Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.
If thats true then I don’t understand why he didn’t qualify if the map r is above 85th percentile??
For low farms schools, the top 15% is apparently around 95% or higher.
For moderate low farms schools, it's around 92%.
For high farms schools, it's around 60%, with more in between.
MCPS documents with the exact numbers have been linked here in the not-too-distant past.
You're talking about middle school magnet cutoffs, not CES norms.
Nope I'm talking about CES cutoffs. A document containing them was posted here based on FARMS rate a month or two ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.
If thats true then I don’t understand why he didn’t qualify if the map r is above 85th percentile??
For low farms schools, the top 15% is apparently around 95% or higher.
For moderate low farms schools, it's around 92%.
For high farms schools, it's around 60%, with more in between.
MCPS documents with the exact numbers have been linked here in the not-too-distant past.
You're talking about middle school magnet cutoffs, not CES norms.
Nope I'm talking about CES cutoffs. A document containing them was posted here based on FARMS rate a month or two ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.
If thats true then I don’t understand why he didn’t qualify if the map r is above 85th percentile??
For low farms schools, the top 15% is apparently around 95% or higher.
For moderate low farms schools, it's around 92%.
For high farms schools, it's around 60%, with more in between.
MCPS documents with the exact numbers have been linked here in the not-too-distant past.
You're talking about middle school magnet cutoffs, not CES norms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.
If thats true then I don’t understand why he didn’t qualify if the map r is above 85th percentile??
For low farms schools, the top 15% is apparently around 95% or higher.
For moderate low farms schools, it's around 92%.
For high farms schools, it's around 60%, with more in between.
MCPS documents with the exact numbers have been linked here in the not-too-distant past.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what the criteria was to get entered into the lottery?
Last I knew it was something like the top 20% using local norms. The actual values have been posted, but at a low FARMS school, that may be 95th% and above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.
If thats true then I don’t understand why he didn’t qualify if the map r is above 85th percentile??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
The lottery qualification is based on locally normed MAP-R scores. Your son may not be in the top 15th percentile within SES-matched schools.
What does that even mean? Top 15th percentile within ses matched school? Do you mean that if the map r score was 90th percentile than it can still not be in the top 15th percentile?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
Are you sure kid’s in 3rd grade, and is reading at least grade level? If so you should just contact the program to get clarification.
Wtf?? Yes he is in 3rd grade and reading above grade level. And yes he has A’s on the report card and yes MAP-R is well above 85th. Now can someone tell me if you kid from a W feeder school qualified for the pool with MAP-R above 85? 86? Where is the cut off?
I don’t care about ces as that was a long shot anyway but i hoped he would get enrichment at home school but this letter might not qualify him for that even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
The lottery qualification is based on locally normed MAP-R scores. Your son may not be in the top 15th percentile within SES-matched schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
Are you sure kid’s in 3rd grade, and is reading at least grade level? If so you should just contact the program to get clarification.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a W feeder school, did not make it to the lottery pool even … wtf
So, being at a W feeder automatically qualifies your kid? wtf
Actually I meant the opposite. Not sure what stats you need to qualify from a W feeder as my kid has the stats required but i am
Sure the cut off for low farms school is higher and therefore my kid did not qualify.
If the kid didn’t make the lottery pool, then they didn’t meet the basic score requirements of report card and top 15 percentile MAP-R.
But that’s what I am telling you. He did. Report card is straight A’s and the map r was above 85th so there must be a different cut off for our w feeder school.
It will be helpful if people can post the mapr scores for qualifying students. It would take the guesswork out.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think W feeders has higher cut off than the rest. Just the pool of qualified kids is larger.