Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this AAP discussion is derailing the discussion on budget cuts. If you want to propose eliminating it, please focus the discussion on budget cuts due to it's expenses verses the outcome of AAP and GE students and not on whether you like it or not. Obviously it's extremely popular and many parents and students love it. My personal opinion is that unless class sizes decrease dramatically, there will be a lot of very unhappy parents in Fairfax if AAP goes away. No one is going to care if you go up to the school board and say "Get rid of AAP because it's divisive" They may try to restructure the program in the future, but it won't necessarily cost less unless you point out how to save money. So other items will still be cut.
Actually didn't they just pay for a study last year that concluded FCPS is using best practices for AAP education? Got an A+ grade as I recall.
Which is hilarious as the study was conducted by GMU (WISC tests, anyone?) at the request of FCPS. http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-06-26/local/40202656_1_independent-study-gifted-program-school-system Several quotes in the article as to this study's lack of credibility. Show us a completely independent and unbiased study, complete with recommendations for improvement.
One quote. By Louise Epstein. Y-ou really have a hard on for the AAP program don't you? [defined in Urban dictionary as an out of proportion vindictiveness toward someone or something.].
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this AAP discussion is derailing the discussion on budget cuts. If you want to propose eliminating it, please focus the discussion on budget cuts due to it's expenses verses the outcome of AAP and GE students and not on whether you like it or not. Obviously it's extremely popular and many parents and students love it. My personal opinion is that unless class sizes decrease dramatically, there will be a lot of very unhappy parents in Fairfax if AAP goes away. No one is going to care if you go up to the school board and say "Get rid of AAP because it's divisive" They may try to restructure the program in the future, but it won't necessarily cost less unless you point out how to save money. So other items will still be cut.
Actually didn't they just pay for a study last year that concluded FCPS is using best practices for AAP education? Got an A+ grade as I recall.
Which is hilarious as the study was conducted by GMU (WISC tests, anyone?) at the request of FCPS. http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-06-26/local/40202656_1_independent-study-gifted-program-school-system Several quotes in the article as to this study's lack of credibility. Show us a completely independent and unbiased study, complete with recommendations for improvement.
us?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The CogAt/FxAT does not measure IQ; these are simply reasoning tests. http://www.riverpub.com/products/cogAt/support.html#4 So scoring high on them does not necessarily indicate a high IQ. Many GE kids are equally intelligent, but just missed the benchmark on those tests. This is why GE students, within center schools especially, feel the stark division of AAP/GE so acutely. It's obvious that most of their AAP counterparts are no "smarter" than they, and yet they (the AAP kids) are receiving special services. This is a program that needs to be cut or deeply overhauled.
If the kids just missed the benchmark, why would their parents not have parent referred?
Speaking as one of those parents, we didn't parent refer because we don't feel AAP is the end-all be-all. AAP is not that much more "advanced" than GE, and we didn't want to go through the whole referral process just so our child could have a meaningless label.
Are you at a center school or non-center school? Did your child take the whole AAP vs. GE thing in stride? I'm wondering if parent attitudes play a role (you didn't make a big deal of it so your child doesn't worry about it either) and if it is easier at a non-center school where the child has classmates who leave the school but doesn't see the AAP classes every day at school.
DC is a GE student at a center school. I'm not sure if the GE/AAP separation really costs more, absent the busing costs. FCPS does spend a decent amount of rescources on GBRS evaluations, putting AAP files together, reviewing files, handling appeals, and administering the NNAT and CogAT. They would save more resources if they'd just allow the teachers to do flexible grouping and team teach within grades. This is what they are doing now for science and social studies. The only separate classes are language arts and math, and they flex group these within AAP and GE already. Why the need to track the students and put all the resources to create the tracks? Seems like a waste.
The bigger problem is the division within the school and the effect tracking has on those in the GE group. DC has struggled with self esteem being in the GE class. DC didn't take it in stride and still comments on how DC thinks DC should be in AAP. We wish we were at a non center school and have considered moving. It would be easier for DC if the constant reminder of AAP wasn't on display daily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this AAP discussion is derailing the discussion on budget cuts. If you want to propose eliminating it, please focus the discussion on budget cuts due to it's expenses verses the outcome of AAP and GE students and not on whether you like it or not. Obviously it's extremely popular and many parents and students love it. My personal opinion is that unless class sizes decrease dramatically, there will be a lot of very unhappy parents in Fairfax if AAP goes away. No one is going to care if you go up to the school board and say "Get rid of AAP because it's divisive" They may try to restructure the program in the future, but it won't necessarily cost less unless you point out how to save money. So other items will still be cut.
Actually didn't they just pay for a study last year that concluded FCPS is using best practices for AAP education? Got an A+ grade as I recall.
Which is hilarious as the study was conducted by GMU (WISC tests, anyone?) at the request of FCPS. http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-06-26/local/40202656_1_independent-study-gifted-program-school-system Several quotes in the article as to this study's lack of credibility. Show us a completely independent and unbiased study, complete with recommendations for improvement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this AAP discussion is derailing the discussion on budget cuts. If you want to propose eliminating it, please focus the discussion on budget cuts due to it's expenses verses the outcome of AAP and GE students and not on whether you like it or not. Obviously it's extremely popular and many parents and students love it. My personal opinion is that unless class sizes decrease dramatically, there will be a lot of very unhappy parents in Fairfax if AAP goes away. No one is going to care if you go up to the school board and say "Get rid of AAP because it's divisive" They may try to restructure the program in the future, but it won't necessarily cost less unless you point out how to save money. So other items will still be cut.
