Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares how you calculate the number? We aren't talking about flyover America. Fairfax County is in the top 5 in the nation in terms of educational attainment and in terms of income. Since SES and maternal education are the top predictors of academic success, I would hope there would be a ton of smart kids. Who cares if the AAP number is 14% or 20%?
I'm just trying to keep the facts straight. Whether having 20% of the student body designated as Level IV and 25% receiving level IV services is a good thing or a bad thing is an entirely different debate. It's also a huge distortion to act as if 20% of the student population is within the top 2% intellectually. I'll freely admit that my AAP child is a bright, motivated student, but isn't gifted under any strict definition. That child seems to be very middle of the pack in AAP. The only reason she "needs" AAP is that all of the other similarly bright, motivated, non-gifted children are also in AAP. It's not necessarily a bad thing that AAP casts a very broad net and gives expanded curriculum to so many kids, but it should be acknowledged that it is a very broad net.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's rude. Just as it's rude to ask little kids other personal things like what their parents do or things like that.
What is rude about asking a kid what his/her parent(s) does (do)? Is a 7th grader "little"? I ask my kid's friends what their parents do - nothing rude asking what mom/dad does.
Ask the parents directly if you must know!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares how you calculate the number? We aren't talking about flyover America. Fairfax County is in the top 5 in the nation in terms of educational attainment and in terms of income. Since SES and maternal education are the top predictors of academic success, I would hope there would be a ton of smart kids. Who cares if the AAP number is 14% or 20%?
I'm just trying to keep the facts straight. Whether having 20% of the student body designated as Level IV and 25% receiving level IV services is a good thing or a bad thing is an entirely different debate. It's also a huge distortion to act as if 20% of the student population is within the top 2% intellectually. I'll freely admit that my AAP child is a bright, motivated student, but isn't gifted under any strict definition. That child seems to be very middle of the pack in AAP. The only reason she "needs" AAP is that all of the other similarly bright, motivated, non-gifted children are also in AAP. It's not necessarily a bad thing that AAP casts a very broad net and gives expanded curriculum to so many kids, but it should be acknowledged that it is a very broad net.
I generally agree with most of the above as applicable for my child as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares how you calculate the number? We aren't talking about flyover America. Fairfax County is in the top 5 in the nation in terms of educational attainment and in terms of income. Since SES and maternal education are the top predictors of academic success, I would hope there would be a ton of smart kids. Who cares if the AAP number is 14% or 20%?
I'm just trying to keep the facts straight. Whether having 20% of the student body designated as Level IV and 25% receiving level IV services is a good thing or a bad thing is an entirely different debate. It's also a huge distortion to act as if 20% of the student population is within the top 2% intellectually. I'll freely admit that my AAP child is a bright, motivated student, but isn't gifted under any strict definition. That child seems to be very middle of the pack in AAP. The only reason she "needs" AAP is that all of the other similarly bright, motivated, non-gifted children are also in AAP. It's not necessarily a bad thing that AAP casts a very broad net and gives expanded curriculum to so many kids, but it should be acknowledged that it is a very broad net.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares how you calculate the number? We aren't talking about flyover America. Fairfax County is in the top 5 in the nation in terms of educational attainment and in terms of income. Since SES and maternal education are the top predictors of academic success, I would hope there would be a ton of smart kids. Who cares if the AAP number is 14% or 20%?
I'm just trying to keep the facts straight. Whether having 20% of the student body designated as Level IV and 25% receiving level IV services is a good thing or a bad thing is an entirely different debate. It's also a huge distortion to act as if 20% of the student population is within the top 2% intellectually. I'll freely admit that my AAP child is a bright, motivated student, but isn't gifted under any strict definition. That child seems to be very middle of the pack in AAP. The only reason she "needs" AAP is that all of the other similarly bright, motivated, non-gifted children are also in AAP. It's not necessarily a bad thing that AAP casts a very broad net and gives expanded curriculum to so many kids, but it should be acknowledged that it is a very broad net.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares how you calculate the number? We aren't talking about flyover America. Fairfax County is in the top 5 in the nation in terms of educational attainment and in terms of income. Since SES and maternal education are the top predictors of academic success, I would hope there would be a ton of smart kids. Who cares if the AAP number is 14% or 20%?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:to those complaining about the AAP - not having it creates other issues. In MoCo (where I am; considering move to FFX which i why i am lurking here) there is nothing at all in any formal way that requires schools to seriously help target advanced ES learners beyond reading groups except for a VERY small program for the top 2 - 3% of kids. That program I hear is awesome but also only exists for 4 and 5th grades. So until 3rd grade you have nothing and for the 97% of kids in regular schools you have little formal process in place to help ensure that those needing more enrichment to target where they are at get it.
Yes, and there's so much research that shows that labeling kids as early as FFX county does is wrong. FFX county has about 20% of kids in AAP, that's crazy!
It's crazy and it's wrong. FFX has about 20% of students in AAP, getting pull outs, in advanced math, etc. It's 12-14% in AAP. Maybe that's also crazy to you, I don't know.
Anonymous wrote:This information is slightly older. There was a year when FCPS accepted too many students to AAP, and they've been correcting since then.
http://www.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/Board.nsf/files/99LQQ56A5BDA/$file/a_Increase%20of%20AAP%20students%20in%20last%20ten%20years.pdf
Compared to your 2016 information, notice that while the number of students entering AAP remains between 2000-2500, the total number of elementary students has increased each year. I'm also unclear how approximately 10000 students can be in AAP while 4400 students transfer from their base schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:to those complaining about the AAP - not having it creates other issues. In MoCo (where I am; considering move to FFX which i why i am lurking here) there is nothing at all in any formal way that requires schools to seriously help target advanced ES learners beyond reading groups except for a VERY small program for the top 2 - 3% of kids. That program I hear is awesome but also only exists for 4 and 5th grades. So until 3rd grade you have nothing and for the 97% of kids in regular schools you have little formal process in place to help ensure that those needing more enrichment to target where they are at get it.
Yes, and there's so much research that shows that labeling kids as early as FFX county does is wrong. FFX county has about 20% of kids in AAP, that's crazy!
Anonymous wrote:to those complaining about the AAP - not having it creates other issues. In MoCo (where I am; considering move to FFX which i why i am lurking here) there is nothing at all in any formal way that requires schools to seriously help target advanced ES learners beyond reading groups except for a VERY small program for the top 2 - 3% of kids. That program I hear is awesome but also only exists for 4 and 5th grades. So until 3rd grade you have nothing and for the 97% of kids in regular schools you have little formal process in place to help ensure that those needing more enrichment to target where they are at get it.