Rock'n Robin
Disney Queen
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2000
- Messages
- 7,810
No, it's not nasty, but I've had something bugging me and I couldn't handle it anymore. At my DD#1's school they only allow 75 kids into Pre-Algebra (honors math) in grade 7, in a class of 300-350. Kelly didn't make the cut. This is the latest in 4 years of "she's smart, but standards are higher here" incidents with her, starting with her being state identified as gifted, but not getting services in our district because the standards are set higher than the state. I'm sick of hearing THAT speech!
They base this mostly on an algebra aptitude test and she scored in the 70s--cutoff was 86. Of course her counselor admitted to me that she is on the weakest of the 3 6th grade "teams". These teams have given out such different amounts of homework this year that the teachers have to be shuffled around next year to even it out!
She has never had less than a B and got a 95% on her Iowa math. I talked to her counselor, but he called me back on my cell when I was driving and half of my arguments were forgotten. So I put them all in an EMail for the asst. principal, who I like. My main argument is, if she wants to be challenged, isn't the time NOW when it won't have a negative effect on her GPA as it would in HS? This takes her out of honors math for good! She'll be a year behind after 7th grade and never able to move UP to honors math. I really feel ANY student who wants to try it should be able to, but I just focused on Kelly. I want her challenged because she does better that way. I don't feel she belongs in math 7 with "everyone else" who didn't make that cut. I know I'm fighting the system here, but sometimes it works when parents make noise. So I decided to make noise over the counselor's head, and also CC'd it to the superintendent. Look I have two more kids in the pipeline, I want them to know I'm not a pushover. I even mentioned that we can reexamine her progress at the end of first quarter and put her in math 7 if it is needed; if the test is right and she can't handle it, I'll be the first to admit it. But why take a kid who wants to excel and deny her that chance?
Honestly, sometimes I feel like we should move to a "less challenging" suburb where she would be more highly valued. What good is living in the best school district if your child isn't given the chance to be among the best? Graduating between 75 and 150 out of 350 won't get her any scholarship money!
Thanks for the vent
Robin M.
They base this mostly on an algebra aptitude test and she scored in the 70s--cutoff was 86. Of course her counselor admitted to me that she is on the weakest of the 3 6th grade "teams". These teams have given out such different amounts of homework this year that the teachers have to be shuffled around next year to even it out!
She has never had less than a B and got a 95% on her Iowa math. I talked to her counselor, but he called me back on my cell when I was driving and half of my arguments were forgotten. So I put them all in an EMail for the asst. principal, who I like. My main argument is, if she wants to be challenged, isn't the time NOW when it won't have a negative effect on her GPA as it would in HS? This takes her out of honors math for good! She'll be a year behind after 7th grade and never able to move UP to honors math. I really feel ANY student who wants to try it should be able to, but I just focused on Kelly. I want her challenged because she does better that way. I don't feel she belongs in math 7 with "everyone else" who didn't make that cut. I know I'm fighting the system here, but sometimes it works when parents make noise. So I decided to make noise over the counselor's head, and also CC'd it to the superintendent. Look I have two more kids in the pipeline, I want them to know I'm not a pushover. I even mentioned that we can reexamine her progress at the end of first quarter and put her in math 7 if it is needed; if the test is right and she can't handle it, I'll be the first to admit it. But why take a kid who wants to excel and deny her that chance?
Honestly, sometimes I feel like we should move to a "less challenging" suburb where she would be more highly valued. What good is living in the best school district if your child isn't given the chance to be among the best? Graduating between 75 and 150 out of 350 won't get her any scholarship money!
Thanks for the vent
Robin M.