Anonymous wrote:Here’s what OP doesn’t tell you: a whopping 4% of students who take the SAT get college board accommodations. And not all college board accommodations are extra time. Extra breaks, computer testing, low vision/ how hearing, 4 function calculators for dysgraphia are all counted in.
And for the most recent year there is data, kids who got accommodations, on average, scored 40-50 points lower than kids who did not (2400 SAT scale was in effect).
That seems a lot different than every ivy bound kid with no real LDs buying accommodations (which is illegal, and for which people are currently going to jail).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/abuse-of-extended-time-on-sat-and-act-outrages-learning-disability-community/2019/03/29/d58de3c6-4c1f-11e9-9663-00ac73f49662_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poster 20:10 - read the WSJ article. It highlights and reports all that I see at our private wealthy HS. Maybe it would then open your eyes to what it really happening out there. The extended time abuse has gone too far that it now an unfair advantage. The current system has to be changed.
Yep.. super easy to get extended time.![]()
https://accommodations.collegeboard.org/documentation-guidelines/extended-time
PS — you work with the school to get accommodations. why is your “private wealthy” school letting kids fake it? That sounds... illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Do you know how to get antibiotics for a sinus infection?
Walk into minute clinic, tell them you had a cold almost two weeks ago and now your face hurts, especially when you bend over, oh...and your upper teeth hurt, and you’ve been using saline for 10 days and it’s not helping. Bingo - prescription.
Do you know how to get your kid diagnosed with ADHD? Walk into a psychiatrists office...tell them the kid can’t focus, kid can’t initiate or complete tasks, kid takes 4 hours to to 1 hour of homework, kid is trying hard with tutors and not making progress. One IQ test, a few achievement tests, and a report from a teacher corroborating that the kid is flaky and can’t put his phone down long enough to focus and ta-da, extra time in school and on SAT/ACT. When SAT and ACT kick back the paperwork, you appeal and almost always goes through. I’ve seen it happen multiple times.
This isn’t rocket science. There is no definitive test for ADHD, it’s simply reported symptoms. I know there are plenty of people who genuinely have ADHD, but there are plenty of high schoolers who don’t and got a diagnosis once their parents realized this wasn’t going the way they wanted it to.
Anonymous wrote:Poster 20:10 - read the WSJ article. It highlights and reports all that I see at our private wealthy HS. Maybe it would then open your eyes to what it really happening out there. The extended time abuse has gone too far that it now an unfair advantage. The current system has to be changed.
Anonymous wrote:Poster 20:10 - read the WSJ article. It highlights and reports all that I see at our private wealthy HS. Maybe it would then open your eyes to what it really happening out there. The extended time abuse has gone too far that it now an unfair advantage. The current system has to be changed.
Anonymous wrote:Why don’t we just make it untuned for everyone and then indicate the time you took to finish as another data point that is reported to universities?
Anonymous wrote:Do you know how to get antibiotics for a sinus infection?
Walk into minute clinic, tell them you had a cold almost two weeks ago and now your face hurts, especially when you bend over, oh...and your upper teeth hurt, and you’ve been using saline for 10 days and it’s not helping. Bingo - prescription.
Do you know how to get your kid diagnosed with ADHD? Walk into a psychiatrists office...tell them the kid can’t focus, kid can’t initiate or complete tasks, kid takes 4 hours to to 1 hour of homework, kid is trying hard with tutors and not making progress. One IQ test, a few achievement tests, and a report from a teacher corroborating that the kid is flaky and can’t put his phone down long enough to focus and ta-da, extra time in school and on SAT/ACT. When SAT and ACT kick back the paperwork, you appeal and almost always goes through. I’ve seen it happen multiple times.
This isn’t rocket science. There is no definitive test for ADHD, it’s simply reported symptoms. I know there are plenty of people who genuinely have ADHD, but there are plenty of high schoolers who don’t and got a diagnosis once their parents realized this wasn’t going the way they wanted it to.
Anonymous wrote:Do you know how to get antibiotics for a sinus infection?
Walk into minute clinic, tell them you had a cold almost two weeks ago and now your face hurts, especially when you bend over, oh...and your upper teeth hurt, and you’ve been using saline for 10 days and it’s not helping. Bingo - prescription.
