Anonymous wrote:Everyone preps. I wish I had known that when my older child was taking these tests. I was completely clueless about AAP and the difference between AAP and General Ed. I thought it was a truly gifted program and if my child was gifted, she'd be chosen. Little did I know it's just a smart kid+prepped kid class.
Anonymous wrote:AAP is not a gifted program. It is an accelerated program, as its name suggests. It used to be called a GT program, but the name was changed to reflect the new nature of the program. I was told that in FFX county, about 50% students receive some form of accelerated service (including different levels of AAP). 25% are in Level IV AAP. In contrast, Montgomery County’s GT Program only admits 3% of the total student population. Loudoun county roughly 10-11%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
The SAT was created in the 1920s and was a modified version of an Army IQ test.
And today it's nothing like that...
For a long time, the Scholastic Aptitude Test was considered an aptitude test, as a PP noted, until Kaplan showed them otherwise.
Since then, they've changed it multiple times and it's very different from the test it used to be. They even changed the name to Scholastic Assessment Test then eventually to just SAT. Just as prepping broke the SAT, prepping is breaking the Cogat and eventually they will do away with it. This hurts gifted URMs who will be undiscovered. But why should families who prep care about other gifted kids?
Yes, SAT evolved and its preparation materials are now freely available on Khan Academy and other online sources which makes it accessible to all kids, including talented URMs. Transparency and equal access are important.
Uh, colleges are dropping the SAT entirely. That hurst URMs. You know that, right?
Many are test optional but SATs can still be submitted. And yes, standardized tests with free materials and open access can help URMs be discovered.
Well, colleges want to get rid of the SATs because, even with free materials, they aren't giving the demographics that the colleges want. So they want to get rid of the test.
Re the Cogat, it's not a "standardized test" or an assessment test. It's supposed to be a more affordable version for schools to use than a full-blown IQ test, that school districts used to use (some still do) on a selected group of students. And no, you're not supposed to study/prep/cheat for an IQ test, but it is preppable/gameable or as PP upthread put it, a "bad test". Since parents have wrecked the Cogat, they'll move to something else. Right now, that something else is the GBRS.
They were some foreign sat scandals. I think that’s what happened. And recycled question.
It is a combination of events. There were foreign cheating scandals. It is not that questions are recycled but that there are recognizable patterns to the types of questions and kids can be taught how to solve the very specific questions on the test. And that prep tends to be concentrated in particular groups of people, primarily people with higher incomes, Caucasians, and Asian kids. Finally, there is academic research that points to cultural bias in the test, particularly in the vocab section.
I remember Kaplan’s arrival on the scene in the 1980’s, I wrote an article on them for my high school newspaper. Very few kids were doing prep at that time, my school was a high SES school, and most of my friends thought the idea of studying for the test on the weekend was horrific and cheating. That had already shifted by the time my younger sibling was in high school 5 years later because people saw how prepping influenced scores and acceptances. It didn’t take long. My high school was a majority/minority high school, with Chinese, Korean, and Japanese kids being in the majority. My younger siblings school was mainly Caucasian, he attended a private school because of learning issues.
Kids can still submit their SAT scores. I believe that the guidance from guidance counselors has been to submit your SAT scores when they are in the range or higher that the school says is the average for their students. Colleges still use them but they have less weight now then they used to. Same thing has happened with the NNAT and the CoGAT for AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe if all kids were judged on only their test scores, I wouldn't bother prepping my DS. But since things like URM, ELL, Young Scholar matter (and he won't get those bonus points) and I don't know how his teacher will evaluate him on GBRS, he needs to do well enough on NNAT and CogAT to be among the top kids at his ES. Not just in pool, but hopefully at top of the pool because he's not an URM. Nobody is under the illusion that all the kids in AAP are "gifted." but it is the more accelerated track in FCPS. I won't pay for a course, but I will buy workbooks to help him put his best foot forward. That's not cheating!
This is very politely worded but tbh sounds like you've spent too much time reading DCUM.
