Title: Gifted Education in Lexington 5
1Gifted Education in Lexington 5
2So a child is gifted.What does that mean?
- Even among researchers and experts in the field,
there is no clear agreement about giftedness - and who should be considered
- gifted and talented.
3In South Carolina
- According to SC R 43-220
- Gifted and talented students are those who are
identified in grades one through twelve as
demonstrating high performance ability or
potential in academic and/or artistic areas and
therefore require an educational program beyond
that normally provided by the general school
program in order to achieve their potential.
4Purposes of Identification
- To find students who display characteristics of
the gifted and talented - To assess the aptitudes, attributes, and
behaviors of each student - To evaluate each student for the purposes of
placement
5Where are they?
Everywhere!
6- Within any racial, ethnic or socioeconomic group
- Within any nationality
- Within both genders
- Within populations with physical disabilities,
learning disabilities or behavioral problems
7How are they identified?
- In South Carolina, students are identified as
gifted and talented by qualifying using the
following dimensions - Dimension A Reasoning Abilities
- Dimension B Achievement in Reading and/or Math
- Dimension C Intellectual/Academic Performance
8Dimension A Reasoning Abilities
- Automatic qualification total or composite
score at the 96th national age percentile or
higher - 93rd national age percentile or higher in one or
more of these areas verbal, nonverbal,
quantitative and/or composite - Examples of tests OLSAT and CogAT
9Dimension B Achievement in Reading and/or Math
- Score of 94th national age percentile in reading
and/or math as measured by a nationally normed
achievement test such as MAP, Terra Nova,
Stanford 8, etc. - Advanced score on PACT Reading (not English
Language Arts) and/or Math
10Dimension C Intellectual/Academic Performance
- For placement in grades 3 through 6 qualifying
score on SC Performance Tasks for grade level
administered annually in March - For placement in grades 7 through 12 Grade
Point Average in academic areas of 3.75 or higher
on a 4.0 scale
11Project STAR Criteria
- Placement into Grade 3
- Primary 16 Verbal or Nonverbal
- Placement into Grade 4
- Primary 18 Verbal or Nonverbal
- Placement into Grade 5
- Intermediate Verbal 16 or Nonverbal 22
- Placement into Grade 5
- Intermediate Verbal 18 or Nonverbal 25
-
12How are they served?
- Resource Room/Pullout Model
- Grade 3 125 minutes per week
- Grades 4-5 200 minutes per week
- Special Class/Content Model
- Grades 4-12 8100 minutes per year
- Reading and/or Math in Middle School
- Honors and Advanced Placement in High School
13What about the curriculum?
- Content, process and product standards that
exceed the state-adopted standards for all
students - Goals and indicators that require students to
demonstrate depth and complexity of knowledge and
skills - A confluent approach that incorporates both
acceleration and enrichment - Opportunities for worldwide communication and
research
14Differentiation for Gifted Students
- Pacing
- Depth
- Complexity
- Level of Abstraction
15Gifted Goals and Objectives
- Goal 1 Standards
- Goal 2 Big Idea
- Goal 3 Inquiry
- Goal 4 Thinking
- Goal 5 Communication
16Who teaches them?
- Teachers must hold a valid teaching certificate.
- Each teacher of a state-funded gifted and
talented class must have completed a training
program. - Two graduate courses
- Nature and Needs of Gifted and Talented Students
- Curriculum for Gifted and Talented Students
17What do they look like?
Gifts come in different packages!
18Meet Jennifer!
- Jennifer runs her 3rd grade class. A teacher is
always present, but it is Jennifer who tells the
children what to do, when to laugh, how to
construct the paper mache map and when its
alright to study quietly. Everybody knows she is
in charge!
19Meet Jason!
- At age 5, Jason could sweep into a room and take
over. What are you doing? Whats this thing on
your desk? How come youre doing that now? Do
you have any gum? What day is this? You put
that in the wrong place it should be over here.
Tie my shoe. Most adults instantly disliked
him. He asked too many questions he demanded
too many answers he had no self-control.
20Meet Sarah!
- Sarahs parents knew from the beginning there was
something different about her. She sat up,
walked and talked at much earlier stages than did
her two sisters. At age five, she taught herself
to read but she was not a particularly good
student. In fact she had to take remedial math
even to get into a state university. Now shes a
professor of law and court judge. - Does This Mean My Kids a Genius? Linda Pergo
Moore
21General Characteristics
- Sensitivity
- Problem solvers
- Rapid learning ability
- Long attention span
- Wide range of interests
- Seem mature for age
- Compassion for others
- High degree of energy
- Perfectionism
- Sense of humor
- Perseverance in areas of interest
- Likes puzzles, mazes or numbers
- Prefers older companions
22Iron rusts from disuse Stagnant water loses its
purity and in cold weather becomes frozen Even
so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.
Leonardo da Vinci, The Notebooks