Do you know how to get your kid diagnosed with ADHD? Walk into a psychiatrists office...tell them the kid can’t focus, kid can’t initiate or complete tasks, kid takes 4 hours to to 1 hour of homework, kid is trying hard with tutors and not making progress. One IQ test, a few achievement tests, and a report from a teacher corroborating that the kid is flaky and can’t put his phone down long enough to focus and ta-da, extra time in school and on SAT/ACT. When SAT and ACT kick back the paperwork, you appeal and almost always goes through. I’ve seen it happen multiple times.
This isn’t rocket science. There is no definitive test for ADHD, it’s simply reported symptoms. I know there are plenty of people who genuinely have ADHD, but there are plenty of high schoolers who don’t and got a diagnosis once their parents realized this wasn’t going the way they wanted it to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As it happens, I am almost certainly one of, say, ten smartest people you ever talked to. No, really. My kids are too young to know for sure but the oldest got into a gifted program with a huge margin.
Where were we again? oh yes, you want us all to scaffold your kid so that she can shy at the detriment of our own kids. As you can tell from the discussion here, that’s unlikely to happen.
Alrighty then.
Just another “extremely stable genius,” I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My TJ kid has a GAI IQ of more than 145. PS 100. That’s three full SDs. It has taken so much effort for them to perform at a school like TJ with such a variation in subtests. Does not get extra time to turn in assignments (which would be pointless, because the workload is so high they would just be digging themselves in a hole). Uses extended time at school for tests in advanced math, Chem and physics only. Does not seem to need it for reading based activities and assessments. Has the accommodation for both sections on the SAT, because it really isn’t an option to only get it for math. But finished the verbal with a lot of time to spare.
You DD is obviously very bright and motivated. While her GAI is above 145 her actual full scale IQ is above 130. She is intellectually gifted by all accounts.
Her processing speed is perfectly average. The deviation between her high scores and low scores is indicative of a possible LD but it’s not an LD by itself. How can being average at something be an LD by itself? It’s not. You allude to her being diagnosed with ADHD.
As a parent you are always going to want to see your child in the best possible way. You choose to look at the score which includes her strengths. You concede processing speed is important enough to warrant an LD and extra time, but you don’t include it in her IQ score or SAT score.
She does not need extra time on reading? Why? Because this is a strength for her. She is an extremely gifted reader. She needs extra time with math because this is a weakness for her. But extra time washes that distinction away. Why? She didn’t need it for one area. Why does she get it for the other?
You are essentially saying “my daughter is smart except for processing speed. So don’t take that into account for her.”
For other kids with average processing speed, yes. Make them rush through the test. Not her though.
Also, kids with high processing speed but relatively low IQ get punished.
DD is strongly ADHD. And the deviation between OS and GAI causes the problems. Also, one of her processing scores is 1%. It’s hard to explain, but her psychiatrist says it’s like putting one foot on the gas and one foot on the accelerator. She has had to learn how to slow down and work through complex problems step by step. She used to do complex problems in her head, make a small error, and just write down an incorrect answer.
She did not use accommodations on the TJ test, because she wasn’t available on accommodations day. Her math test was so low, I was surprised she was admitted (40/50, Old test). Her verbal score was perfect (50/50, old test). She refused accommodations for Math 3 and got a C+. Agreed to use them going forward and is now an A-/B+ math student.
If she understands TJ math, which is very, very deep and hard, not just time constrained, at an A-/B+ level, why should she not be allowed to demonstrate that? Are colleges looking for fast? Or kids who really understand the subject.
BtW, she is killing it in physics and wants to major in that.
I have nothing against your kid and I don’t care for TJ (live in MD). The problem is that the place your child is taking is a place denied to some other kid with some other “problem”. What you are saying is that your kids weaknesses need to be ignored - but that flip side is that some other kids weaknesses become more of an obstacle for that very reason. Kids who are quick don’t get credit for it and forced to compete on the ground that favors “slow” or whatever kids.
Btw I am pretty sure I have “undiagnosed” ADD. I can’t imagine preferential treatment on the account of it. It feels like cheating.
Nah, you are probably just not intelligent, just like your kid. There's a big difference between a "weakness" and a diagnosed brain disorder. Just accept that your kid is average.
As it happens, I am almost certainly one of, say, ten smartest people you ever talked to. No, really. My kids are too young to know for sure but the oldest got into a gifted program with a huge margin.
Where were we again? oh yes, you want us all to scaffold your kid so that she can shy at the detriment of our own kids. As you can tell from the discussion here, that’s unlikely to happen.