If your kid is gifted, they'll most likely get in. If they aren't, they might get in but also will be fine in gen ed classes. ES isn't FCPS's strong suit but it's fine and students are prepared for MS and HS, which are FCPS's strong suit.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe if all kids were judged on only their test scores, I wouldn't bother prepping my DS. But since things like URM, ELL, Young Scholar matter (and he won't get those bonus points) and I don't know how his teacher will evaluate him on GBRS, he needs to do well enough on NNAT and CogAT to be among the top kids at his ES. Not just in pool, but hopefully at top of the pool because he's not an URM. Nobody is under the illusion that all the kids in AAP are "gifted." but it is the more accelerated track in FCPS. I won't pay for a course, but I will buy workbooks to help him put his best foot forward. That's not cheating!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
The SAT was created in the 1920s and was a modified version of an Army IQ test.
And today it's nothing like that...
For a long time, the Scholastic Aptitude Test was considered an aptitude test, as a PP noted, until Kaplan showed them otherwise.
Since then, they've changed it multiple times and it's very different from the test it used to be. They even changed the name to Scholastic Assessment Test then eventually to just SAT. Just as prepping broke the SAT, prepping is breaking the Cogat and eventually they will do away with it. This hurts gifted URMs who will be undiscovered. But why should families who prep care about other gifted kids?
Yes, SAT evolved and its preparation materials are now freely available on Khan Academy and other online sources which makes it accessible to all kids, including talented URMs. Transparency and equal access are important.
Yes, but that's for chumps. If you want to be prepped you got to pay$$$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
The SAT was created in the 1920s and was a modified version of an Army IQ test.
And today it's nothing like that...
For a long time, the Scholastic Aptitude Test was considered an aptitude test, as a PP noted, until Kaplan showed them otherwise.
Since then, they've changed it multiple times and it's very different from the test it used to be. They even changed the name to Scholastic Assessment Test then eventually to just SAT. Just as prepping broke the SAT, prepping is breaking the Cogat and eventually they will do away with it. This hurts gifted URMs who will be undiscovered. But why should families who prep care about other gifted kids?
Yes, SAT evolved and its preparation materials are now freely available on Khan Academy and other online sources which makes it accessible to all kids, including talented URMs. Transparency and equal access are important.
Yes, but that's for chumps. If you want to be prepped you got to pay$$$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
The SAT was created in the 1920s and was a modified version of an Army IQ test.
And today it's nothing like that...
For a long time, the Scholastic Aptitude Test was considered an aptitude test, as a PP noted, until Kaplan showed them otherwise.
Since then, they've changed it multiple times and it's very different from the test it used to be. They even changed the name to Scholastic Assessment Test then eventually to just SAT. Just as prepping broke the SAT, prepping is breaking the Cogat and eventually they will do away with it. This hurts gifted URMs who will be undiscovered. But why should families who prep care about other gifted kids?
Yes, SAT evolved and its preparation materials are now freely available on Khan Academy and other online sources which makes it accessible to all kids, including talented URMs. Transparency and equal access are important.
Uh, colleges are dropping the SAT entirely. That hurst URMs. You know that, right?
Many are test optional but SATs can still be submitted. And yes, standardized tests with free materials and open access can help URMs be discovered.
Well, colleges want to get rid of the SATs because, even with free materials, they aren't giving the demographics that the colleges want. So they want to get rid of the test.
Re the Cogat, it's not a "standardized test" or an assessment test. It's supposed to be a more affordable version for schools to use than a full-blown IQ test, that school districts used to use (some still do) on a selected group of students. And no, you're not supposed to study/prep/cheat for an IQ test, but it is preppable/gameable or as PP upthread put it, a "bad test". Since parents have wrecked the Cogat, they'll move to something else. Right now, that something else is the GBRS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the 1970s and 80s, kids were told that they couldn't/shouldn't study for the SAT. That it was a measure of their innate ability.
Look how far we've come.
No one I know has ever been told this. This is a knowledge test. OF COURSE you should prep.
The SAT was created in the 1920s and was a modified version of an Army IQ test.
And today it's nothing like that...
For a long time, the Scholastic Aptitude Test was considered an aptitude test, as a PP noted, until Kaplan showed them otherwise.
Since then, they've changed it multiple times and it's very different from the test it used to be. They even changed the name to Scholastic Assessment Test then eventually to just SAT. Just as prepping broke the SAT, prepping is breaking the Cogat and eventually they will do away with it. This hurts gifted URMs who will be undiscovered. But why should families who prep care about other gifted kids?
Yes, SAT evolved and its preparation materials are now freely available on Khan Academy and other online sources which makes it accessible to all kids, including talented URMs. Transparency and equal access are important.