Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think, in general, kids are different now, however. For goodness sakes, look at how high our kids in this area score on the CogAT compared to nationwide. I grew up in this area, was in the "GT" program back then (when it was supposed to be so exclusive) and think that overall kids are much brighter now. Think of kindergarten alone - much more academic, full day, many kids are advanced readers, etc.
Why do people equate early/advanced readers with intelligence- when reading ability, especially in the first half of ES, is not highly correlated to intelligence?
Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
Anonymous wrote:I think, in general, kids are different now, however. For goodness sakes, look at how high our kids in this area score on the CogAT compared to nationwide. I grew up in this area, was in the "GT" program back then (when it was supposed to be so exclusive) and think that overall kids are much brighter now. Think of kindergarten alone - much more academic, full day, many kids are advanced readers, etc.
) and think that overall kids are much brighter now. Think of kindergarten alone - much more academic, full day, many kids are advanced readers, etc.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Very true. grew up in FCPS in the 70/80s and knew maybe 1 or 2 kids who were in GT. Very few parents discussed.
+1
It was a total non-issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Most kids are still in Gen Ed. Folks who say otherwise are either talking about their own unique neighborhood stats or are zoned for an overcrowded center that makes it seem like most kids are designated AAP. Our school sent only a handful to 3rd grade center. And no, we're not "low SES".
I'm talking about a huge area of the county, not just one specific neighborhood. Most of the kids around here (Vienna, Oakton, Great Falls, McLean, Chantilly) are in AAP.
Really? Are you referring to elementary school Level IV AAP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Most kids are still in Gen Ed. Folks who say otherwise are either talking about their own unique neighborhood stats or are zoned for an overcrowded center that makes it seem like most kids are designated AAP. Our school sent only a handful to 3rd grade center. And no, we're not "low SES".
I'm talking about a huge area of the county, not just one specific neighborhood. Most of the kids around here (Vienna, Oakton, Great Falls, McLean, Chantilly) are in AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Most kids are still in Gen Ed. Folks who say otherwise are either talking about their own unique neighborhood stats or are zoned for an overcrowded center that makes it seem like most kids are designated AAP. Our school sent only a handful to 3rd grade center. And no, we're not "low SES".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Very true. grew up in FCPS in the 70/80s and knew maybe 1 or 2 kids who were in GT. Very few parents discussed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Not the PP - you may not like hearing it, but it is the truth. The GT program was a far different animal than AAP of today. The kids in GT were truly exceptional (high IQ) and everyone knew it. There was no resentment because most kids were in General Ed. GT was reserved for kids with exceptional ability. There is no way anyone could argue that AAP comes anywhere close to that model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?
It is ridiculous. You hear this argument all the time: it was a gifted program when my kid went, but not now. Translation: Her kid really needed the program b/c her kid is really gifted. Today's program is not a gifted program and the children currently in it are not really that bright...well, compared to her kid.
Anonymous wrote:This is the result of turning a gifted program into advanced academics. When my son was in the GT program, the whole point was the busy work and unnecessary homework went away. He was very engaged in his school work, at school, but not doing heaps of h homework at night because he and his classmates "got" what they were teaching and didn't need all the repetition.
What year was that?