Anonymous
Post 09/08/2023 12:41     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard


There's some cognitive dissonance between the plurality of "above grade level kids who miss the cutoff" and the statement that they "never get a peer group".

Reducing a student to a percentile number sucks, but for simplicity's sake I'll use it here regardless: let's assume for sake of argument that the 80th+ percentile of FCPS students are generally selected in AAP. Then within the Gen Ed classroom there's going to be a cohort of say 65th-79th percentile kids who will be above grade level and clustered/differentiated within that Gen Ed classroom. Just like the AAP class might differentiate the 80-89th percentile kids (vs. the 90-96th percentile kids vs. the 97th+ percentile kids; again, just trying to illustrate the general point). I acknowledge these lines are blurry (e.g. if you test one day vs. the next you might get a few percentile difference) and they vary by subject and so on, and they don't necessarily take into account other factors like home support, potential/talent vs. current achievement, executive functioning, emotional/behavioral issues, and myriad other factors that can all impact a kids ability/readiness to succeed in a given environment and/or their rate of progress.

But for a kid around the 80th percentile, they might wind up in the bottom differentiated cohort within an AAP class, or the top differentiated cohort within a Gen Ed class, but either way they'll generally have an adequate peer group that their either at the top of bottom of.


That is such a shockingly naive view of how AAP selection works. If you look at national percentile ranks, there are many kids who test in the 97th percentile and above who are also above grade level in all subjects, but get rejected from AAP. There are kids who are completely average and below grade level in at least one subject who are admitted into AAP. The line between who gets in and who doesn't is very blurred and somewhat random. It's not like the kids 80th percentile and above (locally) get in and the kids below that are out. Keep in mind that 1/3 of the in-pool kids get rejected, and a lot of kids who were not in-pool get accepted.

(This is at a title I school and a middle of the road AAP center) My older kid scored 97th percentile on the CogAT, had a 15 GBRS, and was above grade level in all subjects. They were rejected from AAP. Pretty much every single kid in the grade who scored a 120+ on CogAT(90th percentile nationally) got admitted. Although they were 2 years above grade level in reading, they often had to be dropped down to an on grade level group, simply because there weren't any other kids above grade level in the classroom. The few years when they had a 1 year above grade level reading group, the group only met with the teacher for 15 minutes every second week. In advanced math, only 3 kids in the entire class (including mine) qualified for Algebra in 7th. My kid got perfect scores on almost every single SOL, and high pass advanced on the rest. There really was no peer group for the smart kids who were mysteriously rejected from AAP.

My younger child, who attended the AAP center, still had a completely inadequate cohort and educational experience. They also were 2 years above grade level in reading, but likewise only got to meet with the teacher at most 15 minutes per week, because the AAP teacher was stuck with kids who were on and below grade level. Math was simply gen ed math given one year earlier, with no real extensions or rigor. This was because many AAP kids were completely incapable of handling the advanced math. My kids school was one of the ones that gave AMC8 to all of the AAP 6th graders, and the scores were pathetic. They proved that the majority of the AAP kids were completely average in math and had no need at all for advanced instruction. Maybe 1/4 of the kids failed to earn the President's award at 6th grade graduation, meaning that they failed to earn a pass advanced on any of their 5th grade SOLs.

A gen ed teacher brought up that in 6th grade, her classroom spanned from kids reading at a K level through kids at an 8th grade level. An AAP classroom might span from kids reading at a 5th grade level through kids at a 9th grade level. This is idiotic and completely defeats the purpose of providing advanced education. It would serve everyone better if the kids who were on and below grade level were all in gen ed, and the kids who were above grade level were in the advanced academic program.

Real gifted programs actually have admissions standards, where kids need high test scores and/or a portfolio showing very advanced work. It's nothing like FCPS AAP, which uses nebulous feelings to decide which kids get to be admitted and which kids aren't. It's idiotic that kids who have the test scores and are advanced are getting rejected just because either the teacher doesn't like them or the admissions panel, when spending their 5 minutes reviewing the file, just weren't feeling it. It's also idiotic that kids who are completely average are getting in because the teacher really liked them or the committee just decides to give them a chance. After they get in, it's absurd that AAP programs cater to the kids who don't belong there at the expense of the kids who do.