Actually didn't they just pay for a study last year that concluded FCPS is using best practices for AAP education? Got an A+ grade as I recall.
Which is hilarious as the study was conducted by GMU (WISC tests, anyone?) at the request of FCPS. http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-06-26/local/40202656_1_independent-study-gifted-program-school-system Several quotes in the article as to this study's lack of credibility. Show us a completely independent and unbiased study, complete with recommendations for improvement.
Anonymous wrote:The thing is the schools without a lot of AAP students would suffer if AAP went away. Now those neighborhoods do better because by 3rd grade you can go to the center. No one wants to live in an area with only 4-5 AAP level kids and have them stay in the same school without any peers. It's a different story say at Great Falls Elementary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The CogAt/FxAT does not measure IQ; these are simply reasoning tests. http://www.riverpub.com/products/cogAt/support.html#4 So scoring high on them does not necessarily indicate a high IQ. Many GE kids are equally intelligent, but just missed the benchmark on those tests. This is why GE students, within center schools especially, feel the stark division of AAP/GE so acutely. It's obvious that most of their AAP counterparts are no "smarter" than they, and yet they (the AAP kids) are receiving special services. This is a program that needs to be cut or deeply overhauled.
If the kids just missed the benchmark, why would their parents not have parent referred?
Speaking as one of those parents, we didn't parent refer because we don't feel AAP is the end-all be-all. AAP is not that much more "advanced" than GE, and we didn't want to go through the whole referral process just so our child could have a meaningless label.
Are you at a center school or non-center school? Did your child take the whole AAP vs. GE thing in stride? I'm wondering if parent attitudes play a role (you didn't make a big deal of it so your child doesn't worry about it either) and if it is easier at a non-center school where the child has classmates who leave the school but doesn't see the AAP classes every day at school.
DC is a GE student at a center school. I'm not sure if the GE/AAP separation really costs more, absent the busing costs. FCPS does spend a decent amount of rescources on GBRS evaluations, putting AAP files together, reviewing files, handling appeals, and administering the NNAT and CogAT. They would save more resources if they'd just allow the teachers to do flexible grouping and team teach within grades. This is what they are doing now for science and social studies. The only separate classes are language arts and math, and they flex group these within AAP and GE already. Why the need to track the students and put all the resources to create the tracks? Seems like a waste.
The bigger problem is the division within the school and the effect tracking has on those in the GE group. DC has struggled with self esteem being in the GE class. DC didn't take it in stride and still comments on how DC thinks DC should be in AAP. We wish we were at a non center school and have considered moving. It would be easier for DC if the constant reminder of AAP wasn't on display daily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The CogAt/FxAT does not measure IQ; these are simply reasoning tests. http://www.riverpub.com/products/cogAt/support.html#4 So scoring high on them does not necessarily indicate a high IQ. Many GE kids are equally intelligent, but just missed the benchmark on those tests. This is why GE students, within center schools especially, feel the stark division of AAP/GE so acutely. It's obvious that most of their AAP counterparts are no "smarter" than they, and yet they (the AAP kids) are receiving special services. This is a program that needs to be cut or deeply overhauled.
If the kids just missed the benchmark, why would their parents not have parent referred?
Speaking as one of those parents, we didn't parent refer because we don't feel AAP is the end-all be-all. AAP is not that much more "advanced" than GE, and we didn't want to go through the whole referral process just so our child could have a meaningless label.
Are you at a center school or non-center school? Did your child take the whole AAP vs. GE thing in stride? I'm wondering if parent attitudes play a role (you didn't make a big deal of it so your child doesn't worry about it either) and if it is easier at a non-center school where the child has classmates who leave the school but doesn't see the AAP classes every day at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The CogAt/FxAT does not measure IQ; these are simply reasoning tests. http://www.riverpub.com/products/cogAt/support.html#4 So scoring high on them does not necessarily indicate a high IQ. Many GE kids are equally intelligent, but just missed the benchmark on those tests. This is why GE students, within center schools especially, feel the stark division of AAP/GE so acutely. It's obvious that most of their AAP counterparts are no "smarter" than they, and yet they (the AAP kids) are receiving special services. This is a program that needs to be cut or deeply overhauled.
If the kids just missed the benchmark, why would their parents not have parent referred?
Speaking as one of those parents, we didn't parent refer because we don't feel AAP is the end-all be-all. AAP is not that much more "advanced" than GE, and we didn't want to go through the whole referral process just so our child could have a meaningless label.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, my article at Rochester SAGE is an op-ed, but the statement cited is supported by Susan Winebrenner's cluster grouping research which finds that removing the gifted students from a class allows the mid-high students to become more proficient and increase their academic self-esteem.
Anonymous wrote:^ Center schools are typically the ones that did have the extra capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this AAP discussion is derailing the discussion on budget cuts. If you want to propose eliminating it, please focus the discussion on budget cuts due to it's expenses verses the outcome of AAP and GE students and not on whether you like it or not. Obviously it's extremely popular and many parents and students love it. My personal opinion is that unless class sizes decrease dramatically, there will be a lot of very unhappy parents in Fairfax if AAP goes away. No one is going to care if you go up to the school board and say "Get rid of AAP because it's divisive" They may try to restructure the program in the future, but it won't necessarily cost less unless you point out how to save money. So other items will still be cut.
Actually didn't they just pay for a study last year that concluded FCPS is using best practices for AAP education? Got an A+ grade as I recall.