Anonymous wrote:AAP has changed from what it once was. Primarily it was a gifted program with requirements to get in. Today it is not for the gifted, but rather the high achieving. No IQ test is required for entry. People who have gifted children understand the differing needs of a gifted child vs one who gets good grades at school because they try hard. FCPS has moved to a holistic approach to AAP admission. There are no set guidelines for entry. Your child’s teacher”s opinion weighs heavily on whether or not your child is found eligible. As a result, a large number of AAP students are not gifted, per se, according to an IQ rest. On the flip side, there are gifted children who are not getting in to AAP with the new FCPS system. Your child with an IQ of 150 has no guarantee of getting in. The system is not standardized . Nysmith is a good place for kids who are gifted who did not impress their teacher and therefore did not get in to AAP. Keep an open mind when deciding where to live as there is no rhyme or reason as to who gets in and who doesn’t . Don’t rely on it.
Anonymous wrote:Nysmith is where the AAP rejects go
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has changed from what it once was. Primarily it was a gifted program with requirements to get in. Today it is not for the gifted, but rather the high achieving. No IQ test is required for entry. People who have gifted children understand the differing needs of a gifted child vs one who gets good grades at school because they try hard. FCPS has moved to a holistic approach to AAP admission. There are no set guidelines for entry. Your child’s teacher”s opinion weighs heavily on whether or not your child is found eligible. As a result, a large number of AAP students are not gifted, per se, according to an IQ rest. On the flip side, there are gifted children who are not getting in to AAP with the new FCPS system. Your child with an IQ of 150 has no guarantee of getting in. The system is not standardized . Nysmith is a good place for kids who are gifted who did not impress their teacher and therefore did not get in to AAP. Keep an open mind when deciding where to live as there is no rhyme or reason as to who gets in and who doesn’t . Don’t rely on it.
That’s troubling to hear. How have these changes affected kids who are gifted? If an AAP is full,of kids who aren’t gifted but try hard, it seems that it would become less able to offer differentiation that meets the needs of gifted kids.
The PP is incorrect, most years students need a 131-133 on the CogAt to be in the pool. Parents do fill out forms to have their child considered if they fall below that line, but unless the teacher has a very strong recommendation, they still need a score of 130or so on another test like the WISC. When Fairfax decided to do its own version of the CogAt because of remapnt cheating, there was a bubble group year where more were accepted because there was quite a bit of leeway.
My child was denied with a 135 WISC, FYI . . .
Anonymous wrote:
TJ changed the admission test last year, which leveled the playing field for kids that do not prep since kindergarten. Last year, 44% of Nysmith's kids that took the test were admitted. This is quite telling regarding the quality of education at Nysmith.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids were in AAP, one had Cogat of 144, the other is high 130s. Both kids now in Nysmith. I don't understand the hate in this board on the school. I don't care about the name of the school and I am sure not all kids are highly gifted in Nysmith. But I regret not moving them to Nysmith sooner. Language Arts is where AAP is behind. Many Nysmith kids are also ahead in terms of Math. And Science. Most of all, my kids keep telling me learning is more fun in Nysmith.
How big are the classes at Nysmith? AAP isn't working well for my kids, largely because the classes are overcrowded and too chaotic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My two kids were in AAP, one had Cogat of 144, the other is high 130s. Both kids now in Nysmith. I don't understand the hate in this board on the school. I don't care about the name of the school and I am sure not all kids are highly gifted in Nysmith. But I regret not moving them to Nysmith sooner. Language Arts is where AAP is behind. Many Nysmith kids are also ahead in terms of Math. And Science. Most of all, my kids keep telling me learning is more fun in Nysmith.
How big are the classes at Nysmith? AAP isn't working well for my kids, largely because the classes are overcrowded and too chaotic.
Anonymous wrote:My two kids were in AAP, one had Cogat of 144, the other is high 130s. Both kids now in Nysmith. I don't understand the hate in this board on the school. I don't care about the name of the school and I am sure not all kids are highly gifted in Nysmith. But I regret not moving them to Nysmith sooner. Language Arts is where AAP is behind. Many Nysmith kids are also ahead in terms of Math. And Science. Most of all, my kids keep telling me learning is more fun in Nysmith.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I do think the point is that the school does the kids no favors by making them announce themselves as being from”Nysmith School for the Gifted” at every opportunity, rather than just having them say they are from Nysmith and letting the winds (or lack thereof) speak for themselves. Since the kids all do this— at debate and OOTM and Math contests, etc, I assume it’s what the school tells them to do, not their choice. So, that’s not on the kids. That’s on the school. But it is obnoxious.
