Anonymous wrote:Leave AAP? No, of course not. Both kids loved it.
Leave the Churchill Road AAP Center? YES. I know 2 families who tried it, then fled.
Churchill Road is an overly-competitive, cut-throat environment driven by a core of really arrogant, pushy, nasty parents who have generally supplemented the heck out of their poor kids.
My own two opted NOT to transfer to Churchill, and both are doing extremely well in HS after finishing AAP without Churchill.
We moved DS to another school because his AAP cohort was horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Standard and rigor wise, current AAP is the old gen ed, and the current gen ed is the old remedial.
Anonymous wrote:I know some kids who wanted to switch to the gen ed classes. It wasn’t because of the academics, it was always because of their friends and also their “image”. AAP kids don’t tend to be the popular kids.
Anonymous wrote:Standard and rigor wise, current AAP is the old gen ed, and the current gen ed is the old remedial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is truly a shame that parents won't put their kids in the right classroom to fit their needs just because they view AAP as some sort of status symbol. If a kid isn't fitting in, is struggling in the AAP class, then nobody should be ashamed of it. Really sad that it has come to this.
It's not a shame and is the right thing to do.
You are the worst of the worst. If your child is struggling, they shouldn't be there.
Anonymous wrote:I know a lot of people who tried the Center for a year and then left to go back to the base school. A lot of the Centers have really bad reputations - there's no need to take a child out of a high SES school's LLIV program ever. Our school is expecting a large cohort of kids back next year b/c the only reason they left was due to construction and our local Center is a nightmare (I did not want my child with that peer group, I did not want to deal with those parents, LOL).
Anonymous wrote:It is truly a shame that parents won't put their kids in the right classroom to fit their needs just because they view AAP as some sort of status symbol. If a kid isn't fitting in, is struggling in the AAP class, then nobody should be ashamed of it. Really sad that it has come to this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is truly a shame that parents won't put their kids in the right classroom to fit their needs just because they view AAP as some sort of status symbol. If a kid isn't fitting in, is struggling in the AAP class, then nobody should be ashamed of it. Really sad that it has come to this.
It's not a shame and is the right thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:Bad decision. Your kid is going to lose out on a quality peer group forever. Even if they never see the people again, it shapes their development early on.