Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is unitimed but occasionally the school denies additional time to really slow test takers, like my kid. He’s not been allowed to finish a couple times and didn’t get scores. Generally, 95th%+ and wants to get them all correct.
Tell him he can't get them all correct. The questions get more difficult until he gets it wrong.
Anonymous wrote:It is unitimed but occasionally the school denies additional time to really slow test takers, like my kid. He’s not been allowed to finish a couple times and didn’t get scores. Generally, 95th%+ and wants to get them all correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The crazy thing about the CES system is when we see the students who have been accepted into a program, they're usually not the students with the highest MAP scores. I think we had at least four or five students with higher MAP scores than those that were accepted into the local program.
I’m more concerned that—at our school—the hooked students got CES invitations (less than a handful got invited from our school). If those very few students also get MS magnet invitations, then they are certainly hooked.
This is a publicly funded school system. Since they say it is a lottery, every student who meets the criteria should have an equal probability of getting an invitation.
Are you suggesting it’s not an actual lottery then? What on earth do you mean by “hooked”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The crazy thing about the CES system is when we see the students who have been accepted into a program, they're usually not the students with the highest MAP scores. I think we had at least four or five students with higher MAP scores than those that were accepted into the local program.
I’m more concerned that—at our school—the hooked students got CES invitations (less than a handful got invited from our school). If those very few students also get MS magnet invitations, then they are certainly hooked.
This is a publicly funded school system. Since they say it is a lottery, every student who meets the criteria should have an equal probability of getting an invitation.
Anonymous wrote:The crazy thing about the CES system is when we see the students who have been accepted into a program, they're usually not the students with the highest MAP scores. I think we had at least four or five students with higher MAP scores than those that were accepted into the local program.