+1 I have nothing at all against Nysmith, but the petty side of me enjoys it when my kids beat the Nysmith "School for the Gifted" kids at academic competitions. If they simply called their school Nysmith, there would be so much less animosity.
It’s especially silly when the kid saying this is clearly not gifted. My AAP MS kid does academic competition where one of the Nysmith competitors wmt to his elementary school, but didn’t get into AAP. He then applied to Flint Hill and Nysmith and did not get into FH for some reason, so went to Nysmith. So, this kid *who got rejected by AAP, which isn’t even really a GT program* announces at the beginning of every round that he is John Doe representing “Nysmith School for the Gifted”. I actually feel bad for the kid. There he is competing against his former classmates (and ultimately losing much more often than winning), and he he is just drawing attention, again, and again, to the fact he is an AAP reject. I know the school has an interest in selling itself as having only gifted kids. But I have never understood why Nysmith parents don’t put a stop to it. A lot of these kids just aren’t gifted and look silly pronouncing that they are. And even if a student has a 180 IQ, bragging is in really, really bad taste.
My oldest is at TJ, and when they compete— in academics, athletics or perform in drama or music, they just say “Jefferson High School” or “Thomas Jefferson High School”. And maybe they call themselves TJ informally. They literally never do the full “Thomas Jefferson High School for...” spiel or say “TJHSST” if there is a way around it.
**** Also, writing this made me think of something for the first time. Why would a kid get into a Nysmith and not Flint Hill? I was under the impression that at the ES level, neither was all that competitive to get into, and that most UMC kids are admitted unless there are problems. In other words you don’t have stand out in a positive wayto get into these school, you just can’t stand out in a negative way. Is that not the case? This was a perfectly nice, normal UMC white kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I do think the point is that the school does the kids no favors by making them announce themselves as being from”Nysmith School for the Gifted” at every opportunity, rather than just having them say they are from Nysmith and letting the winds (or lack thereof) speak for themselves. Since the kids all do this— at debate and OOTM and Math contests, etc, I assume it’s what the school tells them to do, not their choice. So, that’s not on the kids. That’s on the school. But it is obnoxious.
+1 I have nothing at all against Nysmith, but the petty side of me enjoys it when my kids beat the Nysmith "School for the Gifted" kids at academic competitions. If they simply called their school Nysmith, there would be so much less animosity.
It’s especially silly when the kid saying this is clearly not gifted. My AAP MS kid does academic competition where one of the Nysmith competitors wmt to his elementary school, but didn’t get into AAP. He then applied to Flint Hill and Nysmith and did not get into FH for some reason, so went to Nysmith. So, this kid *who got rejected by AAP, which isn’t even really a GT program* announces at the beginning of every round that he is John Doe representing “Nysmith School for the Gifted”. I actually feel bad for the kid. There he is competing against his former classmates (and ultimately losing much more often than winning), and he he is just drawing attention, again, and again, to the fact he is an AAP reject. I know the school has an interest in selling itself as having only gifted kids. But I have never understood why Nysmith parents don’t put a stop to it. A lot of these kids just aren’t gifted and look silly pronouncing that they are. And even if a student has a 180 IQ, bragging is in really, really bad taste.
My oldest is at TJ, and when they compete— in academics, athletics or perform in drama or music, they just say “Jefferson High School” or “Thomas Jefferson High School”. And maybe they call themselves TJ informally. They literally never do the full “Thomas Jefferson High School for...” spiel or say “TJHSST” if there is a way around it.
**** Also, writing this made me think of something for the first time. Why would a kid get into a Nysmith and not Flint Hill? I was under the impression that at the ES level, neither was all that competitive to get into, and that most UMC kids are admitted unless there are problems. In other words you don’t have stand out in a positive wayto get into these school, you just can’t stand out in a negative way. Is that not the case? This was a perfectly nice, normal UMC white kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I do think the point is that the school does the kids no favors by making them announce themselves as being from”Nysmith School for the Gifted” at every opportunity, rather than just having them say they are from Nysmith and letting the winds (or lack thereof) speak for themselves. Since the kids all do this— at debate and OOTM and Math contests, etc, I assume it’s what the school tells them to do, not their choice. So, that’s not on the kids. That’s on the school. But it is obnoxious.
+1 I have nothing at all against Nysmith, but the petty side of me enjoys it when my kids beat the Nysmith "School for the Gifted" kids at academic competitions. If they simply called their school Nysmith, there would be so much less animosity.