Anonymous wrote:My DS got labeled as Gifted as he got awesome percentile in all five areas: 99,99,95,91,91. So, there are no disparity in the score and this test is not useless. I am happy he would not go through the basic instructions in Grade 3 that will save his lots of time in learning more advanced stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The test means he will be doing more challenging work in his classroom as compared to other kid who are not GT labeled
I'm not sure that's true.
I am 100% sure.
Please click below for more info.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/enriched/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The test means he will be doing more challenging work in his classroom as compared to other kid who are not GT labeled
I'm not sure that's true.
Anonymous wrote:
The test means he will be doing more challenging work in his classroom as compared to other kid who are not GT labeled
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS got labeled as Gifted as he got awesome percentile in all five areas: 99,99,95,91,91. So, there are no disparity in the score and this test is not useless. I am happy he would not go through the basic instructions in Grade 3 that will save his lots of time in learning more advanced stuff.
What do you mean? The test does not mean that your child will not be in an accellerated curiculum.
Anonymous wrote:My DS got labeled as Gifted as he got awesome percentile in all five areas: 99,99,95,91,91. So, there are no disparity in the score and this test is not useless. I am happy he would not go through the basic instructions in Grade 3 that will save his lots of time in learning more advanced stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got a letter and my child was not identified gifted. Which is fine, I'm not concerned. What concerns me is the disparity in the testing, he scored a 90% in onw test and a 20% in one test. I tried to google and couldn't find ANYTHING about the testing. I was told the test was given all in one day which could allow for this kind of disparity, but still, that is a HUGE range.
FWIW, this kind of disparity would be a major red flag for me -- I would want to check why and see if there are any other indications that there might be an LD or ADD involved.
Write a letter to the principal. Tell the principal that you are requesting to see a copy of your child's answers and the test and that you have a right to do so under FERPA. You may have to sign a non-disclosure agreement. The school will tell you no, but persist -- it is your right. I would look at the test and see what answers my child got wrong. Is there a pattern? Certain types of questions? Maybe they didn't understand what to do? Did most of the answers come at the end of a section, then maybe attention is playing a role. Ask questions about how/when the test was administered -- time of day, all sections in one sitting, were directions self-read or read aloud by proctor, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I got a letter and my child was not identified gifted. Which is fine, I'm not concerned. What concerns me is the disparity in the testing, he scored a 90% in onw test and a 20% in one test. I tried to google and couldn't find ANYTHING about the testing. I was told the test was given all in one day which could allow for this kind of disparity, but still, that is a HUGE range.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing here yet, Anyone else?
oh well. It really doesn't mean much anyways. Just not sure how much faith I have in the screening. Anonymous wrote:I got a letter and my child was not identified gifted. Which is fine, I'm not concerned. What concerns me is the disparity in the testing, he scored a 90% in onw test and a 20% in one test. I tried to google and couldn't find ANYTHING about the testing. I was told the test was given all in one day which could allow for this kind of disparity, but still, that is a HUGE range.