Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be ready to write a good appeal letter, and read up on all the literature on giftedness. The GBRS is very subjective, especially if you have a truly gifted child (they pick up on teachers’ mistakes all the time and tends to give their opinions in the middle of lectures, yes I got emails from his 2nd grade teacher complaining about that). My child had 160 NNAT, 144 CoGAT, still had to do an appeal, with an 154 WISC and a good appeal letter to explain what truly gifted is they couldn’t deny him. He’s doing great now in the AAP center, and loves him new teacher, no more frustrations with the teacher in class.
Serious question: How can your child be happy in AAP if they are so truly gifted? Isn't AAP full of kids who are merely bright and helpful?
I also wonder why being liked or disliked by one's teacher matters so much. I mean, what does that have to do with the day-to-day experience in AAP vs gen ed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. encourage him to express his idea by drawing. Work sample is important, either from the teacher or the parents. If he's good at writing, great, but drawing is easier to express his idea, esp. the complicated ones that get her into AAP. I've seen girls draw intricate decoration patterns around her writing, boys draw the video game they are designing, etc.
2. test prep. There is a march test for 1st grade NNAT. I joined testingmom.com around Xmas in my son's first grade, $100 lifetime membership (it was Xmas sales down from $150). Both NNAT and CoGat are computer based test so I just let my son to do testing mom's NNAT test on the desktop or ipad for two months, mostly weekends, around 40 questions per session, all together or broken up into 2 or 4 sittings. He got it right or get it wrong, we talk about the wrong ones. That's pretty much it. The test questions tends to be more difficult than the real test, so don't let that scare you.
I heard from others that fee based tutoring also uses testing mom. I mean, there isn't much to "prep" anyway. The kid either get it or not.
3. There are four iReady tests in first grade, that will give you a sense of where your kid is. My son was 95% and up without me doing anything, so I didn't bother with iReady "prep"ing on testingmom, but I heard some crazy parents do that.
LOL it is not crazy to prep for the NNAT in first grade but it is crazy to prep for the iReady?
DS has been in the 99th percentile on every iready and didn’t need test prep to be in the 99th percentile in the NNAT or the CoGAT.
What is crazy is the amount of angst on that parents put themselves through for a few years to get into AAP. It just isn’t that special. If you are that worried about the “cohort” enter the lottery for one of the language immersion programs that starts in K or 1rst grade. The classes end up looking a lot like AAP classes, fewer kids who need a ton of time from the teacher, and most of the kids end up in Advanced Math. Then you can focus on school and stop trying to figure out the magical formula for AAP and worrying about changing school in third grade to move to the Center. Bonus: The kids are challenged with learning a new language and develop a decent base that will let them take a foreign language for high school credit for 2 years in MS instead of one.
But I guess the LI programs don’t give your kid the label that you are after.
Anonymous wrote:Be ready to write a good appeal letter, and read up on all the literature on giftedness. The GBRS is very subjective, especially if you have a truly gifted child (they pick up on teachers’ mistakes all the time and tends to give their opinions in the middle of lectures, yes I got emails from his 2nd grade teacher complaining about that). My child had 160 NNAT, 144 CoGAT, still had to do an appeal, with an 154 WISC and a good appeal letter to explain what truly gifted is they couldn’t deny him. He’s doing great now in the AAP center, and loves him new teacher, no more frustrations with the teacher in class.
Anonymous wrote:1. encourage him to express his idea by drawing. Work sample is important, either from the teacher or the parents. If he's good at writing, great, but drawing is easier to express his idea, esp. the complicated ones that get her into AAP. I've seen girls draw intricate decoration patterns around her writing, boys draw the video game they are designing, etc.
2. test prep. There is a march test for 1st grade NNAT. I joined testingmom.com around Xmas in my son's first grade, $100 lifetime membership (it was Xmas sales down from $150). Both NNAT and CoGat are computer based test so I just let my son to do testing mom's NNAT test on the desktop or ipad for two months, mostly weekends, around 40 questions per session, all together or broken up into 2 or 4 sittings. He got it right or get it wrong, we talk about the wrong ones. That's pretty much it. The test questions tends to be more difficult than the real test, so don't let that scare you.
I heard from others that fee based tutoring also uses testing mom. I mean, there isn't much to "prep" anyway. The kid either get it or not.
3. There are four iReady tests in first grade, that will give you a sense of where your kid is. My son was 95% and up without me doing anything, so I didn't bother with iReady "prep"ing on testingmom, but I heard some crazy parents do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Join the PTA!! At our school, all the AAP kids have PTA parents.
Yes this too. I'm the one that made the room mom comment earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Join the PTA!! At our school, all the AAP kids have PTA parents.
Anonymous wrote:My DS”s handwriting is atrocious and his art work is crap, love the boy but his writing is just bad and he is not an artist. He was accepted into LIV first round. He did well in school, had strong test scores (135], and good GBRS (3CO, 1FO). He dis used things he learned outside of school that related to what they were doing in class. He read books that tied into what they were learning in class when he finished his work. He did the extra work available and then read or wrote stories for fun. He is an easy going kid who doesn’t get in trouble in class.
We read to him at home, played lots of games, and went to some museums. He plays sports and does Scouts. There is no magic formula.