Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
The "base school" kids will have to compete with AAP kids in middle and high school. If the AAP kids are with them in elementary, the gen ed kids get the oopportunity to learn to compete and develop their strengths. I don't think separating gen ed kids from AAP kids so they can shine in an artificial environment prepares them for the real world.
This does not make sense, you are missing a couple things. Regardless of local level 4, the students found gifted are still going to be pull out for gifted services, separate from the general Ed kids. The same complaint will still exist, some kids receiving more services.
In most school districts the gifted services is under the Special Ed Dept. I guarantee the school district will still provide some type of gifted services and the same AAP qualified kids will still get pulled out for "extra" or "more" services. This is nothing new and happens everywhere. Kids will still get noticed for being pulled out into the smart class or program. This area has attracted very high achieving and academically gifted adults, due to the location and industries here. These adults have kids, therefore this area has a higher number of gifted over achieving, advanced kids than most cities. This is fact, you can read those results on the CoGAT score sheets. In turn, the AAP is much larger than other school districts, making it more of a "thing," or more visible here than in other cities or what parents may be use to from their own experience.
Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. It's about time. It's a tremendous waste of money and resources.
"Base kid" is a common taunt at our center school.
The AAP students are so segregated and operate in their own rarefied air beginning as young as third grade.
Very much an "us v. them" mentality fueled by hyper-competitive parents.
Enough!
The ugly reality is that FCPS is back to ersatz segregation, with the "elites" getting preferential treatment and in some center schools, "base kids" are the minority.
Interesting to note that some of the FCPS center schools HAD to become centers to avoid permanent closure.
Not at our center. Which center(s) are you referring too?
Anonymous wrote:Good. It's about time. It's a tremendous waste of money and resources.
"Base kid" is a common taunt at our center school.
The AAP students are so segregated and operate in their own rarefied air beginning as young as third grade.
Very much an "us v. them" mentality fueled by hyper-competitive parents.
Enough!
The ugly reality is that FCPS is back to ersatz segregation, with the "elites" getting preferential treatment and in some center schools, "base kids" are the minority.
Interesting to note that some of the FCPS center schools HAD to become centers to avoid permanent closure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
The "base school" kids will have to compete with AAP kids in middle and high school. If the AAP kids are with them in elementary, the gen ed kids get the oopportunity to learn to compete and develop their strengths. I don't think separating gen ed kids from AAP kids so they can shine in an artificial environment prepares them for the real world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
The "base school" kids will have to compete with AAP kids in middle and high school. If the AAP kids are with them in elementary, the gen ed kids get the oopportunity to learn to compete and develop their strengths. I don't think separating gen ed kids from AAP kids so they can shine in an artificial environment prepares them for the real world.
Everyone does not have to progress at the same point to reach the same place at the end (in this case, high school).
It is a different journey with the same destination (for all but the TJ crowd). And that is a very good thing. Kods develop at different paces but most of them should end up at roughly the same place if things are done right.
And given that most of the kids, AAP and gen ed end up in very similar places in high school tells me the fcps and the center system is doing it right and allowing the vast majority of our students to progress to the same or similar place at the pace that is right for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
The "base school" kids will have to compete with AAP kids in middle and high school. If the AAP kids are with them in elementary, the gen ed kids get the oopportunity to learn to compete and develop their strengths. I don't think separating gen ed kids from AAP kids so they can shine in an artificial environment prepares them for the real world.
Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
Anonymous wrote:Many parents of students at base schools do not realize that removing that gifted level of learner, lends for many opportunities for the next level of learner. The sense of being at the top of the class, moving up to leadership roles in the classroom and school. This builds confidence. Many if not most of the AAP kids are competitive by nature, academically ahead and quick learners, they also made up the majority if not the entire highest level reading/math groups etc. opportunities will be lost for base kids...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not all about taunting or bullying. It's just a pervasive feeling that the GenEd kids are an afterthought. That they are lesser. That they aren't worthy.
That self esteem issue comes from home and what kind of attitudes parents put on their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Good. It's about time. It's a tremendous waste of money and resources.
"Base kid" is a common taunt at our center school.
The AAP students are so segregated and operate in their own rarefied air beginning as young as third grade.
Very much an "us v. them" mentality fueled by hyper-competitive parents.
Enough!
The ugly reality is that FCPS is back to ersatz segregation, with the "elites" getting preferential treatment and in some center schools, "base kids" are the minority.
Interesting to note that some of the FCPS center schools HAD to become centers to avoid permanent closure.
Anonymous wrote:haha - the extracurricular activities at our center school are an absolute joke. And please, the parents do NOT show up for the PTA - as long as they can get their precious babies into the couple ultracompetitive academic clubs that have hogged all the meeting spaces while not making these families be PTA members, the AAP parents don't show up.
Anonymous wrote:It's not all about taunting or bullying. It's just a pervasive feeling that the GenEd kids are an afterthought. That they are lesser. That they aren't worthy.