But isn't it true that if your child is rejected with good scores you can just keep trying and will eventually prevail? I'm also genuinely wondering how much of your experience is related to your particular school zone. Or is it really like this everywhere.

Don't you think that this is at least better than a true G&T program where many more students who would enjoy the challenge of advanced work would be in a class that has too much variation in ability to be able to address everyone's needs? I agree that such a broad range in AAP also defeats the purpose but is it really the case that most programs have that wide of a range in ability?
Anonymous
Post 09/08/2023 12:31     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


This is an unhinged response.

NP but AAP teachers have the sweetest deals. They have the best, most eager to learn kids, and a curriculum already built for them. She doesn't want to deal with the disruptive kids in gen ed.


I have had disruptive kids in AAP. As a whole, AAP kids have better work habits and want to learn, yes. That doesn’t mean we don’t have other issues. My AAP kids are waaay more sensitive to not doing well and the productive struggle. I have had way more crying in AAP than Gen Ed classes.

As for the curriculum- some of it is already built, but a lot needs to be adapted. The pacing guides for ALL subjects Gen Ed and AAP are messy and not user friendly. They give suggestion on lessons, but it is up to teacher to pick/choose what works best for their class. AAP has moved to a concept based instruction but our schedules don’t really always work to implement it the way they envision. They also don’t always stay paced with the Gen Ed curriculum. I much preferred the old pacing guides for each unit of study.


I appreciate this teacher response and the previous one. I wish there was more reality injected into these threads like this (so much for the idea "It's all the same curriculum; your kid will be fine").

I'm really curious about the teachers' comment re: productive struggle. I don't know if you have any specific examples, but just wondering if the sensitivity could be due to being in over their head or is it more about not liking to be wrong? I would be concerned about my child being in an environment where everyone feels the need to be the best and right all the time. I don't want to nurture that sort of thing.



I am PP. I think for many of these kids, school has been pretty easy. They don’t have to try to hard in the lower grades. So once they get to something that is hard or where they need to put forth more effort they have self doubt and think something is wrong with them. I also think some of my students get a lot of pressure from their parents regarding school, so they stress about not doing well. That seems to be more of a cultural thing though. So I think it is more of an internal struggle vs wanting to be right all the time. Hope that makes sense.


That does make sense, thank you. I was just wondering if it could be that they really are in over their head, because with younger kids at least the interest and effort is there when they are getting material that is pitched just above their level. I might be a bit idealistic in hoping my child can find the struggle interesting rather than indicative that something is wrong with them. No doubt it's part parenting/culture and part temperament/personality (as it is with everything).
Anonymous
Post 09/08/2023 12:28     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard


There's some cognitive dissonance between the plurality of "above grade level kids who miss the cutoff" and the statement that they "never get a peer group".

Reducing a student to a percentile number sucks, but for simplicity's sake I'll use it here regardless: let's assume for sake of argument that the 80th+ percentile of FCPS students are generally selected in AAP. Then within the Gen Ed classroom there's going to be a cohort of say 65th-79th percentile kids who will be above grade level and clustered/differentiated within that Gen Ed classroom. Just like the AAP class might differentiate the 80-89th percentile kids (vs. the 90-96th percentile kids vs. the 97th+ percentile kids; again, just trying to illustrate the general point). I acknowledge these lines are blurry (e.g. if you test one day vs. the next you might get a few percentile difference) and they vary by subject and so on, and they don't necessarily take into account other factors like home support, potential/talent vs. current achievement, executive functioning, emotional/behavioral issues, and myriad other factors that can all impact a kids ability/readiness to succeed in a given environment and/or their rate of progress.

But for a kid around the 80th percentile, they might wind up in the bottom differentiated cohort within an AAP class, or the top differentiated cohort within a Gen Ed class, but either way they'll generally have an adequate peer group that their either at the top of bottom of.


That is such a shockingly naive view of how AAP selection works. If you look at national percentile ranks, there are many kids who test in the 97th percentile and above who are also above grade level in all subjects, but get rejected from AAP. There are kids who are completely average and below grade level in at least one subject who are admitted into AAP. The line between who gets in and who doesn't is very blurred and somewhat random. It's not like the kids 80th percentile and above (locally) get in and the kids below that are out. Keep in mind that 1/3 of the in-pool kids get rejected, and a lot of kids who were not in-pool get accepted.

