Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone’s gotten the acceptance form or the website to work?
I received an updated email this afternoon indicating to reply with the decision by email. The email also included the expected bus stop location for the center school.
That’s odd. We didn’t get one. What school is your child in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone’s gotten the acceptance form or the website to work?
I received an updated email this afternoon indicating to reply with the decision by email. The email also included the expected bus stop location for the center school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone’s gotten the acceptance form or the website to work?
I received an updated email this afternoon indicating to reply with the decision by email. The email also included the expected bus stop location for the center school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a bunch of idiots posting here to rub in the denial, blaming it on using the $9 CogAT/NNAT workbooks. I was such an idiot too, but I got my treatment done and am on meds now. But I confess whenever I get the itch, I do come here and post "prepping". please send prayers, atleast I am trying to not be a low life.
I'm the PP who first brought up the prepping, but not in the way you're assuming. If PP's kid wasn't enrolled in some sort of heavy duty CogAT cram program, then the 139 is a very high score. A kid with a score well into the 99th percentile should be included in a program that admits 16% of all FCPS 2nd graders, even if the kid attends a high SES school. PP likely should appeal. If they're reluctant, they should at least schedule a meeting with the AART to find out what advanced options their school has for advanced kids.
My child did one Cogat workbook so she was familiar with the type of questions that would be asked. Is that prepping?
You seem like an insecure parent. Why are you asking for permission to buy one or ten cogat workbooks for your child? Do what you can afford. If you are rich, you should have enrolled them in private preschools that makes high cogat scores possible or if you are poor like me buy workbooks.
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LOL, no, not insecure at all and obviously not asking for your permission, since I bought the workbook many months ago. Also, what is your weird ass obsession with private preschools and why do you keep posting about this everywhere? Maybe you're the insecure one since you didn't send your child to preschool?
Anonymous wrote:Anyone’s gotten the acceptance form or the website to work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a bunch of idiots posting here to rub in the denial, blaming it on using the $9 CogAT/NNAT workbooks. I was such an idiot too, but I got my treatment done and am on meds now. But I confess whenever I get the itch, I do come here and post "prepping". please send prayers, atleast I am trying to not be a low life.
I'm the PP who first brought up the prepping, but not in the way you're assuming. If PP's kid wasn't enrolled in some sort of heavy duty CogAT cram program, then the 139 is a very high score. A kid with a score well into the 99th percentile should be included in a program that admits 16% of all FCPS 2nd graders, even if the kid attends a high SES school. PP likely should appeal. If they're reluctant, they should at least schedule a meeting with the AART to find out what advanced options their school has for advanced kids.
My child did one Cogat workbook so she was familiar with the type of questions that would be asked. Is that prepping?
You seem like an insecure parent. Why are you asking for permission to buy one or ten cogat workbooks for your child? Do what you can afford. If you are rich, you should have enrolled them in private preschools that makes high cogat scores possible or if you are poor like me buy workbooks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a bunch of idiots posting here to rub in the denial, blaming it on using the $9 CogAT/NNAT workbooks. I was such an idiot too, but I got my treatment done and am on meds now. But I confess whenever I get the itch, I do come here and post "prepping". please send prayers, atleast I am trying to not be a low life.
I'm the PP who first brought up the prepping, but not in the way you're assuming. If PP's kid wasn't enrolled in some sort of heavy duty CogAT cram program, then the 139 is a very high score. A kid with a score well into the 99th percentile should be included in a program that admits 16% of all FCPS 2nd graders, even if the kid attends a high SES school. PP likely should appeal. If they're reluctant, they should at least schedule a meeting with the AART to find out what advanced options their school has for advanced kids.
A 99%tile on a single test does not a genius make.
I agree that appealing is the right move, given the variation in offers/rejections.
Anonymous wrote:General question - If your child got accepted into Level IV, would you still request HOPE score from the school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:General question - If your child got accepted into Level IV, would you still request HOPE score from the school?
No
Anonymous wrote:General question - If your child got accepted into Level IV, would you still request HOPE score from the school?