Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Young Scholars is:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses. This may include students who are the first in their family to attend college in the U.S., English language learners, students who are economically disadvantaged, and students who are twice exceptional.
Looks like it's mentoring and counseling since they suspect parents can't take care of the need of the child's advanced academy needs?
It's basically limited to blacks and Hispanics.
Wouldn't this be unconstitutional under the Harvard/UNC case?
Lot of what public schools are doing is unconstitutional, and each case is dealt separately. Harvard/UNC case outcome can be used as basis for making future case arguments. If there is enough public support to call it out, YS might end up in court. Separately, TJ admissions racial balancing case is currently on Supreme Court docket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Young Scholars is:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses. This may include students who are the first in their family to attend college in the U.S., English language learners, students who are economically disadvantaged, and students who are twice exceptional.
Looks like it's mentoring and counseling since they suspect parents can't take care of the need of the child's advanced academy needs?
It's basically limited to blacks and Hispanics.
Wouldn't this be unconstitutional under the Harvard/UNC case?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Young Scholars is:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses. This may include students who are the first in their family to attend college in the U.S., English language learners, students who are economically disadvantaged, and students who are twice exceptional.
Looks like it's mentoring and counseling since they suspect parents can't take care of the need of the child's advanced academy needs?
It's basically limited to blacks and Hispanics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Young Scholars is:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses. This may include students who are the first in their family to attend college in the U.S., English language learners, students who are economically disadvantaged, and students who are twice exceptional.
Looks like it's mentoring and counseling since they suspect parents can't take care of the need of the child's advanced academy needs?
It's basically limited to blacks and Hispanics.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Young Scholars is:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses. This may include students who are the first in their family to attend college in the U.S., English language learners, students who are economically disadvantaged, and students who are twice exceptional.
Looks like it's mentoring and counseling since they suspect parents can't take care of the need of the child's advanced academy needs?
Anonymous wrote:Is YS only at certain schools? Never heard of it at the schools my kids have attended in FCPS and we have lived in several pyramids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it appears YS is a companion program for a subset of AAP students to make sure they continue with AAP and not drop out?
It's a way to help minority and poor students to get in TJ. As you know TJ is under-represented for white, and non-Asian students.
Are poor asian students not allowed in YS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it appears YS is a companion program for a subset of AAP students to make sure they continue with AAP and not drop out?
It's a way to help minority and poor students to get in TJ. As you know TJ is under-represented for white, and non-Asian students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry meant YS
Lol, no https://www.fcps.edu/academics/elementary/advanced-academic-programs/young-scholars
Why LOL?
The link says:
Designed to identify and nurture students with high academic potential who may face additional barriers to access and success in Advanced Academic Programs (AAP) and courses.
So doesn't this imply that a YS should be AAP in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:it appears YS is a companion program for a subset of AAP students to make sure they continue with AAP and not drop out?