Anonymous wrote:I predict......that FCPS will do absolutely nothing in response to parental outrage over the administration of this custom test.
Anonymous wrote:How does no guarantee = presume? I dont think I presumed anything. Ill say this...if the fcps scores were the same as national cogat scores, there would be no need to move to FAT. No reason the age adjustment might be equally uncomparable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes to question 1 and I clearly stated "at best you could normalize the test for the fat, but no guarantee there would be any statistical significance in the need to age adjust." Whats your verbal score?
Not OP.
So you are saying that the deviation between oldest and youngest in Fairfax County would be significantly different than the deviation between oldest and youngest in national tests which show several points of adjustment? What is the is the basis to presume the bell curve in FF County is tighter than the national curve?
Where did you get the number "several point of adjustment"? We didn't get the raw scores, so can't project based on national normed data. But for NNAT, what I know is with the SAME raw score, the normed score for 7 years old (Oct kids) and 6 years old (Sept of next year) could be diff for 1 standard deviation or more. Depends on where you are, 1 standard deviation could be 36%, 12% or just less than 1% in percentile. If the kid's score is near 100 (50% average kid), 1 standard deviation means 86%-50%=36%. If the kid's score near 86% for 7 years old, same raw score could make him/her in 98% national percentile. Without raw scores published, everything is just speculating, no sound science supports it. It's crazy claim if anyone says one could adjust the percentile by view the age printed on the report.
Anonymous wrote:The kids have been in the public school system for 3 years now. I would think the few months of age gap would be very minor at this point. It's not like K or 1st grade!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One saying is that boys' development is slower than girls'. Do we need a gender-adjusted score too?
What about late bloomers? How can we adjust for that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If admission were based only on test scores, this argument would have validity.
Chill out and wait for the admission decisions before you freak out. There is an appeal process for a reason.
My child was born in July (young) and scored 93%. He was sick during the NNAT test and scored 130. Did not make the cut off. He has good grades.
We cannot afford the WISC, I cannot appeal with any new test scores. Doesn't look good for us.
If you qualify for free or reduced lunch, GMU will administer the WISC for free. Otherwise, it's around $375. I know it's tough for those in the middle, but there are ways to make up the difference. Ask grandparents, sell some stuff on Craigslist, get creative.
OP here. If we make it on the initial application that will be great. Not sure what the purpose of the pool is, if everyone can refer in anyway. My understanding is that on appeal the WISC is the key. It is unfair to me , and many of my friends that don't speak good English or understand the system to have to manage this entire process ourselves. It should be done by the school system where only those in the know, or who have money know hire to hire professionals to get a good WISC score.
Thanks to the other poster that suggested I adjust the scores myself. I am not a great at statistics and should not have to explain the test to the County. Also, asked the teacher about the recommendation form, and she said she could not discuss it with individual parents. She said I could get a copy after it is submitted. No big help there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes to question 1 and I clearly stated "at best you could normalize the test for the fat, but no guarantee there would be any statistical significance in the need to age adjust." Whats your verbal score?
Not OP.
So you are saying that the deviation between oldest and youngest in Fairfax County would be significantly different than the deviation between oldest and youngest in national tests which show several points of adjustment? What is the is the basis to presume the bell curve in FF County is tighter than the national curve?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One saying is that boys' development is slower than girls'. Do we need a gender-adjusted score too?
What about late bloomers? How can we adjust for that?
You can apply for AAP every year.
Anonymous wrote:Yes to question 1 and I clearly stated "at best you could normalize the test for the fat, but no guarantee there would be any statistical significance in the need to age adjust." Whats your verbal score?