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#16272 - 05/19/08 07:15 PM
"Re-forming Gifted Education" by Rogers
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Member
Registered: 04/05/08
Posts: 742
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I'm currently reading "Re-forming Gifted Education" by Karen Rogers. WOW this book is packed w/ info about every conceivable method of instruction. I'm reading about cluster grouping at the moment which "refers to the practice of identifying the top 5-8 academically gifted (or intellectually gifted) students at a grade level and placing them in the same classroom at that grade level with a teacher bet suited and qualified to work with gifted students."
She goes on to say:
At the beginning of this section, you may have noted a distinction between the academically talented as a cluster or the intellectually gifted as a cluster. The "talented" cluster would include the most advanced learners at a grade level-those farthest ahead in their academic work. The differentiation for this group would probably include a great deal of subject-based acceleration in math, science, social studies, and language arts/English. Students would be identified for this "talent cluster" through their performances on achievement tests, preferably out of level tests. Compacting the curriculum would be the first st ep for any differentiation developed for them .
The "gifted cluster" might look somewhat different. The children in this cluster group will be identified by their general capacity to reason conceptually, think abstractly, and solve problems. Differentiation for this group should be based more on in-depth learning, independent study, exposure to higher order knowledge, and problem-based learning than on acceleration of subject matter. In some cases, the children in a "gifted" cluster might not be the most advanced workers at a grade level since the clsuter could include gifted children who are underachieving. Allowing the under achievers to participate in the cluster will nurture their motivation to learn and to become excited by challenge.
This clarification between these two cluster types is critical to the success of the practice. IF both types of children are included in the same cluster, the academic growth we would expect from ability grouping may be hindered. The intellectually gifted children may "drop out" if the leranign is too fast-paced and doesn't allow time for reflection and analysis, while the academically talented children may "drop out" if the curriculum is so slow that they feel they are not progressing rapidly enough in their achievement. And of course, the mix of carefully selected students with a teacher who will work with them effectively is of primary importance to to make this management strategy work."
to the parent, she suggests finding out which type of clustering your school uses ie gifted or talented, and then see if your child matches that type.
I wonder if this is what my district is trying to accomplish with it's creativity testing for the gifted program. They don't appear to be looking for academically talented kids.
I also wonder if distinction between these two clusters actually happen IRL?
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#16284 - 05/20/08 05:48 AM
Re: "Re-forming Gifted Education" by Rogers
[Re: Dottie]
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Member
Registered: 08/28/07
Posts: 22
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This post could not possibly be more timely - or more perfect for the school discussions going on in our house right now! Our two remaining school choices fall squarely in those two buckets - but the one identified as the "gifted" model above (in our case) is a 10 kid mixed-age classroom that would include kids who may not be GT but whose parents have selected the school because they believe in that depth and breadth of education and think their children would thrive in it.
We know in our gut what the right answer is (and unfortunately it is wildly expensive, prompting us to try to ration away said gut!) but we have been really struggling to put the difference into words...these paragraphs did it in spades. Thanks!
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#16311 - 05/20/08 09:10 AM
Re: "Re-forming Gifted Education" by Rogers
[Re: kcab]
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Member
Registered: 06/30/06
Posts: 3267
Loc: The Real World
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Funny, it seems like DD's school follows the academically talented model for math and the intellectually gifted cluster model for language arts/other. In my experience, there is a pervasive "math fear" in the elementary teaching profession...maybe in the teaching profession in general (secondary math teachers excluded). Our secondary GT teacher outright admits she doesn't know math. I think we have lots of truly wonderful creative thinkers in the teaching field, but perhaps their is a hole in creative math thinkers?
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#19198 - 07/07/08 11:53 AM
Re: "Re-forming Gifted Education" by Rogers
[Re: Dottie]
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Member
Registered: 09/01/07
Posts: 268
Loc: California
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In my experience, there is a pervasive "math fear" in the elementary teaching profession...maybe in the teaching profession in general (secondary math teachers excluded).
Our secondary GT teacher outright admits she doesn't know math. I think we have lots of truly wonderful creative thinkers in the teaching field, but perhaps their is a hole in creative math thinkers? I've seen that. My son's teachers were thoroughly unimpressed by him being able to do long division on the 1st day of 2nd grade. Despite meetings and e-mails and letters over the course of the fall semester, nothing changed in his curriculum and he still had to do 4+7 (he was doing algebra by the end of 2nd grade and none of us even bothered to mention it). Then one day in January, they let him read a 3rd grade book. He read it in the car driving to/from school and turned in a book report 7 days later. Turned out just reading it was a 3 week project for the 3rd grade. All of a sudden, things changed. An offer for a grade skip came soon after. Go figure. I don't understand this whole attitude (or lack thereof) toward mathematics. If anyone out there has insight into it, I would love to understand more. Please tell me it's more complicated than a simple lack of understanding. Val
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