Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NNAT: 108
COGAT: (V / Q / NV / Composite) 119/132/124 Composite 130
GBRS: (#Consistent / #Frequent / #Occasional) 2 consistent and 2 frequent
In-Pool: (Y/N) : Y
Parent Referral: (Y/N): Letter only, no work samples
WISC: NO
Zip Code: 22180
AAP Decision: (IN / NOT IN) - IN
I am completely surprised given her test results! I really thought I she would not get in without a WISC test.
Congrats. Louise Archer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NNAT 119
Cogat 132 (v 132 / q 128 / nv 126)
GBRS ?
Not in.
I’m thinking about appealing. Do I have to schedule a WISC?
This was my post and I just got her packet. GBRS were 2 consistently and the rest were frequently. Great teacher comments. DRA is 34. Area of strength in both math and reading. I did not submit any work samples and the ones submitted were really terrible. All 4s on report cards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:NNAT 112
CogAT Composite 135 (127/136/128)
Don't know GBRS
DRA 28
Not In![]()
I'm surprised because CogAT overall was 99th % for age, 96th% local.
Surprised by this one too.
I am this PP. We provided parent questionnaire and referral form (was in-pool also). Did not do a WISC.
Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:NNAT 112
CogAT Composite 135 (127/136/128)
Don't know GBRS
DRA 28
Not In![]()
I'm surprised because CogAT overall was 99th % for age, 96th% local.
Surprised by this one too.
\Anonymous wrote:NNAT 112
CogAT Composite 135 (127/136/128)
Don't know GBRS
DRA 28
Not In![]()
I'm surprised because CogAT overall was 99th % for age, 96th% local.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NNAT 119
Cogat 132 (v 132 / q 128 / nv 126)
GBRS ?
Not in.
I’m thinking about appealing. Do I have to schedule a WISC?
This was my post and I just got her packet. GBRS were 2 consistently and the rest were frequently. Great teacher comments. DRA is 34. Area of strength in both math and reading. I did not submit any work samples and the ones submitted were really terrible. All 4s on report cards.
Anonymous wrote:NNAT 119
Cogat 132 (v 132 / q 128 / nv 126)
GBRS ?
Not in.
I’m thinking about appealing. Do I have to schedule a WISC?
Anonymous wrote:Is anyone else getting the sense that without the numeric GBRS, the teacher commentary becomes a total mystery? Like if you have a teacher who is great at saving samples and writing commentary, that makes much more of a difference without the numeric number for the committee to look at.
Anonymous wrote:
NNAT: 108
COGAT: (V / Q / NV / Composite) 119/132/124 Composite 130
GBRS: (#Consistent / #Frequent / #Occasional) 2 consistent and 2 frequent
In-Pool: (Y/N) : Y
Parent Referral: (Y/N): Letter only, no work samples
WISC: NO
Zip Code: 22180
AAP Decision: (IN / NOT IN) - IN
I am completely surprised given her test results! I really thought I she would not get in without a WISC test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Level 3 is a joke at our school. 1-2 hours a month with a part time art.
exactly. That is why there is such a push to get kids into Level 4 -- b/c there is a cliff b/t level 3 and level 4. It's an "all" or "almost-nothing" situation.
If they are in level 3 plus highest math and highest reading group it shouldn’t be a huge difference.
are you not getting it? Level 3 = 45 min. in ONE subject each quarter for 45 min per week. So, if you are in "Level 3" at my kids' elem. school, and if you are lucky enough to get the pull outs each quarter (that is not guaranteed even if your CogAT is 130), then the most you can get is 45 min (TOTAL) per week for about 6 weeks out of each quarter. I think that IS a "huge difference" compared to fulltime AAP at a center.
My Level III child gets advanced math every day (which is the same as AAP math), above grade level language arts materials every day along with the other kids in the highest reading group, advanced word study grouping once per week, the 1 hour AAP pull out once/week, and some academic extracurriculars available only to the kids in Level III. I know these services are school-based and not standardized across all FCPS schools, but they ought to be. Level III looks much less dismal when you at least get advanced math, advanced language arts groups, and teachers who differentiate for their strongest students.
My LIV child's AAP center does not offer advanced math to gen ed students at all until 5th or 6th grade, which is a shame for the gen ed kids who are talented in math.
This is the same at my LLIV school. The Level III kids go to the AAP class for math and/or advanced language arts (some kids are both, some only one subject) and get an AAP pullout once a week. And since the AAP kids generally follow the same curriculum as Gen Ed (with the exception of advanced math), it's not a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out of curiosity, what are the odds of a child who is in the referral pool NOT getting in?
I don't know the odds but my oldest did not initially get into Level 4 when he was in the pool in 2nd grade.
My kid was "in the pool" this year based on her test scores and did not get in. Her older sister had much lower test scores and a lower reading level and was in the first round after I parent-referred. This seems like such a crap shoot.