Anonymous wrote:The kids in local level IV are determined with the same standards. The committee has no clue who will opt for the center and who will stay at the local level IV. I'm not sure why the peer group would be so different in schools that can fill classes locally without having to include level III kids. I think things will be fine if centers are eliminated in my neighborhood.
Fixed that for you.
The kids in local level IV are determined with the same standards. The committee has no clue who will opt for the center and who will stay at the local level IV. I'm not sure why the peer group would be so different in schools that can fill classes locally without having to include level III kids. I think things will be fine if centers are eliminated in my neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Your husband is wrong.
I think people get confused and think that only centers are Level IV and anything at the base school is level III, which is not the case. The local level IV curriculum is supposed to be of the same caliber as the center program. If it's different, it's an implementation issue rather than an issue of having a different curriculum because they are different levels.
The intended curriculum at LLIV is the same as the Level IV Center. The peer groups are different.
The peer group was the original, and still most important, part of Level IV. The curriculum is a nice bonus, although many people have gotten too focused on the curriculum. So Local Level IV just isn't the same.
The kids in local level IV are determined with the same standards. The committee has no clue who will opt for the center and who will stay at the local level IV. I'm not sure why the peer group would be so different in schools that can fill classes locally without having to include level III kids. I think things will be fine if centers are eliminated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Your husband is wrong.
I think people get confused and think that only centers are Level IV and anything at the base school is level III, which is not the case. The local level IV curriculum is supposed to be of the same caliber as the center program. If it's different, it's an implementation issue rather than an issue of having a different curriculum because they are different levels.
The intended curriculum at LLIV is the same as the Level IV Center. The peer groups are different.
The peer group was the original, and still most important, part of Level IV. The curriculum is a nice bonus, although many people have gotten too focused on the curriculum. So Local Level IV just isn't the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Your husband is wrong.
I think people get confused and think that only centers are Level IV and anything at the base school is level III, which is not the case. The local level IV curriculum is supposed to be of the same caliber as the center program. If it's different, it's an implementation issue rather than an issue of having a different curriculum because they are different levels.
The intended curriculum at LLIV is the same as the Level IV Center. The peer groups are different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Your husband is wrong.
I think people get confused and think that only centers are Level IV and anything at the base school is level III, which is not the case. The local level IV curriculum is supposed to be of the same caliber as the center program. If it's different, it's an implementation issue rather than an issue of having a different curriculum because they are different levels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Your husband is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK so if I understand correctly there is no Level IV except at centers, which happen to have GenEd kids as well. When there's space, then I guess the centers sometimes round out the Level IV aka AAP classes with Level III kids.
-- Parent of 2nd grader
There's level IV both at centers and at base schools. It's the same curriculum. The idea behind the centers was to provide a larger peer group to AAP kids who would have been few in numbers at their base school. This works well when you have a handful of kids who qualify for AAP at the base schools--they actually get enough of them to form one classroom or more at a center.
In practice it has two perverse effects when the qualifying cohort is larger:
1. If the base school has enough AAP kids to form a classroom absent the center, the fact that kids leave for the center hollows out that group and forces the principal to try to fill the class with kids who didn't formally qualify. That sends some parents into a tizzy and generates the idiotic presumption that the center is somehow better. In truth, AAP is such a broad program and the admissions process is so subjective that there are lots of kids in GenEd who can do the work.
2. Some centers get hopelessly overcrowded with AAP kids. People are fond of throwing around the word "critical mass" as if having tons of AAP kids in one place somehow raises their collective intelligence. What it does result in is lots of kids in trailers, AAP classes over 30 like my kids' in the last two years, and cut-throat competition for academic after-school activities (Science Olympiad, Mathcounts, Quiz Bowl, etc.) and lots of kids who are left out of them due to limited numbers of spaces.
Anonymous wrote:OK my husband says his understanding is that if they do away with AAP centers, there will be no Level IV anywhere. I'm lost.
Anonymous wrote:OK so if I understand correctly there is no Level IV except at centers, which happen to have GenEd kids as well. When there's space, then I guess the centers sometimes round out the Level IV aka AAP classes with Level III kids.
-- Parent of 2nd grader
Anonymous wrote:OK so if I understand correctly there is no Level IV except at centers, which happen to have GenEd kids as well. When there's space, then I guess the centers sometimes round out the Level IV aka AAP classes with Level III kids.
-- Parent of 2nd grader