Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The peer cohort thing is ridiculous. Peer cohorts don't teach children -- teachers teach children, and children are taught what's in the curriculum. The idea that talented students will have their educational needs met simply because they're grouped with other talented children makes a mockery of the fundamental premise that teachers and curricula are critical to education.
Nobody's saying that. Once they've been grouped together as a cohort, that can enable the group to be given the enriched or applied courses, i.e. teachers and curricula.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you just cling to those high MAP scores like they’re absolute evidence of your child being gifted. The MAP is an imperfect test and wasn’t designed for this application. It is preppable *by design*. The COGAT is only slightly better! (Here is just some evidence: over 15% of MCPS kids tested in the Top percentile nationally.) MCPS officials are wading through murky waters. Without administering WISC tests to thousands of students this is the best they can do. They are identifying hundreds of kids as high performers. Yes, it was easier to get your kid accepted when all you had to do was ask for testing and compete against a couple hundred other kids. But universal testing is actually turning up kids who are equally bright *and have no peer group at their home middle school*. That’s a good thing to capture. He is more deserving than your high MAP kid—good gravy!
A high map score is a premier indicator of prepping because it shows exposure to concepts not taught in school. It's absolutely not about aptitude or giftedness.
You can say this all you want but it's not true. I know several kids who take RSM or Dr. Li's classes and their Map scores lower than other bright kids who don't do outside classes. You are correct it isn't designed to measure giftedness like the Cogat. It's more like the SAT. So you can prep all you want but if a child doesn't have a certain aptitude the scores will not go up very much.
Maybe. But mostly, those who prep have higher MAP scores than similarly capable kids who don't.
Throw an ipad to two kids, one doesn't have any extracurricular activity and goes straight back home everyday after dismissal because parents cannot afford aftercare or extracurricular acitivity and plays tons of video games on it, the other has to squeeze some personal time out from sports/band/chores/etc to watch Kahn Academy. Then you say: "the latter prepped! Unfair!"
There is something called self-motivation, which is by no means equal to "prep".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you just cling to those high MAP scores like they’re absolute evidence of your child being gifted. The MAP is an imperfect test and wasn’t designed for this application. It is preppable *by design*. The COGAT is only slightly better! (Here is just some evidence: over 15% of MCPS kids tested in the Top percentile nationally.) MCPS officials are wading through murky waters. Without administering WISC tests to thousands of students this is the best they can do. They are identifying hundreds of kids as high performers. Yes, it was easier to get your kid accepted when all you had to do was ask for testing and compete against a couple hundred other kids. But universal testing is actually turning up kids who are equally bright *and have no peer group at their home middle school*. That’s a good thing to capture. He is more deserving than your high MAP kid—good gravy!
A high map score is a premier indicator of prepping because it shows exposure to concepts not taught in school. It's absolutely not about aptitude or giftedness.
You can say this all you want but it's not true. I know several kids who take RSM or Dr. Li's classes and their Map scores lower than other bright kids who don't do outside classes. You are correct it isn't designed to measure giftedness like the Cogat. It's more like the SAT. So you can prep all you want but if a child doesn't have a certain aptitude the scores will not go up very much.
Maybe. But mostly, those who prep have higher MAP scores than similarly capable kids who don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you just cling to those high MAP scores like they’re absolute evidence of your child being gifted. The MAP is an imperfect test and wasn’t designed for this application. It is preppable *by design*. The COGAT is only slightly better! (Here is just some evidence: over 15% of MCPS kids tested in the Top percentile nationally.) MCPS officials are wading through murky waters. Without administering WISC tests to thousands of students this is the best they can do. They are identifying hundreds of kids as high performers. Yes, it was easier to get your kid accepted when all you had to do was ask for testing and compete against a couple hundred other kids. But universal testing is actually turning up kids who are equally bright *and have no peer group at their home middle school*. That’s a good thing to capture. He is more deserving than your high MAP kid—good gravy!
A high map score is a premier indicator of prepping because it shows exposure to concepts not taught in school. It's absolutely not about aptitude or giftedness.
