Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all who are curious, here is a full report on exactly how children are selected:
https://montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/sharedaccountability/reports/2019/Enriched%20and%20Accelerated%2028Jan2019%20FINAL.pdf
The instructions to the admissions team say clearly intent of program is academic cohort.
The linked PDF does NOT contain the word cohort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all who are curious, here is a full report on exactly how children are selected:
https://montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/sharedaccountability/reports/2019/Enriched%20and%20Accelerated%2028Jan2019%20FINAL.pdf
The instructions to the admissions team say clearly intent of program is academic cohort.
The linked PDF does NOT contain the word cohort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all who are curious, here is a full report on exactly how children are selected:
https://montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/sharedaccountability/reports/2019/Enriched%20and%20Accelerated%2028Jan2019%20FINAL.pdf
The instructions to the admissions team say clearly intent of program is academic cohort.
Anonymous wrote:For all who are curious, here is a full report on exactly how children are selected:
https://montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/sharedaccountability/reports/2019/Enriched%20and%20Accelerated%2028Jan2019%20FINAL.pdf
Anonymous wrote:I don't think they are using cohort for CES, only for Middle School and not for High School.
Anonymous wrote:Elaborating it's cohort at the home elementary. We were told DD's grade had a lot of high scoreres which were considered a peer group so very few, including one far far out outlier, went from our school.
Anonymous wrote:Folks, take this info with a grain of salt. MCPS has not said what criteria are given the most weight, and I know kids who had higher quant/non-verbal scores than verbal on Cogat and got into a CES (Chevy Chase/Cold Spring.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who says the CES test is weighted higher than other criteria? I don't think that's true. They've provided a list of criteria used but never talked about whether one thing is more important than the next thing.
For the middle schools they used a complicated formula that even included creating percentiles for some tests based on the socieoeconomic tier of the location of your home MS. They've never said whether they did the same for ES or not.
Because I know
What about a child who has 99% map but didn't do too well in the CES test? Does he/she have a good chance of getting into a local center?
In my experience, it depends on which subsection of the CES test they didn't do as well on. There were kids from my child's home school with lower quantitative scores but very high verbal scores and they were admitted to the CES over kids whose results were flipped. This makes sense because all kids in MCPS have access to compacted math, so kids whose strength lies in math will get enrichment at their home school no matter what.