(This is at a title I school and a middle of the road AAP center) My older kid scored 97th percentile on the CogAT, had a 15 GBRS, and was above grade level in all subjects. They were rejected from AAP. Pretty much every single kid in the grade who scored a 120+ on CogAT(90th percentile nationally) got admitted. Although they were 2 years above grade level in reading, they often had to be dropped down to an on grade level group, simply because there weren't any other kids above grade level in the classroom. The few years when they had a 1 year above grade level reading group, the group only met with the teacher for 15 minutes every second week. In advanced math, only 3 kids in the entire class (including mine) qualified for Algebra in 7th. My kid got perfect scores on almost every single SOL, and high pass advanced on the rest. There really was no peer group for the smart kids who were mysteriously rejected from AAP.

My younger child, who attended the AAP center, still had a completely inadequate cohort and educational experience. They also were 2 years above grade level in reading, but likewise only got to meet with the teacher at most 15 minutes per week, because the AAP teacher was stuck with kids who were on and below grade level. Math was simply gen ed math given one year earlier, with no real extensions or rigor. This was because many AAP kids were completely incapable of handling the advanced math. My kids school was one of the ones that gave AMC8 to all of the AAP 6th graders, and the scores were pathetic. They proved that the majority of the AAP kids were completely average in math and had no need at all for advanced instruction. Maybe 1/4 of the kids failed to earn the President's award at 6th grade graduation, meaning that they failed to earn a pass advanced on any of their 5th grade SOLs.

A gen ed teacher brought up that in 6th grade, her classroom spanned from kids reading at a K level through kids at an 8th grade level. An AAP classroom might span from kids reading at a 5th grade level through kids at a 9th grade level. This is idiotic and completely defeats the purpose of providing advanced education. It would serve everyone better if the kids who were on and below grade level were all in gen ed, and the kids who were above grade level were in the advanced academic program.

Real gifted programs actually have admissions standards, where kids need high test scores and/or a portfolio showing very advanced work. It's nothing like FCPS AAP, which uses nebulous feelings to decide which kids get to be admitted and which kids aren't. It's idiotic that kids who have the test scores and are advanced are getting rejected just because either the teacher doesn't like them or the admissions panel, when spending their 5 minutes reviewing the file, just weren't feeling it. It's also idiotic that kids who are completely average are getting in because the teacher really liked them or the committee just decides to give them a chance. After they get in, it's absurd that AAP programs cater to the kids who don't belong there at the expense of the kids who do.
Anonymous
Post 09/08/2023 11:31     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard


There's some cognitive dissonance between the plurality of "above grade level kids who miss the cutoff" and the statement that they "never get a peer group".

Reducing a student to a percentile number sucks, but for simplicity's sake I'll use it here regardless: let's assume for sake of argument that the 80th+ percentile of FCPS students are generally selected in AAP. Then within the Gen Ed classroom there's going to be a cohort of say 65th-79th percentile kids who will be above grade level and clustered/differentiated within that Gen Ed classroom. Just like the AAP class might differentiate the 80-89th percentile kids (vs. the 90-96th percentile kids vs. the 97th+ percentile kids; again, just trying to illustrate the general point). I acknowledge these lines are blurry (e.g. if you test one day vs. the next you might get a few percentile difference) and they vary by subject and so on, and they don't necessarily take into account other factors like home support, potential/talent vs. current achievement, executive functioning, emotional/behavioral issues, and myriad other factors that can all impact a kids ability/readiness to succeed in a given environment and/or their rate of progress.

But for a kid around the 80th percentile, they might wind up in the bottom differentiated cohort within an AAP class, or the top differentiated cohort within a Gen Ed class, but either way they'll generally have an adequate peer group that their either at the top of bottom of.
Anonymous
Post 09/08/2023 08:28     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard



I am the PP. I think clustering works when you don’t have such a large gap. Schools that have low ESL populations and SpED populations, it would work better because the majority of the kids are on grade level. But schools with larger ESL populations and SPED needs, no one would get what they need. I much prefer ability leveled classes so everyone gets what they need.
ESL and Special Education and Gifted student populations are not separate silos. You can have an ESL student who has an IEP and is gifted.
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 23:03     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.


Not only in northern Virginia, but also in NYC (Stuyvesant), Durham (NCSSM), Reno (Davidson)... Basically in many places where they recognize that gifted students do better when surrounded by other gifted students.


