Anonymous wrote:I emailed the email listed on the letter asking what the cutoff was for MAP-R and where my kid landed. Someone replied tonight and said an 89 was considered 68% for our area...so not even close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Please provide a source for this. I really think you are incorrect.
If you have the IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL factor, you are not "Locally Normed". With 85%, you are in the lottery.
If you don't have the above factor, depends, but in a low moderate FARM school, 96% will NOT be in the lottery.
They will adjust points to make it locally normed, and you are not in the lottery anymore. 96 - 12 = 84% percentile
I was on the MCPS website a while ago, where they listed admission factors to the application special programs. You'll have to find it yourself since I didn't save the link. It's also been discussed on this board numerous times. Again you'll need to search yourself to find those threads but it really isn't that hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Please provide a source for this. I really think you are incorrect.
If you have the IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL factor, you are not "Locally Normed". With 85%, you are in the lottery.
If you don't have the above factor, depends, but in a low moderate FARM school, 96% will NOT be in the lottery.
They will adjust points to make it locally normed, and you are not in the lottery anymore. 96 - 12 = 84% percentile
I was on the MCPS website a while ago, where they listed admission factors to the application special programs. You'll have to find it yourself since I didn't save the link. It's also been discussed on this board numerous times. Again you'll need to search yourself to find those threads but it really isn't that hard.
Anonymous wrote:Pine Crest--kid was in the lottery but not selected, will get ELC next year. Honestly we (including kid) had been going back and forth about wanting a spot. Kid wanted more in-depth, interesting work but was not excited about the longer bus ride and super late dismissal, which would've messed with their long-held after school activity. Staying at the same school with pull-outs for ELC and compacted math seems to be the best option, to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Please provide a source for this. I really think you are incorrect.
If you have the IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL factor, you are not "Locally Normed". With 85%, you are in the lottery.
If you don't have the above factor, depends, but in a low moderate FARM school, 96% will NOT be in the lottery.
They will adjust points to make it locally normed, and you are not in the lottery anymore. 96 - 12 = 84% percentile
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Please provide a source for this. I really think you are incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I emailed the email listed on the letter asking what the cutoff was for MAP-R and where my kid landed. Someone replied tonight and said an 89 was considered 68% for our area...so not even close.
Are you worried PP?
Anonymous wrote:I emailed the email listed on the letter asking what the cutoff was for MAP-R and where my kid landed. Someone replied tonight and said an 89 was considered 68% for our area...so not even close.
Anonymous wrote:I emailed the email listed on the letter asking what the cutoff was for MAP-R and where my kid landed. Someone replied tonight and said an 89 was considered 68% for our area...so not even close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Received our letter today. DS got a spot at CCES. His MAP-R is 96 and has straight As. My son won’t be accepting his seat in the program because we’re changing school systems, so someone will move off the waitlist!
Ironically, my oldest had the same exact student profile (scores and grades) and didn’t get in 3 years ago before they started the “lottery” system. I can’t help but think my oldest wasn’t accepted because he also had an extensive 504 plan. I have never believed the system, lottery or not, was fair. Too many deserving kids are being left behind. The enrichment at the local ES is a joke.
I think the 504 might count in your favor based on their point system. However, before the lottery 96% wouldn't cut it at CCES. You would likely need 99 or 98% at the lowest pre-lottery.
I don’t think the 504 counts in your favor. My sense is that it’s neutral unless the CES teachers would not be able to provide the accommodations in it, and then that supersedes the CES offer and it’s pulled. Of course mcps won’t actually tell us the real way that piece is used/determined. There were a handful of students with 504s in the CES when my child was there fwiw.
Also, 98 percent wasn’t the lowest pre-lottery. 96 might have made it in with a solid cogat. But feeder school FARMS band mattered then too, just not as much.
I know on their website where they list the criteria (maybe it was for middle school?). They listed things ESOL or 504 counting in your favor.
They don’t say anything counts in your favor. They list the various student services and say that they are part of the multiple measure criteria. They do not explain beyond that.
IEP 504 FARMS and ESOL are all positive factors for consideration when applying to these special programs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Received our letter today. DS got a spot at CCES. His MAP-R is 96 and has straight As. My son won’t be accepting his seat in the program because we’re changing school systems, so someone will move off the waitlist!
Ironically, my oldest had the same exact student profile (scores and grades) and didn’t get in 3 years ago before they started the “lottery” system. I can’t help but think my oldest wasn’t accepted because he also had an extensive 504 plan. I have never believed the system, lottery or not, was fair. Too many deserving kids are being left behind. The enrichment at the local ES is a joke.
I think the 504 might count in your favor based on their point system. However, before the lottery 96% wouldn't cut it at CCES. You would likely need 99 or 98% at the lowest pre-lottery.
I don’t think the 504 counts in your favor. My sense is that it’s neutral unless the CES teachers would not be able to provide the accommodations in it, and then that supersedes the CES offer and it’s pulled. Of course mcps won’t actually tell us the real way that piece is used/determined. There were a handful of students with 504s in the CES when my child was there fwiw.
Also, 98 percent wasn’t the lowest pre-lottery. 96 might have made it in with a solid cogat. But feeder school FARMS band mattered then too, just not as much.
I know on their website where they list the criteria (maybe it was for middle school?). They listed things ESOL or 504 counting in your favor.
They don’t say anything counts in your favor. They list the various student services and say that they are part of the multiple measure criteria. They do not explain beyond that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Received our letter today. DS got a spot at CCES. His MAP-R is 96 and has straight As. My son won’t be accepting his seat in the program because we’re changing school systems, so someone will move off the waitlist!
Ironically, my oldest had the same exact student profile (scores and grades) and didn’t get in 3 years ago before they started the “lottery” system. I can’t help but think my oldest wasn’t accepted because he also had an extensive 504 plan. I have never believed the system, lottery or not, was fair. Too many deserving kids are being left behind. The enrichment at the local ES is a joke.
I think the 504 might count in your favor based on their point system. However, before the lottery 96% wouldn't cut it at CCES. You would likely need 99 or 98% at the lowest pre-lottery.
I don’t think the 504 counts in your favor. My sense is that it’s neutral unless the CES teachers would not be able to provide the accommodations in it, and then that supersedes the CES offer and it’s pulled. Of course mcps won’t actually tell us the real way that piece is used/determined. There were a handful of students with 504s in the CES when my child was there fwiw.
Also, 98 percent wasn’t the lowest pre-lottery. 96 might have made it in with a solid cogat. But feeder school FARMS band mattered then too, just not as much.
I know on their website where they list the criteria (maybe it was for middle school?). They listed things ESOL or 504 counting in your favor.