Weekend update: First-grade G&T
Quick catch-up for parents looking for 1st-grade gifted and talented program information; we have answers from the Department of Education to some general questions (thank you, Andy Jacob), and look forward to details on a couple of specific questions tomorrow or early next week.
First, Jacob says, "Applications were mailed to all kindergarten and 1st-grade students, including those who qualified as entering kindergarteners in 1st-grade-entry districts last year." If you haven't yet received word from the DOE about your child's application, contact the DOE's Gifted and Talented program office at (212) 374-5165 or (212) 374-5972.
Second, parents have asked if their child's kindergarten seat is at risk if they choose to apply for citywide G&T (provided their child tested this year and meets eligibility criteria, of course). Concerns about risking a seat are unwarranted, says Jacob. "Unless a child actually accepts another placement, she keeps her current placement."
Third, we raised a number of questions that have to do with particular districts or particular schools: Regarding Queens' District 30, the DOE plans to offer G&T programs in three schools come September: PS 150, PS 122(both in District 30) and PS 217on Roosevelt Island (District 2). (We are going back to DOE with questions about the commute.)
Readers raised questions about PS 122, which historically began G&T classes in 2nd grade, wondering whether beginning next year's program in kindergarten would jeopardize 122's current 1st-graders, some of whom might enter the school's established G&T program next year. Jacob was unfamiliar with the specific situation, but promised to follow up with G&T staffers; we'll stay on this.
In District 28, where parents had concerns about too few seats for the number of children who qualified for district G&T programs, Jacob says two additional schools are listed on the application -- at PS 220and PS 55.
Additionally, we have heard from two families of current G&T kindergarten students in Manhattan's PS 9 who told us that scores for the tests their children took this year are missing. Despite thorough searching at DOE by G&T office workers, the parents say, there is no trace of the test results -- or any record that the children actually sat for this year's test. These parents rightly ask, what happened to the tests their children took? They also want to know what's next if the tests are truly AWOL -- will the DOE use eligibility scores from last year's test? And finally, in a DOE whose professed hallmark is accountability and transparency, how can there be no paper trail -- no physical record of who took which test when? Jacob will, we trust, offer answers to these questions soon.
In the interim, if your child sat for the G&T tests and you have not received notice of her or his scores from DOE, let us know, contact your parent coordinator, and call the DOE to report your concern first thing Monday morning. And if you're among the families of PS 9 whose children's tests seem to be missing, please be in touch, so we can try to track down what happened.
Please Post Comments