What? No. None of those schools are comparable to AAP. Those schools serve the tippy tippy top kids. Like one school per district, not one class per school.
I can accept that the kids who go to Davidson truly have academic needs that can’t be met in a local public school. That’s not the population that AAP is serving
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 21:27     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


This is an unhinged response.

NP but AAP teachers have the sweetest deals. They have the best, most eager to learn kids, and a curriculum already built for them. She doesn't want to deal with the disruptive kids in gen ed.


I have had disruptive kids in AAP. As a whole, AAP kids have better work habits and want to learn, yes. That doesn’t mean we don’t have other issues. My AAP kids are waaay more sensitive to not doing well and the productive struggle. I have had way more crying in AAP than Gen Ed classes.

As for the curriculum- some of it is already built, but a lot needs to be adapted. The pacing guides for ALL subjects Gen Ed and AAP are messy and not user friendly. They give suggestion on lessons, but it is up to teacher to pick/choose what works best for their class. AAP has moved to a concept based instruction but our schedules don’t really always work to implement it the way they envision. They also don’t always stay paced with the Gen Ed curriculum. I much preferred the old pacing guides for each unit of study.


I appreciate this teacher response and the previous one. I wish there was more reality injected into these threads like this (so much for the idea "It's all the same curriculum; your kid will be fine").

I'm really curious about the teachers' comment re: productive struggle. I don't know if you have any specific examples, but just wondering if the sensitivity could be due to being in over their head or is it more about not liking to be wrong? I would be concerned about my child being in an environment where everyone feels the need to be the best and right all the time. I don't want to nurture that sort of thing.



I am PP. I think for many of these kids, school has been pretty easy. They don’t have to try to hard in the lower grades. So once they get to something that is hard or where they need to put forth more effort they have self doubt and think something is wrong with them. I also think some of my students get a lot of pressure from their parents regarding school, so they stress about not doing well. That seems to be more of a cultural thing though. So I think it is more of an internal struggle vs wanting to be right all the time. Hope that makes sense.
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 21:21     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard



I am the PP. I think clustering works when you don’t have such a large gap. Schools that have low ESL populations and SpED populations, it would work better because the majority of the kids are on grade level. But schools with larger ESL populations and SPED needs, no one would get what they need. I much prefer ability leveled classes so everyone gets what they need.
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 10:50     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.


Not only in northern Virginia, but also in NYC (Stuyvesant), Durham (NCSSM), Reno (Davidson)... Basically in many places where they recognize that gifted students do better when surrounded by other gifted students.


Those are high schools. I agree that we should follow that model. LLIV would be much less of a drag on resources if it disappeared


DP. Many school districts have a GT program. Sometimes it is a one-hour pull out program, sometimes it is a one day program. When I was a child, our program did both of those in different years. The one day program was a lot better because we were all bused to one school and spent the day together. The full time program of FCPS is unusual but not bad or wrong. I'm glad my kids got to have it and feel bad that younger children will not get it when it is finally dismantled.


PP here. NYC, Durham, and Davidson have magnet schools for elementary/middle schoolers where the entire student bodies are gifted. This is even more segregated than the FCPS model. If you want FCPS to emulate that, FCPS would start TJ elementary and TJ middle schools.

FWIW, AAP is an advanced academics program (top 10-20%), not a gifted or magnet program (top 2-5%).
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 08:02     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.


Not only in northern Virginia, but also in NYC (Stuyvesant), Durham (NCSSM), Reno (Davidson)... Basically in many places where they recognize that gifted students do better when surrounded by other gifted students.


Those are high schools. I agree that we should follow that model. LLIV would be much less of a drag on resources if it disappeared


DP. Many school districts have a GT program. Sometimes it is a one-hour pull out program, sometimes it is a one day program. When I was a child, our program did both of those in different years. The one day program was a lot better because we were all bused to one school and spent the day together. The full time program of FCPS is unusual but not bad or wrong. I'm glad my kids got to have it and feel bad that younger children will not get it when it is finally dismantled.
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 07:45     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


I am the PP. I taught Gen Ed for years. In my Gen Ed, 6th grade classroom I had kids reading at a Kindergarten classroom all the way through an 8th grade level. It is too much for one person to differentiate that much. I switched to AAP and while I do have some lower readers, the gap is not as large and is more manageable. I have many Gen Ed kids in my class. So, I don’t think I am too good for Gen Ed. I think what they are asking of teachers is IMPOSSIBLE!

