Anonymous wrote:
Yes, but all the kids in those 2 AAP classes are not originally from your school. Most of them are bused in from other schools. That's what being a center means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP consider that the issue might be your child's school.
OP here; This is certainly possible as we only have experience with this school. Teacher turnover is very high at the school. And to confirm, at this school it is 50/50, two classes of AAP, and two of Gen Ed, for each grade.
Anonymous wrote:OP consider that the issue might be your child's school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since this is a private school forum, some people (myself included) may not be familiar with the terminology you used in your post. Are you looking for an academically advanced school or one that will differentiate? Or just a school with better handle on kids behavior? Maybe clarify if you want more responses in this forum.
OP here; We are seeking a more productive classroom environment with a better handle on behavior. We are also seeking a different structure. As per the county policy, the current elementary school begins to split students 50/50 into full time 'advanced' and 'gen ed' classes in 3rd grade. Kids like ours, who apply but do not make it into the 'advanced' half, are grouped in class full time with a higher than average number of distracting pupils. These classes are taught by the least experienced teachers, as these classes are the least desirable to teach. We do not like the setup and would rather DC have an equal chance of interacting with experienced educators and advanced students, instead of being blocked from that.
PP who asked about the possibility of your family moving. The bolded is not true at our center at all. If anything the full-time advanced classes have more teacher turnover than the general education classes. Again I'd suggest to you that the specific issues you note are a "your school" issue as opposed to an FCPS issue.
Also the county doesn't split kids 50%/50%. 20% of FCPS is in full-time AAP, not 50%. At our center only about 1/4 of the kids in full-time AAP have our center as the base, some years less. My now-5th grader had many more friends from one specific other base school in her AAP classes than from our center/base.
I think your idea of AAP is pretty skewed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since this is a private school forum, some people (myself included) may not be familiar with the terminology you used in your post. Are you looking for an academically advanced school or one that will differentiate? Or just a school with better handle on kids behavior? Maybe clarify if you want more responses in this forum.
OP here; We are seeking a more productive classroom environment with a better handle on behavior. We are also seeking a different structure. As per the county policy, the current elementary school begins to split students 50/50 into full time 'advanced' and 'gen ed' classes in 3rd grade. Kids like ours, who apply but do not make it into the 'advanced' half, are grouped in class full time with a higher than average number of distracting pupils. These classes are taught by the least experienced teachers, as these classes are the least desirable to teach. We do not like the setup and would rather DC have an equal chance of interacting with experienced educators and advanced students, instead of being blocked from that.
Anonymous wrote:Since this is a private school forum, some people (myself included) may not be familiar with the terminology you used in your post. Are you looking for an academically advanced school or one that will differentiate? Or just a school with better handle on kids behavior? Maybe clarify if you want more responses in this forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congressional and Westminister
OP here; Unfortunately both out of budget (<=$20k) and too far to drive for us.
Anonymous wrote:Congressional and Westminister
Anonymous wrote:Look at St Stephens/St Agnes also. OP needs to apply to several schools, really maybe 4-5 different schools. Admissions are fairly competitive, perhaps more competitive than OP realizes…