Anonymous wrote:Arlington starts their gifted education in kindergarten. People will leave Fairfax if they can't get any advanced services by 3rd grade. It's already a contentious issue that FCPS has dumbed down their curriculum to work with all the ESOL and FARM kids they are taking in.
Anonymous wrote:What does FARM stand for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:rigidly track children
Tracking should have been eliminated decades ago
It was.
Anonymous wrote:rigidly track children
Tracking should have been eliminated decades ago
rigidly track children
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ what's the point?
I am the pp. Frankly, I used to think that just raising the bar for everyone was the answer. But I realize now that I have had kids, Thai it is not the answer. FWIW, the Eastern European curriculum was based on the assumption that only 30% or so of the top students would go to college and everyone else would be shunted to the vocational track in/after high school. Different kids have different abilities. Some need a more advanced curriculum. Others need the extra help in one subject or another. Unfortunately, differentiation has very negative connotations in this country - people claim that it's racist, classist and what not. Whereas in reality, everyone has different strengths and they should be accommodated as much as possible.
You made the point very clearly. Thanks. The reason I brought it up was to illustrate that no matter the model, it won't work for everyone. The point is, what do you do with the kids that are clueless, do you put them in an advanced curriculum and let them be lost, or do you differentiate their learning, so the can comfortably learn something. The biggest problem is that most parents whose kids aren't advanced can't admit that that is the case, but want every one else to lower their standards. Then they start calling other parents elitist. Also, smart parents will have smart kids, so given the high number of high achiever/smart/well educated parents in parts of the county, you'll have more smarter kids in those areas. Intelligence like every other human attribute is mostly genetic. The same as we inherent physical traits, we also inherent personality and intellectual traits. The problem is that it's a big 'no no' to say that.
If those more affluent areas with a higher number of advanced kids had a different curriculum from the rest of the county, that'd be a big 'no no' too, because it would create disparity in opportunities. Hence we are left with a separate Level of differentiation.
This debate will never end, because there is not a one solution fits all to this problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did I speak slow enough for you monolinguals?
Who you're talking to? You were actually not clear in your statement! The only obvious thing was rage.
So arrogant to think that you are above others because of your beliefs about them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We're again talking in circles. You clearly think that kids with 120s IQs "need" to be separated from the masses and placed in special classrooms. I don't. Could you please cite some sources showing that above average kids simply cannot function in a regular classroom, even with differentiation in core subjects?
They may function, but they are underserved, and end up wasting their time in class. Stays at school for 7hrs with kids that don't get it is mistreating the gift of time. That's cruel. Than they say that the kids are learning a lot, which they aren't. If they let them stay together and let them play outside in the sun a lot, is be ok with that, but I can afford (time wise) to enrich them when they come home so Larla doesn't get left behind. The kids need many more activities than school, and they need to maximize the benefit of the time spent, because they have very busy schedules. Its essentially like going to work full time. Would you like to get stuck in a job with low level workers if you're highly educated? Do you lack the skills to function around those people, or is it just not beneficial for you?
These same kids were served just fine in 2nd grade with switching classes and flexible grouping. Many of the kids didn't even qualify for the advanced math grouping or were middle-of-the pack within the advanced language arts or advanced math groupings. Meanwhile, kids who are actual outliers and poorly served in 2nd grade will continue to be poorly served in AAP, because the bar has been lowered so much. If 120s Larla simply can't be served in the same school as 110s Carla, then how on earth can 130s or 140s Darla be served in AAP with the 120s kids?
Let me guess... You have a 120s kid, and you're desperately clinging to the notion that your child is so special that (s)he "needs AAP".![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We're again talking in circles. You clearly think that kids with 120s IQs "need" to be separated from the masses and placed in special classrooms. I don't. Could you please cite some sources showing that above average kids simply cannot function in a regular classroom, even with differentiation in core subjects?
They may function, but they are underserved, and end up wasting their time in class. Stays at school for 7hrs with kids that don't get it is mistreating the gift of time. That's cruel. Than they say that the kids are learning a lot, which they aren't. If they let them stay together and let them play outside in the sun a lot, is be ok with that, but I can afford (time wise) to enrich them when they come home so Larla doesn't get left behind. The kids need many more activities than school, and they need to maximize the benefit of the time spent, because they have very busy schedules. Its essentially like going to work full time. Would you like to get stuck in a job with low level workers if you're highly educated? Do you lack the skills to function around those people, or is it just not beneficial for you?
These same kids were served just fine in 2nd grade with switching classes and flexible grouping. Many of the kids didn't even qualify for the advanced math grouping or were middle-of-the pack within the advanced language arts or advanced math groupings. Meanwhile, kids who are actual outliers and poorly served in 2nd grade will continue to be poorly served in AAP, because the bar has been lowered so much. If 120s Larla simply can't be served in the same school as 110s Carla, then how on earth can 130s or 140s Darla be served in AAP with the 120s kids?
Let me guess... You have a 120s kid, and you're desperately clinging to the notion that your child is so special that (s)he "needs AAP".![]()
Anonymous wrote:The kids need many more activities than school, and they need to maximize the benefit of the time spent, because they have very busy schedules. Its essentially like going to work full time. Would you like to get stuck in a job with low level workers if you're highly educated? Do you lack the skills to function around those people, or is it just not beneficial for you?