Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone’s child gotten in with a nnat score of 106?
That’s literally the definition of average. It would be a travesty if someone got in with that and basically proof that admissions is a total sham
If the Cogat and/or WISC were 106, then it would be very hard to believe that the child should be in AAP. But the NNAT is such a strange test, it has very little value at all. It certainly wouldn't be a travesty for a child with a 106 NNAT and other higher scores to be admitted.
I probably shouldn’t admit this, but my child got in with a 108 nnat. DC was principal placed. I would never disclose that to parents at the school.
"Principal placed" is not "getting in"
Well, he's in level IV. I don't know what to tell you, it's on his report card. Also, he is eligible to attend the AAP center school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NNAT is a test uniquely susceptible to test prep so its scores are pretty meaningless IMO.
Agree so much.
Anonymous wrote:NNAT is a test uniquely susceptible to test prep so its scores are pretty meaningless IMO.
Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to decide if it’s even worth appealing with an NNAT of 106. There was no CogAt this year and doing external testing is not feasible for us. How can a child be judged by a score that is just a snapshot of a day 18 months ago? My child had DRA of 30 in the fall, all 4’s on progress reports the entire year, iReady scores above grade level. That is all the information I have available to me.
Anonymous wrote:I just pulled the list of Title 1 schools and looked at their school profiles to see if they had a Level IV program. I would guess that the few schools that were in the 25-30% of population in Level IV were Center schools. The vast majority of the schools seemed to be between 5-10% participation in Level IV.
It really was a quick gander to get a feel for what percentage of Title 1 schools had Level IV programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone’s child gotten in with a nnat score of 106?
That’s literally the definition of average. It would be a travesty if someone got in with that and basically proof that admissions is a total sham
If the Cogat and/or WISC were 106, then it would be very hard to believe that the child should be in AAP. But the NNAT is such a strange test, it has very little value at all. It certainly wouldn't be a travesty for a child with a 106 NNAT and other higher scores to be admitted.
I probably shouldn’t admit this, but my child got in with a 108 nnat. DC was principal placed. I would never disclose that to parents at the school.
"Principal placed" is not "getting in"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone’s child gotten in with a nnat score of 106?
That’s literally the definition of average. It would be a travesty if someone got in with that and basically proof that admissions is a total sham
If the Cogat and/or WISC were 106, then it would be very hard to believe that the child should be in AAP. But the NNAT is such a strange test, it has very little value at all. It certainly wouldn't be a travesty for a child with a 106 NNAT and other higher scores to be admitted.
I probably shouldn’t admit this, but my child got in with a 108 nnat. DC was principal placed. I would never disclose that to parents at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone’s child gotten in with a nnat score of 106?
That’s literally the definition of average. It would be a travesty if someone got in with that and basically proof that admissions is a total sham
If the Cogat and/or WISC were 106, then it would be very hard to believe that the child should be in AAP. But the NNAT is such a strange test, it has very little value at all. It certainly wouldn't be a travesty for a child with a 106 NNAT and other higher scores to be admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone’s child gotten in with a nnat score of 106?
That’s literally the definition of average. It would be a travesty if someone got in with that and basically proof that admissions is a total sham