Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mh child got a 132 on NNAT and COGAT, Oakton Pyramid, not in pool. Not surprised - similar to the OP of the other thread. 99th percentile kid not considered advanced because we're Indian and they're at a high SES school.
I am Indian and I don’t think 132 would cut it regardless, sorry. However you can definitely self refer if you think the teacher will give a good recommendation. Our DS got a 135 and didn’t get in last year but we weren’t surprised because it was 97% and frankly that is an on-the-fence score at our school.
Side note, it is quite embarrassing to hear some Indians griping about problems with equity. Not all of us agree with this mindset!
A 135 is not 97%
Sorry you’re right - 98%. My kid still didn’t get in last year with the 135.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are applying to the AAP program from a K-12 private and our DS is a second grader. We will be requesting their HOPE and their WISC-V results are FSIQ 136, GAI 138, both 99%. How does this compare to COGAT/NNAT scores?
WISC is more accurate and that’s a solid score. No idea how the AAP process works from private school but that score won’t be the issue if your child doesn’t get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mh child got a 132 on NNAT and COGAT, Oakton Pyramid, not in pool. Not surprised - similar to the OP of the other thread. 99th percentile kid not considered advanced because we're Indian and they're at a high SES school.
I am Indian and I don’t think 132 would cut it regardless, sorry. However you can definitely self refer if you think the teacher will give a good recommendation. Our DS got a 135 and didn’t get in last year but we weren’t surprised because it was 97% and frankly that is an on-the-fence score at our school.
Side note, it is quite embarrassing to hear some Indians griping about problems with equity. Not all of us agree with this mindset!
A 135 is not 97%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mh child got a 132 on NNAT and COGAT, Oakton Pyramid, not in pool. Not surprised - similar to the OP of the other thread. 99th percentile kid not considered advanced because we're Indian and they're at a high SES school.
To be honest, your kid’s score is not high enough. Not because you’re Indian, just because there are bunch of kids scored much much better than yours. See how many 140+ we have here.
Anonymous wrote:We are applying to the AAP program from a K-12 private and our DS is a second grader. We will be requesting their HOPE and their WISC-V results are FSIQ 136, GAI 138, both 99%. How does this compare to COGAT/NNAT scores?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mh child got a 132 on NNAT and COGAT, Oakton Pyramid, not in pool. Not surprised - similar to the OP of the other thread. 99th percentile kid not considered advanced because we're Indian and they're at a high SES school.
I am Indian and I don’t think 132 would cut it regardless, sorry. However you can definitely self refer if you think the teacher will give a good recommendation. Our DS got a 135 and didn’t get in last year but we weren’t surprised because it was 97% and frankly that is an on-the-fence score at our school.
Side note, it is quite embarrassing to hear some Indians griping about problems with equity. Not all of us agree with this mindset!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mh child got a 132 on NNAT and COGAT, Oakton Pyramid, not in pool. Not surprised - similar to the OP of the other thread. 99th percentile kid not considered advanced because we're Indian and they're at a high SES school.
To be honest, your kid’s score is not high enough. Not because you’re Indian, just because there are bunch of kids scored much much better than yours. See how many 140+ we have here.