So by going back to Clustering, I would be back at square 1 with doing the impossible.

I am a great teacher and I love my job. I just want to be able to do my job effectively and have a work/life balance. I am sorry you interpreted my message as I am too good for Gen Ed.

As is, teaching is hard. I would be shocked if I made it the full 30 years. I wish the county made our jobs easier vs harder.



Clustering at least acknowledges those kids reading at the 8th grade level that you had. AAP just ensures that the above grade level kids who miss the cutoff never get a peer group and get ignored by teachers who think differentiation is too hard
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 07:43     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.


Not only in northern Virginia, but also in NYC (Stuyvesant), Durham (NCSSM), Reno (Davidson)... Basically in many places where they recognize that gifted students do better when surrounded by other gifted students.


Those are high schools. I agree that we should follow that model. LLIV would be much less of a drag on resources if it disappeared
Anonymous
Post 09/07/2023 07:40     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why are you against the Center?


I’m not the OP, but I really wish we didn’t have to choose the center to get a non cluster model. The bus ride is nearly an hour, it feeds into a different high school than his base (so friends won’t stick around), and he doesn’t get to know the neighborhood kids (we moved here in 3rd grade)


I think you're confused about what is and is not clustering. LLIV programs have ALWAYS been a mix of LLIV and principal placed LIII children. That's NOT clustering, it's just filling the classroom. Clustering is when a school doesn't have an LLIV classroom at all but separates out kids for advanced math.


Wait, what? So clustering means...no LLIV for any subject but math (pull outs)? Or is it there some attempt at differentiation within the classroom for other subjects? Or does the meaning of clustering depend on the school?

Also, just curious if anyone knows how long clustering has been a thing in FCPS? Sounds like it's happening more with the increase in LLIV programs but has it always been done?


I think the newer programs (within the last couple of years) started doing the cluster model. Then a few schools changed to it as well that had established programs. There are still schools with 1 Local Level 4 class per grade. Kids who are not Level 4 are principal placed.


Clustering sounds like a good way to ignore the AAP kids since I don't expect a teacher to be able to consistently make 2-3 different lessons plans daily. Yay, equity!


AAP teacher here. If my school ever moved to clustering, I would leave.

You are the reason AAP students have the attitude they have. You think you're too good for the general population? What a terrible teacher.


This is an unhinged response.

NP but AAP teachers have the sweetest deals. They have the best, most eager to learn kids, and a curriculum already built for them. She doesn't want to deal with the disruptive kids in gen ed.


I have had disruptive kids in AAP. As a whole, AAP kids have better work habits and want to learn, yes. That doesn’t mean we don’t have other issues. My AAP kids are waaay more sensitive to not doing well and the productive struggle. I have had way more crying in AAP than Gen Ed classes.

As for the curriculum- some of it is already built, but a lot needs to be adapted. The pacing guides for ALL subjects Gen Ed and AAP are messy and not user friendly. They give suggestion on lessons, but it is up to teacher to pick/choose what works best for their class. AAP has moved to a concept based instruction but our schedules don’t really always work to implement it the way they envision. They also don’t always stay paced with the Gen Ed curriculum. I much preferred the old pacing guides for each unit of study.


I appreciate this teacher response and the previous one. I wish there was more reality injected into these threads like this (so much for the idea "It's all the same curriculum; your kid will be fine").

I'm really curious about the teachers' comment re: productive struggle. I don't know if you have any specific examples, but just wondering if the sensitivity could be due to being in over their head or is it more about not liking to be wrong? I would be concerned about my child being in an environment where everyone feels the need to be the best and right all the time. I don't want to nurture that sort of thing.
Anonymous
Post 09/06/2023 22:38     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Anonymous wrote:Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.


Not only in northern Virginia, but also in NYC (Stuyvesant), Durham (NCSSM), Reno (Davidson)... Basically in many places where they recognize that gifted students do better when surrounded by other gifted students.
Anonymous
Post 09/06/2023 22:22     Subject: Which schools only have LIV kids in their LLIV program?

Somehow ALL the other school systems in the country manage with a clustering model but there are just SO many gifted children in FCPS that they require their only classes and schools. ONLY in Northern Virginia, nowhere else. I see.