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    #105227 06/16/11 07:30 PM
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    Dear Mrs. X,
    I can definitely get the raw score for you on your child's test. I will need to pull her test and hand score it. I will be out of the office on Monday and Tuesday next week and will try and get back to you by Thursday with that information.

    As far as why we use the verbal and nonverbal portions of the test for our program qualification: each year we have an internal committee of administrators, gifted teachers and psychologists review the data from the students we screened to determine if our criteria is appropriate for our programs. Our goal is to not over test students thus having more students not qualify than qualify, but to target the students that will achieve the cognitive scores to enter our programs. In years past, the district used a combined quantitative/nonverbal score with the verbal score. When reviewing this data, the committee found that the combined score was causing an inflation, or heavier weighing, on the rubric in this one area. Also, with all children now taking the MAP starting in kindergarten, we were able to get nationally normed math scores across the district for the first time this year. Since the quantitative part of the test is based on number sense and number concepts, the committee felt the MAP test would provide us with good information on students who were strong in this academic area. Therefore, the decision was made to take out the quantitative portion of the test and use the nonverbal portion weighted equally with the verbal portion. By using the nonverbal only, it also provided more equity for second language learners since the quantitative has a heavy language component in grades 1 and 2. In August, our committee will meet to review this past year's data where we discuss MAP targets for screening as well as cognitive scores. We then post all updates to our webpage for our parents to receive the most up to date information about our testing program for gifted services.

    I hope this has been helpful and I will pull your child's test booklet next week for scoring and communicate back with you her raw scores on each of the subtests within the verbal and nonverbal portions of the cognitive test.
    Sincerely,
    Y Z


    Last edited by frannieandejsmom; 06/16/11 07:30 PM. Reason: this is in response to my inquiry
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    Short answer: No.

    (jus' sayin')
    -Mich.


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    The school district near ours uses the Raven's test, which is like the NNAT test. Both are only non-verbal tests. They use it since that district has alot of kids for whom English is not their native language. I can understand why a district does that. I would see if this school district would also accept a WISC or some more traditional IQ test.

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    sounds like they are saying they have programs for 'x' sort of kid, and if your kid scores in the range that makes them look like 'x' sort of kid, they will do well in our program.
    this doesn't sound like they are even necessarily trying to find the majority of the high ability kids, and really sounds like they are NOT trying to find the highest ability kids. Is this cogat?

    "Since the quantitative part of the test is based on number sense and number concepts, the committee felt the MAP test would provide us with good information on students who were strong in this academic area. Therefore, the decision was made to take out the quantitative portion of the test and use the nonverbal portion weighted equally with the verbal portion."

    gets a little dicey there, but are they saying they are now using 2/3 of one test and the map test to cover the 1/3 they dropped?


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    This is CogAT. They use the MAP to determine who will take it. The kids need to score in the 90th percentile in reading and math (fall scores) to be eligible to take CogAT in January. And yes, they are only using 2/3 of the test. To me, it would seem as verbal would be more of a roadblock to non native speakers not the quantitative section.


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    Originally Posted by frannieandejsmom
    This is CogAT. They use the MAP to determine who will take it. The kids need to score in the 90th percentile in reading and math (fall scores) to be eligible to take CogAT in January. And yes, they are only using 2/3 of the test. To me, it would seem as verbal would be more of a roadblock to non native speakers not the quantitative section.

    If they use MAP to determine who takes the GT screener, they will miss all kinds of kids, like a kid who didn't test well on the particular day of the MAP test, a kid who has not been exposed to higher level materials because they haven't been learning anything new, a kid who is already developed underachieving tendencies. MAP is a great test of what a kid already knows, but it really has little to do with whether you are GT or not. An extremely bright kid who would not test GT on IQ tests could nonetheless do very well through hard work on the MAP. IMO, they should give the CogAT to all the kids. Or at least allow the CogAT to anyone who asks, or accept outside testing that shows the child is GT.

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    I hope this pastes correctly... They use this matrix

    Cognitive Abilities Test

    (CogAT)

    0 1 2 3 4 5
    120-125 126-128 129-134 135-139 140+
    Verbal
    National Percentile

    Nonverbal
    National Percentile

    The child needs to score 3 points, with at least one point in verbal and 1 point in non verbal

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    Originally Posted by Dottie
    Yeah that might leave out the ESL students, but otherwise it's not a bad cutoff system. It's much more generous than many schools.
    So, if I'm reading her chart right, you'd need to be 126+ in both areas. Our local districts will take 125 in any one area (nonverbal, verbal, or quantitative). Kids who come out around 120+ in any one area are also retested on the OLSAT or the CogAT again at some of the schools in the district dd12 was in last year -- so even more generous than hers. That may be why dd12 has been a major outlier in the GT programs even though she isn't PG.

    eta: I, too, don't like the idea of achievement needing to be in place in order to bother testing for ability, but there are also flaws to the broad net approach. Both of our local districts are now testing everyone in 3rd grade in a group format. When dd10 took the CogAT in 3rd grade it was in a classroom with nearly 30 other kids, a teacher who told them all to just hurry up and finish and guess if they were running out of time, and parents walking in and out of the room despite a sign on the door that said "testing, quiet please." I was waiting in the hall to volunteer and saw two parents go in and then loudly apologize when the teacher asked them to leave until testing was done. With a distractable kid with ADD, that is far from an ideal testing format.

    Last edited by Cricket2; 06/17/11 07:01 AM.
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    Dottie, You are correct. The weaker needs a 120. DD fell into that 0 catagory with a 118 in non verbal and scored 2 points in verbal (I dont recall her score here and its not handy). She is being subject accelerated next year .. she is skipping second grade math. Her teacher and her class' buddy teacher (a 5/6 gifted teacher) were surprised she did not get into the program for second grade.. hence why I am asking a ton of questions.

    I am becoming "that" mom

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    Ah, got it. Ours is still more generous wink. You could get a 125 (2 pt) score in any one of the three subtests here and be in the 1st percentile on the other two (again, I know unlikely), but you'd still get a GT id for that one 95th percentile score. One of the GT coordinators did tell me that a good majority of the kids with GT ids have composite CogAT scores around the 70th-75th percentile with one area that hit the 95th. I know for a fact that some of these kids were given the CogAT and OLSAT within the course of a few weeks and some were given the exact same test twice within a few months to hit that one 95th.

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