Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop stereotyping Asian kids on test prepping. My child is an Asian and we did not test prep him, and he did very well on both NNAT and CogNat.
Have you ever walked outside a Kumon or any other prep place? Have you seen the racial composition of the kids who attend such places? I am sorry if you are an exception, but it's not "stereotyping" if something is true for the majority of a population!
What do they do at Kumon???
Prep CogAT??
I think the point is the Asian community places a high level of importance on academic preparedness and success. This of course is not to say that other, individuals and other ethnic groups do not do the same, but in general the Asian culture as a whole has historically promoted a strong work ethic and environment that rewards and recognizes academic excellence. This was examined in the book Outliers (great read), which equates the historic "rice paddy" agrarian societies of Asian with continued meticulous behavior and hard work. It is a good book in that it explains in a very systematic way that many differences between cultures are rooted in history, and passed down from generation to generation. They can be bad or good qualities, but they exist whether our PC environment today likes it or not. Its so intellectually dishonest that one cannot state a statistical fact (note the enrollment of Asians at TJ or in AAP versus the per capita population as a whole for example) without being labeled a "racist".
And to avoid any further( unnecessary) exchanges, no, Asians are not a majority in TJ or AAP because the majority of the general Asian population worldwide (in corresponding percentages) are smarter than the rest of the world. If that were the case, their corresponding countries would dominate all scientific achievements, prizes, inventions and accolades worldwide, which as we all know hasn't happened yet...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop stereotyping Asian kids on test prepping. My child is an Asian and we did not test prep him, and he did very well on both NNAT and CogNat.
Have you ever walked outside a Kumon or any other prep place? Have you seen the racial composition of the kids who attend such places? I am sorry if you are an exception, but it's not "stereotyping" if something is true for the majority of a population!
What do they do at Kumon???
Prep CogAT??
I think the point is the Asian community places a high level of importance on academic preparedness and success. This of course is not to say that other, individuals and other ethnic groups do not do the same, but in general the Asian culture as a whole has historically promoted a strong work ethic and environment that rewards and recognizes academic excellence. This was examined in the book Outliers (great read), which equates the historic "rice paddy" agrarian societies of Asian with continued meticulous behavior and hard work. It is a good book in that it explains in a very systematic way that many differences between cultures are rooted in history, and passed down from generation to generation. They can be bad or good qualities, but they exist whether our PC environment today likes it or not. Its so intellectually dishonest that one cannot state a statistical fact (note the enrollment of Asians at TJ or in AAP versus the per capita population as a whole for example) without being labeled a "racist".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop stereotyping Asian kids on test prepping. My child is an Asian and we did not test prep him, and he did very well on both NNAT and CogNat.
Have you ever walked outside a Kumon or any other prep place? Have you seen the racial composition of the kids who attend such places? I am sorry if you are an exception, but it's not "stereotyping" if something is true for the majority of a population!
What do they do at Kumon???
Prep CogAT??
Anonymous wrote:Has everyone received their CogAT scores? We do not have ours yet. The in-pool letter was based on his NNAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop stereotyping Asian kids on test prepping. My child is an Asian and we did not test prep him, and he did very well on both NNAT and CogNat.
Have you ever walked outside a Kumon or any other prep place? Have you seen the racial composition of the kids who attend such places? I am sorry if you are an exception, but it's not "stereotyping" if something is true for the majority of a population!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems as though a 134-135 composite score for benchmark CoGat would be reasonable-they raised the benchmark to 132 last year from 130 the year before, and still had too large of a pool-but why the actual number cannot be released is beyond me.
They most likely did not release the composite because many parents would be too confused seeing that the threshold went from 132 last year to close to 126 this year even though its a little more difficult to make the automatic pool. The threshold number would have dropped but the actual number of kids making it would have dropped as well. Again since this cogat was fairfax only, they could not score it at the us level like they have done in the past.
but they could've normed for age and given that percentile. It looks like lot of incompetence on the FCPS/AAP testing!
Anonymous wrote:Nnat 90% taken in the midst of huge stress and sickness. Not enough for the pool but decent in view of the circumstances.
Non-verbal CogAt 58% taken in a good mood rested and alert. Wait, what?!!! Same non verbal skill, should act as a control, no?
Her school performance puts her in the advanced groups for reading writing and math -- all at one of the schools that send 1/3 of their students to aap centers.
Even adjusting for fairfax local scores, the single way this makes sense is if she decided to, say, braid her hair during the test!
So now we're now testing for attention deficit... Arghrr
Do they ever report on the validity of the test (eg student actually participated)?