Anonymous wrote:So, back to the topic. Do people know yet whether Cooper will become the sole AAP center option for 7th graders in the fall of 2016 or will it be the fall of 2017?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Many parents here, like me, have have kids in both AAP and Gen Ed. We see the disparity and we how the program has been diluted over the years and with so many AAP students in a lot of districts, we're also confused with why we are still busing kids out of their neighborhoods.
That still doesn't answer the question. How will bugging this board, for years apparently, do anything to address your confusion? It just seems like an endless pattern of pestering to elicit a sassy response that allows ypu to remark how that's "in a nutshell" why you hate AAP. So pointless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Many parents here, like me, have have kids in both AAP and Gen Ed. We see the disparity and we how the program has been diluted over the years and with so many AAP students in a lot of districts, we're also confused with why we are still busing kids out of their neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Well, AAP students are in the same school as GE students. When the AAP students overwhelm the school so the GE students become a minority in their neighborhood school, the GE parents are.very interested in moving the AAP students back to their own school. They would like their neoghboor school to reflect the population of the neighborhood.
Also, AAP is four levels, but you'd never know it on this board. GE students in Level III, advanced math, and just generally high performing have parents who are quite annoyed at the disparate treatment shown towards their children. It sucks knowning students in the same school are getting taught material you know your child could handle, but being told that it's only for the AAP students.
+1000
Everything you just said is entirely accurate. And I guess I don't understand why parents of AAP children feel all other parents should have no say in how their public school system is run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Well, AAP students are in the same school as GE students. When the AAP students overwhelm the school so the GE students become a minority in their neighborhood school, the GE parents are.very interested in moving the AAP students back to their own school. They would like their neoghboor school to reflect the population of the neighborhood.
Also, AAP is four levels, but you'd never know it on this board. GE students in Level III, advanced math, and just generally high performing have parents who are quite annoyed at the disparate treatment shown towards their children. It sucks knowning students in the same school are getting taught material you know your child could handle, but being told that it's only for the AAP students.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why parents with no AAP children spend their time on the AAP threads
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^^It's more the mentality that no one wants to be first, and second because of the Longfellow reputation-they've done it to themselves by being so good and saught after. Can't speak to Kilmer but perhaps same thing.
it's freaking middle school for goodness sakes! two years where kids are mostly worrying about bad skin and what their friends think. at most they'll take 3 courses that even matter going forward (algebra, geometry and a language) and this can be done at any middle school in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did anyone has any ideas how Cooper is going to find enough qualified teachers to teach the in coming AAP kids once it has become a center? How about those AAP teachers from Longfellow and Kilmer who no longer are needed once the AAP kids go to Cooper? quote]
^^^Very good point and a question that was aasked earlier on in this thread-of course, hard to get past all of the snark to address the substantive and practical issues!!!
Four teachers for AAP is difficult?
Well, yes. Those four teachers must speak at least five languages fluently, have PhD's in economics and molecular biology (at a minimum), have taught at MIT and Stanford within the past ten years, and belong to Mensa. What would the point be in hiring ordinary teachers for such extraordinary human specimens?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did anyone has any ideas how Cooper is going to find enough qualified teachers to teach the in coming AAP kids once it has become a center? How about those AAP teachers from Longfellow and Kilmer who no longer are needed once the AAP kids go to Cooper? quote]
^^^Very good point and a question that was asked earlier on in this thread-of course, hard to get past all of the snark to address the substantive and practical issues!!!
Four teachers for AAP is difficult?