Anonymous wrote:OK, here are my thoughts.
If a grade level can't support an entire class of LIV kids, there shouldn't be a local LLIV for that grade at a school.
If the number of LIV classes at a center is > than the number of GE classes at a center, split the center.
I think each grade levels at all schools should have open seating for lunch and have recess together.
When practical/feasible with scheduling at a given school, I think that GE kids should be able to push in to LIV classes, whether that is LLIV or a center.
I think most schools mix GE and LIV for specials because those classes are often much larger than one class. At our LLIV school, the LLIV class is spot in half, and and half the class has specials with one GE class and the other half of the class has specials with a different GE class. It gets much harder when they mix in things like strings, band, and chorus.
Personally, I don't think there is anything that special about the specific LIV curriculum. I think the main advantage, as some PP have said, is the cohort of kids who are generally able to move faster.
I think that kids with IEPs, LDs and ESL should get better support in all classrooms (GE and LIV) so that the main classroom teacher is not overwhelmed trying to be all things to all students. (This is one thing I think our LLIV school is amazing at, and the main reason I have kept this kid in LLIV vs the center.)
What I don't know is how some of these things get paid for.
Anonymous wrote:
For a group of parents who are supposed to be smart, I'm not sure why my question keeps getting derailed by a discussion of LLIV vs. Center. My question was "Why can't the general ed kids have lunch, specials, and homeroom time with AAP students at a center?" I'm specifically asking about center schools.
Anonymous wrote:
For a group of parents who are supposed to be smart, I'm not sure why my question keeps getting derailed by a discussion of LLIV vs. Center. My question was "Why can't the general ed kids have lunch, specials, and homeroom time with AAP students at a center?" I'm specifically asking about center schools.
Anonymous wrote:
For a group of parents who are supposed to be smart, I'm not sure why my question keeps getting derailed by a discussion of LLIV vs. Center. My question was "Why can't the general ed kids have lunch, specials, and homeroom time with AAP students at a center?" I'm specifically asking about center schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading level went down because of the book selection at school? I find that hard to believe.
Were there no challenging books available at home, in the library or at the community library?
This question can be the same for parents who say their child 'needs' AAP. Can't they provide more challenging work at home? Can't they pick up books from the library on how to enrich their gifted children?
Parents who have struggling readers with dyslexia often hire private tutors at great costs because the school is not providing what their child needs to succeed. Why can't those parents with gifted kids that need more hire private tutors if GE is not enough?
It's funny what you find hard to believe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is LLIV worse?
There are no issues with transportation. Kids are in their neighborhood school. The number of AAP kids does not overwhelm the school.
I am not the poster you asked, but I've seen this work at 2 different LLIV schools. What often happens is the LLIV class becomes the "smart" class. And when it is the same kids year after year, then absolutely all the kids in the grade know who is Level IV and who is not. Some schools mix for specials, etc. Our school also has math groupings where the kids in all classes change to a math class at their level, but what typically happens is a few kids go into the LLIV class for math.
Also, if there are not enough Level IV kids to have a full class, the rest of the class is principal placed in some fashion. It can get very ugly when some parents are resentful their kid is not in the LLIV class.
+1. This, this and this. We moved, and I had one kid go LLIV and another do the Center. LLIV was far more toxic. The "smart class" was right there, front and center. It became a huge clique because kids could not be rotated each year. GE parents were pissed-- about who was in AAP, who was principal placed, that the "best" teacher at each grade level was the one who got AAP certified, that their DC's 3 BFFs were in the smart class and DC was left behind in GE, that AAP always seems to develop a clique of mean girls, etc. The school went from a cohesive community to toxic in the three years after LLIV was introduced. The Center on the other hand-- the kids seemed to mix fine. GE was normal. AAP was normal. Rather than a handful of "special kids" there was a better balance.
I don't think all you LLIV advocates realize what you are getting yourselves into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading level went down because of the book selection at school? I find that hard to believe.
Were there no challenging books available at home, in the library or at the community library?
Not the PP, but are you being deliberately obtuse? The point is: why should the reading level within a classroom (any classroom) be capped?? Of course there are challenging books available at home or at the library - but the point of sending our children to school is for them to receive an appropriate education there. That includes having ready access to any and all levels of books. Many Gen Ed kids are highly advanced readers and excel at Language Arts. Just because they're in Gen Ed doesn't mean they're not fully capable of doing high level reading.![]()
Anonymous wrote:How is LLIV worse?
There are no issues with transportation. Kids are in their neighborhood school. The number of AAP kids does not overwhelm the school.
I am not the poster you asked, but I've seen this work at 2 different LLIV schools. What often happens is the LLIV class becomes the "smart" class. And when it is the same kids year after year, then absolutely all the kids in the grade know who is Level IV and who is not. Some schools mix for specials, etc. Our school also has math groupings where the kids in all classes change to a math class at their level, but what typically happens is a few kids go into the LLIV class for math.
Also, if there are not enough Level IV kids to have a full class, the rest of the class is principal placed in some fashion. It can get very ugly when some parents are resentful their kid is not in the LLIV class.
Anonymous wrote:Reading level went down because of the book selection at school? I find that hard to believe.
Were there no challenging books available at home, in the library or at the community library?
Anonymous wrote:It is very simple to figure out who is AAP in a LLIV.
LLIV is far worse for schools than the center model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is LLIV worse?
There are no issues with transportation. Kids are in their neighborhood school. The number of AAP kids does not overwhelm the school.
I am not the poster you asked, but I've seen this work at 2 different LLIV schools. What often happens is the LLIV class becomes the "smart" class. And when it is the same kids year after year, then absolutely all the kids in the grade know who is Level IV and who is not. Some schools mix for specials, etc. Our school also has math groupings where the kids in all classes change to a math class at their level, but what typically happens is a few kids go into the LLIV class for math.
Also, if there are not enough Level IV kids to have a full class, the rest of the class is principal placed in some fashion. It can get very ugly when some parents are resentful their kid is not in the LLIV class.
+1. This, this and this. We moved, and I had one kid go LLIV and another do the Center. LLIV was far more toxic. The "smart class" was right there, front and center. It became a huge clique because kids could not be rotated each year. GE parents were pissed-- about who was in AAP, who was principal placed, that the "best" teacher at each grade level was the one who got AAP certified, that their DC's 3 BFFs were in the smart class and DC was left behind in GE, that AAP always seems to develop a clique of mean girls, etc. The school went from a cohesive community to toxic in the three years after LLIV was introduced. The Center on the other hand-- the kids seemed to mix fine. GE was normal. AAP was normal. Rather than a handful of "special kids" there was a better balance.
I don't think all you LLIV advocates realize what you are getting yourselves into.