You can say this all you want but it's not true. I know several kids who take RSM or Dr. Li's classes and their Map scores lower than other bright kids who don't do outside classes. You are correct it isn't designed to measure giftedness like the Cogat. It's more like the SAT. So you can prep all you want but if a child doesn't have a certain aptitude the scores will not go up very much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you just cling to those high MAP scores like they’re absolute evidence of your child being gifted. The MAP is an imperfect test and wasn’t designed for this application. It is preppable *by design*. The COGAT is only slightly better! (Here is just some evidence: over 15% of MCPS kids tested in the Top percentile nationally.) MCPS officials are wading through murky waters. Without administering WISC tests to thousands of students this is the best they can do. They are identifying hundreds of kids as high performers. Yes, it was easier to get your kid accepted when all you had to do was ask for testing and compete against a couple hundred other kids. But universal testing is actually turning up kids who are equally bright *and have no peer group at their home middle school*. That’s a good thing to capture. He is more deserving than your high MAP kid—good gravy!
A high map score is a premier indicator of prepping because it shows exposure to concepts not taught in school. It's absolutely not about aptitude or giftedness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they're in compacted math in 5th grade, then there's no difference. If they were in the regular math track, then they would do math 6, then IM in 7th grade, then algebra 1 in 8th grade (for high school credit). The old version had math 6, math 7, then math 8, and algebra 1 would be done in 9th grade. See page 19 of this PDF from Lee MS: https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/schools/leems/news/5th%20Grade%20Parent%20Meeting.pptx.pdf
Lee MS has a different path now, according to the presentation given to rising 6th graders this year. That PPT is from January 2017, before the IM and Applied IM class placement was enforced. Now, the basic path for students who took regular math 5 is math 6, IM 7, Algebra I, then geometry in 9th. Compacted math 5/6 students will start IM 6, then Algebra I, then Geometry, then Algebra II in 9th (although that is sometimes replaced with pre-calculus or functions, as in the Blair SMAC magnet). Some advanced 6th graders were allowed to start in Algebra I with the 7th graders, but now they have the magnet-level math and that is generally not being allowed anymore (except at Eastern where they have no magnet-level math class and they start all advanced 6th graders in Algebra I).
Anonymous wrote:The peer cohort thing is ridiculous. Peer cohorts don't teach children -- teachers teach children, and children are taught what's in the curriculum. The idea that talented students will have their educational needs met simply because they're grouped with other talented children makes a mockery of the fundamental premise that teachers and curricula are critical to education.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry but that is not what MCPS wants and that is not what the BOE wants for the definition of the magnet programs.
7. My child’s scores for the various criteria are in the 90+ percentiles and/or higher levels, why did my child not get selected?
This year, the process looked at all grade five students. This provided information about your student’s performance in addition to their academic peer group. This process considered over 6,900 Grade 5 students. Your child, while high performing, may have an academic peer group at the local school and may not have emerged an outlier within the group
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/.../middle/Magnet%20FAQs%202019(7).pdf
If you are not happy or not agree, (a) inform the BOE members and (b) use your vote (and your friends' votes) to change the BOE members in the upcoming elections
WILD APPLAUSE.
Yes, MCPS is moving away from a system that relies on a child having received significant instruction above grade level in order to access the magnet program. Yes, that means that some kids will arrive at the magnet with the raw potential, but not the exposure, of another child in the magnet.
THAT'S FINE.
That is in fact preferable to a system that can only be accessed if you *already* have all of the resources available.
If that bothers you, please advocate for more above-grade-level instruction in high-needs schools, so that your precious kids won't be held back when those children are in a classroom with them at the magnet.
Anonymous wrote:Well, it has impact if they are using it to discern the existence of a cohort. My kid has a cohort at his CES, but almost none of them will go to his middle school, so in sure what the cohort situation there would be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a new FAQ posted on the website with the appeal information, which says that the mcps percentiles were not based on countywide information. Rather, each student was compared to their own ES's overall SES. Students at the CES were compared to that CES's SES. That means, if your home school was a different SES than your child CES, they may have been calculated under the wrong numbers. Those numbers are then used to calculate the middle school cohort group.
Where is this posted? Can you post the link? Thanks!
Question 3 here: https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/curriculum/specialprograms/middle/Magnet%20FAQs%202019(7).pdf
This link does not work. But I did find the document:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/curriculum/specialprograms/middle/Magnet%20FAQs%202019(7).pdf
And this document does not say anything about CES vs non-CES schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a new FAQ posted on the website with the appeal information, which says that the mcps percentiles were not based on countywide information. Rather, each student was compared to their own ES's overall SES. Students at the CES were compared to that CES's SES. That means, if your home school was a different SES than your child CES, they may have been calculated under the wrong numbers. Those numbers are then used to calculate the middle school cohort group.
Where is this posted? Can you post the link? Thanks!
Question 3 here: https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/curriculum/specialprograms/middle/Magnet%20FAQs%202019(7).pdf