Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my daughter also had WISC 142, great LOR from coach added and really good work samples. Also didn't get in. We plan to switch to Potomac. I am very interested in petition or whatever else we can do. Get it going!
Yes, let's get the petition going. We need to force the committee to transparent about their decision-making process, instead of hiding behind the "holistic" label.
Anonymous wrote:my daughter also had WISC 142, great LOR from coach added and really good work samples. Also didn't get in. We plan to switch to Potomac. I am very interested in petition or whatever else we can do. Get it going!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted children can benefit from tutors. They may be gifted but weren’t born with all the worlds knowledge in their brains, or know instinctively how to study. Not every gifted child excels in every subject area. If your child is just very smart they might not ever need a tutor, but gifted children aren’t just regular kids with a high IQ, they often need support.
This is very true. Our child is 2e and just started with a math tutor. He struggles with math fact memorization, but tested at the 5th grade level in math on the WISC. He just finished up 2nd grade. We sought a tutor to help with the math facts, as we were running out of ideas. Once that is mastered, the tutoring will hopefully keep him stimulated in one of his favorite subjects.
Stop gaming the system and prepping all the time.
Ok, AAP police. Wow. Some people come on here to literally put down 7 and 8 year olds. I thought the point of this board was for parents to share info and help each other out, not slam other parents and their kids. You have an awful lot of time on your hands to come on just to be so rude. Wake up. What planet are you living in? Please contact all the Mathnasiums, Kumons, Russian School of Mathematics, Sylvan Learning etc. and tell them they are not allowed to take anyone who will apply for AAP. I guess the AAP board needs to eliminate anyone who takes additional enrichment. And let’s not forget te kids who play instruments. Gifted kids should automatically know how to play every instrument. They should also not be coached for athletics. They should automatically be star athletes. Everyone, please remove your kids from any form of extra-curriculars, enrichment etc that will help them improve academically or otherwise. . If your child is truly gifted, they don’t need any of this. They are born with super powers and should also be able to fly a plane by simply watching a You-tube video. If they can’t, they are not gifted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted children can benefit from tutors. They may be gifted but weren’t born with all the worlds knowledge in their brains, or know instinctively how to study. Not every gifted child excels in every subject area. If your child is just very smart they might not ever need a tutor, but gifted children aren’t just regular kids with a high IQ, they often need support.
This is very true. Our child is 2e and just started with a math tutor. He struggles with math fact memorization, but tested at the 5th grade level in math on the WISC. He just finished up 2nd grade. We sought a tutor to help with the math facts, as we were running out of ideas. Once that is mastered, the tutoring will hopefully keep him stimulated in one of his favorite subjects.
Stop gaming the system and prepping all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted children can benefit from tutors. They may be gifted but weren’t born with all the worlds knowledge in their brains, or know instinctively how to study. Not every gifted child excels in every subject area. If your child is just very smart they might not ever need a tutor, but gifted children aren’t just regular kids with a high IQ, they often need support.
This is very true. Our child is 2e and just started with a math tutor. He struggles with math fact memorization, but tested at the 5th grade level in math on the WISC. He just finished up 2nd grade. We sought a tutor to help with the math facts, as we were running out of ideas. Once that is mastered, the tutoring will hopefully keep him stimulated in one of his favorite subjects.
Anonymous wrote:Gifted children can benefit from tutors. They may be gifted but weren’t born with all the worlds knowledge in their brains, or know instinctively how to study. Not every gifted child excels in every subject area. If your child is just very smart they might not ever need a tutor, but gifted children aren’t just regular kids with a high IQ, they often need support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After being extremely furious about this decision based on my child’s scores, I am thinking at least the silver lining is that it would be much harder and confusing to start AAP all virtual... Who knows? The teachers may not be great etc.
I’m so sorry things didn’t work out for your child but that doesn’t mean you wish ill will towards the other students who were admitted. How petty of you.
I didn't read that into the comment at all, and I'm not sure where you're getting it from.
Thank you. I am the one that posted that. The only thing I meant was that a virtual start to that (and any) program will be more difficult than in person. So it’s ok. My child can try again and maybe he will do better in an in-person situation anyways (as many kids would.) I was certainly not wishing ill on anyone. My son got placed in Level III and even for that, I mean wondering how it will look virtually since no info has been given.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After being extremely furious about this decision based on my child’s scores, I am thinking at least the silver lining is that it would be much harder and confusing to start AAP all virtual... Who knows? The teachers may not be great etc.
I’m so sorry things didn’t work out for your child but that doesn’t mean you wish ill will towards the other students who were admitted. How petty of you.
I didn't read that into the comment at all, and I'm not sure where you're getting it from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After being extremely furious about this decision based on my child’s scores, I am thinking at least the silver lining is that it would be much harder and confusing to start AAP all virtual... Who knows? The teachers may not be great etc.
I’m so sorry things didn’t work out for your child but that doesn’t mean you wish ill will towards the other students who were admitted. How petty of you.
I didn't read that into the comment at all, and I'm not sure where you're getting it from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After being extremely furious about this decision based on my child’s scores, I am thinking at least the silver lining is that it would be much harder and confusing to start AAP all virtual... Who knows? The teachers may not be great etc.
I’m so sorry things didn’t work out for your child but that doesn’t mean you wish ill will towards the other students who were admitted. How petty of you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So every other child I know is in Mathnasium or Kumon. The center owner said they have a TON of AAP kids. So I guess they ALL must not be gifted or advanced.
This. At least half of the kids in my child's AAP class were in Kumon, Mathnasium, RSM, AoPS, or some other tutoring system. If they're trying to guess which kids are being tutored and then keep them out of AAP, they're doing a miserable job.
Also, LOL at the PP who thought that kids who have very high IQs and are advanced are not necessarily AAP material because they aren't showing enough curiosity or enough excitement to be learning. PP, you obviously know nothing at all about gifted ed and gifted children. Gifted programs were created primarily to help the high IQ kids who were underachieving and who were falling through the cracks. It has been documented for a long time that many gifted kids disengage when they already know the material being taught and can't make themselves slog through another worksheet. Or they start having behavioral problems because everything is so incredibly slow.
The kids who the teachers view as curious and excited to learn are the kids who will thrive in any educational setting. If they're stuck in gen ed, they would create their own assignments or challenges, or they would read the entire classroom library. They really don't "need AAP." Kids who have gifted IQs genuinely need gifted programming.
Well, we we joined our younger one in kumon during this summer after she got into AAP as she bored at home and wanted to keep her occupied. Our older kid (also in AAP) started once a week math tutoring (with some homework each day) around 4th grade, which is a little ahead of his class instruction, but gives him more practice and problems to solve. In our experience tutoring isn't really required until 4th grade, but definitely helps afterwords. Also, I believe most of my older kids AAP class goes to some sort of after school enrichment and we thought he would probably fall behind if we didn't do the same. Alternatively, if parents could provide enrichment, it would be great!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who were denied with high scores, it would be very interesting to hear which Center you’re zoned for.
^^This. And if you are at the base school or from a feeder school.
Haycock both base and center