Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I don’t find it credible that an AART would admit to it.
AARTs don’t admit but they indicate because they are surrounded by AAP obsessed parents.
Anonymous wrote: I don’t find it credible that an AART would admit to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By definition only 2% of kids in FCPS are gifted. And it’s not a given those kids are even in aap.
Depends on your definition, I guess.
It’s not my definition. Gifted is the top 2%. If you are letting in the top 20% of a population it’s not a gifted program. And it’s not a program full of gifted kids. Roughly 90% of those aap kids are not gifted.
That's your definition. The tests are normed so that there are scores that are two standard deviations above the mean. That's the definition that Fairfax uses. And everyone else too.
+1 A higher percentage of FCPS students are 2+ standard deviation over the mean than would be the national average. Look at the local percentages vs. national percentages associated with scores. Not surprising given that many people relocate here for high level professional positions and the average education level is post graduate. Sure, some kids in AAP have scores below, but overall the average score is more than 2 standard deviations above the national normed mean. This is the federal definition of "gifted" --the level at which schools are required to provide services to meet educational need. Don't believe all the DCUM crap and parent gossip.
The local percentages are also given a boost by all the people prepping their kids for the tests, though.
Exactly. Don’t be a fool and think we just have smarter kids. 2 standard deviations is always top 2 percent. You’d be an idiot to think this county has 10x the amount of gifted kids. Sure, maybe 1.5 to 2x more. Maybe. Successful people are more likely to have IQs in the 110-130 range anyway.
These kids are prepped and the parents obsessed. It makes a huge difference. Just looking at sample questions online screw with the norms.
The national norms are also tilted by many other intensive prepping cultures and on-line availability. It's not like everywhere outside of Fairfax is magically immune from test prep. What about NY, CA, wealthy suburbs of any city, gentrified areas of any city etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By definition only 2% of kids in FCPS are gifted. And it’s not a given those kids are even in aap.
Depends on your definition, I guess.
It’s not my definition. Gifted is the top 2%. If you are letting in the top 20% of a population it’s not a gifted program. And it’s not a program full of gifted kids. Roughly 90% of those aap kids are not gifted.
That's your definition. The tests are normed so that there are scores that are two standard deviations above the mean. That's the definition that Fairfax uses. And everyone else too.
+1 A higher percentage of FCPS students are 2+ standard deviation over the mean than would be the national average. Look at the local percentages vs. national percentages associated with scores. Not surprising given that many people relocate here for high level professional positions and the average education level is post graduate. Sure, some kids in AAP have scores below, but overall the average score is more than 2 standard deviations above the national normed mean. This is the federal definition of "gifted" --the level at which schools are required to provide services to meet educational need. Don't believe all the DCUM crap and parent gossip.
The local percentages are also given a boost by all the people prepping their kids for the tests, though.
Exactly. Don’t be a fool and think we just have smarter kids. 2 standard deviations is always top 2 percent. You’d be an idiot to think this county has 10x the amount of gifted kids. Sure, maybe 1.5 to 2x more. Maybe. Successful people are more likely to have IQs in the 110-130 range anyway.
These kids are prepped and the parents obsessed. It makes a huge difference. Just looking at sample questions online screw with the norms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By definition only 2% of kids in FCPS are gifted. And it’s not a given those kids are even in aap.
Depends on your definition, I guess.
It’s not my definition. Gifted is the top 2%. If you are letting in the top 20% of a population it’s not a gifted program. And it’s not a program full of gifted kids. Roughly 90% of those aap kids are not gifted.
That's your definition. The tests are normed so that there are scores that are two standard deviations above the mean. That's the definition that Fairfax uses. And everyone else too.
+1 A higher percentage of FCPS students are 2+ standard deviation over the mean than would be the national average. Look at the local percentages vs. national percentages associated with scores. Not surprising given that many people relocate here for high level professional positions and the average education level is post graduate. Sure, some kids in AAP have scores below, but overall the average score is more than 2 standard deviations above the national normed mean. This is the federal definition of "gifted" --the level at which schools are required to provide services to meet educational need. Don't believe all the DCUM crap and parent gossip.
The local percentages are also given a boost by all the people prepping their kids for the tests, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By definition only 2% of kids in FCPS are gifted. And it’s not a given those kids are even in aap.
Depends on your definition, I guess.
It’s not my definition. Gifted is the top 2%. If you are letting in the top 20% of a population it’s not a gifted program. And it’s not a program full of gifted kids. Roughly 90% of those aap kids are not gifted.
That's your definition. The tests are normed so that there are scores that are two standard deviations above the mean. That's the definition that Fairfax uses. And everyone else too.
+1 A higher percentage of FCPS students are 2+ standard deviation over the mean than would be the national average. Look at the local percentages vs. national percentages associated with scores. Not surprising given that many people relocate here for high level professional positions and the average education level is post graduate. Sure, some kids in AAP have scores below, but overall the average score is more than 2 standard deviations above the national normed mean. This is the federal definition of "gifted" --the level at which schools are required to provide services to meet educational need. Don't believe all the DCUM crap and parent gossip.
Anonymous wrote:NNAT is the least important part of the package. My son got in with a 111 score. Focus on the COGAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An IQ of 120 puts a person in the 90th percentile for intelligence. While the NNAT and the CogAT are not IQ tests, they are meant to be proxies. A child that scores 120 on the CogAT is well above average intelligence and will probably do just fine in AAP. It is hardly an awful score.
The committee is using test scores as well as class room behavior and work to try and determine who might benefit from AAP. A kid with a 140 test score and poor class work and motivation in class might be really bright but not do well in AAP because they don't seem to be motivated in the classroom. A kid with 120 and excellent classwork and showing motivation in class might not be as intelligent as the kid with the 140 but gives the appearance of being motivated and probably in a good place to do well in AAP.
The process is not perfect but there is far more grey area in the selection process then people here want to acknowledge. test scores are one indicator of intelligence but that does not equate with being a good fit in AAP.
And there are folks who are far more driven to get their kid into AAP because they are at lower performing schools and want to move their kids into AAP because they hope to surround their kids with other kids that appear to be motivated to learn. And their are folks who are less concerned about AAP because the base school is solid and the parents are less worried about the education their kid is going to receive. And then there are the parents who see AAP as a status symbol.
These are exactly the kids that gifted programs are for. And while Fairfax has changed the name of the GT program, it still does serve these kids, better in some center schools than others.