Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The default is that prepping is not widespread. Just because you found some books at a supermarket doesn't make it a widespread phenomenon. You have no data to support it's happening.
How convenient that you decide the default is your position and thus don't need to support it with any evidence.I think the default is that we're just like everywhere else. Widespread prepping is an acknowledged problem for NYC gifted programs. Why would you imagine that we're so different from the people in NYC? I can't find the article right now, but even the authors of the CogAT have noted that the test is being heavily prepped, and that will inflate the scores.
Your viewpoint seems to be that all of the type A, overly obsessed, tiger parents who put their kids in Kumon and prep their kids for TJ are somehow totally chill about whether their kids get into AAP. Also, people in Fairfax are so special that even though prepping is widespread everywhere else that has dedicated gifted programs, with proportionally way too many kids in the top 2%, we don't prep and just legitimately have much more gifted kids than everywhere else. If you want to believe that, it's your prerogative, but the viewpoint is completely illogical.
Are you only defining prepping as attending one of the prep camps? What about the numerous people on this forum who claim that they "aren't prepping," but rather they just got the Amazon workbook or did demo problems on testing mom, just so their kids were "familiar with the test format." Are those people prepping or aren't they? Perhaps our difference in opinion is that I would view all of that as prepping, too. The test was normed assuming that the kids are going in completely blind, other than the handful of official demo problems shown to everyone by the teacher. Any teaching or discussion of the test beyond that could lead to inflated results.
Anonymous wrote:
DP. I also view all of that, classes or workbooks or practice questions, as prepping. But I also think that Fairfax County is very large and that only some portions of it prep and the other portions don't. So the default is prepping here and no prepping there. Although we picked our neighborhood and house because of other factors, I am happy that we happened to pick one of those areas and not the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The default is that prepping is not widespread. Just because you found some books at a supermarket doesn't make it a widespread phenomenon. You have no data to support it's happening.
How convenient that you decide the default is your position and thus don't need to support it with any evidence.I think the default is that we're just like everywhere else. Widespread prepping is an acknowledged problem for NYC gifted programs. Why would you imagine that we're so different from the people in NYC? I can't find the article right now, but even the authors of the CogAT have noted that the test is being heavily prepped, and that will inflate the scores.
Your viewpoint seems to be that all of the type A, overly obsessed, tiger parents who put their kids in Kumon and prep their kids for TJ are somehow totally chill about whether their kids get into AAP. Also, people in Fairfax are so special that even though prepping is widespread everywhere else that has dedicated gifted programs, with proportionally way too many kids in the top 2%, we don't prep and just legitimately have much more gifted kids than everywhere else. If you want to believe that, it's your prerogative, but the viewpoint is completely illogical.
Are you only defining prepping as attending one of the prep camps? What about the numerous people on this forum who claim that they "aren't prepping," but rather they just got the Amazon workbook or did demo problems on testing mom, just so their kids were "familiar with the test format." Are those people prepping or aren't they? Perhaps our difference in opinion is that I would view all of that as prepping, too. The test was normed assuming that the kids are going in completely blind, other than the handful of official demo problems shown to everyone by the teacher. Any teaching or discussion of the test beyond that could lead to inflated results.
Anonymous wrote:
The default is that prepping is not widespread. Just because you found some books at a supermarket doesn't make it a widespread phenomenon. You have no data to support it's happening.
I think the default is that we're just like everywhere else. Widespread prepping is an acknowledged problem for NYC gifted programs. Why would you imagine that we're so different from the people in NYC? I can't find the article right now, but even the authors of the CogAT have noted that the test is being heavily prepped, and that will inflate the scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So what you're saying is that you dont have actual data to support your assertion that prepping is widespread. Okay, thanks.
You have no actual data to support your assertion that few people are prepping. I suspect that people who think prepping is rare have a Lake Wobegon view of Fairfax, and the people who think prepping is widespread think that we're no more special than any other affluent urban area.
Anonymous wrote:
So what you're saying is that you dont have actual data to support your assertion that prepping is widespread. Okay, thanks.
Anonymous wrote:25% is not "most" kids/families.
Anonymous wrote:
That said, we are a Caucasian family who bought a CogAT workbook for our son. He was above the threshold for the NNAT but we wanted him to be comfortable with the way questions were asked on the CogAT.
So anecdotal data but enough that makes me comfortable with the notion that there are a good number of kids who are prepped. Probably less then 25%, just a guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would it be bizarre to talk with other parents about children? I talk to friends, acquaintances, coworkers, about schooling. We share tips all the time.
The bigger question is how do you get stats on who has prepped? You have no aggregate data on that at all. Or if you do (other than prep books at Asian stores), please share
It's considered somewhat tactless to talk about AAP with people whose kids might not qualify. Also, many people don't want to be viewed as tiger moms, so they keep their prepping to themselves.
No one can ever get stats on who has prepped. Saying that you think people are or aren't prepping is meaningless. For my part, I suspect that a lot of people are prepping based on the prevalence of prep books or centers, the over-representation we have in the top 2% on those tests, the sheer number of kids in tutoring programs, and the fact that people admit to prepping for everything else, like IAAT, TJ entrance, etc, making it unlikely that they would be blasé about getting their kids into AAP. Additionally, I know and work with a lot of AAP kids, and while they all seem bright, very few of them seem gifted.
It is known that prepping for gifted entrances tests is rampant in NYC, which also has statistically too many kids in the top few percent. I doubt people here are less driven to get their kids into gifted programs than the people in NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also dont think the test prep is as prevalent as people on DCUM seem to suggest. I hadn't even heard of test prep or taking additional tests for the application until DCUM.
In my community it is quite common.
By community do you mean your neighborhood, circle of friends, ...?
Anonymous wrote:
Why would it be bizarre to talk with other parents about children? I talk to friends, acquaintances, coworkers, about schooling. We share tips all the time.
The bigger question is how do you get stats on who has prepped? You have no aggregate data on that at all. Or if you do (other than prep books at Asian stores), please share