP and GenEd/PBL are essentially treated as two different programs within the same school, so they probably try to ensure all AAP classes are the same size and all GenEd/PBL classes are the same size.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe a better question than class size is whether AAP will have a better teacher:student ratio?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, for centers it’s completely dependent on school numbers. Our LIV numbers dropped significantly when one of our feeder schools became a center several years ago and the 2 others started LLIV programs.
Last year and this year we have a grade that has 1 LIV class and they are over 30. The grade above that has just enough LIV kids to require 2 teachers, so they’re at 18-19 kids.
I talked to a LIV at a nearby center school, and they are busting at the seams with multiple level IV teachers at each grade.
(For the PP who said they put level III kids in a level IV center class to fill it, I’m surprised. We were told at my center school that is not allowed under any circumstances!)
Anonymous wrote:Yes, for centers it’s completely dependent on school numbers. Our LIV numbers dropped significantly when one of our feeder schools became a center several years ago and the 2 others started LLIV programs.
Last year and this year we have a grade that has 1 LIV class and they are over 30. The grade above that has just enough LIV kids to require 2 teachers, so they’re at 18-19 kids.
I talked to a LIV at a nearby center school, and they are busting at the seams with multiple level IV teachers at each grade.
(For the PP who said they put level III kids in a level IV center class to fill it, I’m surprised. We were told at my center school that is not allowed under any circumstances!)