Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, hard to see 8 parents divulging specific scores on TWO tests to you taken a year apart. Unless...you also are a Wisc administerer.
I've had 5 people divulge both scores to me in the parent referral process because I have older kids in AAP and my youngest is friends with their kids. They basically asked if I thought the scores were worth referring. I don't know the GBRS because at that point they didn't know it either, but they did told me the NNAT and CogAT. Some people talk openly about scores, some treat scores as very private. 4 had both scores in the 120s and all of them got in. One didn't because one score was below 120. Based on that, I'd say 122 on the NNAT is not a deal breaker.
That's my experience too. No one said anything about SPECIFIC scores. Parent A says that the AART suggested recommending Larla for AAP, but since Larla bombed the NNAT and only scored in the low 120s on the CogAT, she is wondering whether that is too low. Parent B replies that all 3 of her kids had scores similar to that, and they're all doing fine in AAP. Parent C says her kid's NNAT was almost in pool, but CogAT was only high teens, and she wasn't sure about referring either. You're parent D, and you know your own kids' scores. Months later, all of the kids are in AAP. That could easily amount to knowing at least ballpark-wise 8 scores in a single conversation.
122 on the NNAT is definitely not a deal breaker. It's a score that neither hurts nor helps the OP's case.