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#20643 - 07/20/08 05:10 AM
Re: "Tracking" ?
[Re: Dazed&Confuzed]
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Member
Registered: 06/25/08
Posts: 50
Loc: New York, Hudson Valley
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20-40% of kids test as gifted as gifted in your district?
In a friend's district, it's very high b/c of the demographics. Near a very large university center so most of the kids are sons/daughters of scientists, engineers, mathematicians and other Ph.D.s. Obviously in a place like that, the teachers have to differentiate in class to a much greater extent. They have methods I only dream about....math is taught at the same time so kids go to the classroom which is at his/her level, multiage classes etc. No, no. I'm sorry. NOT in my District. No way. More like 1%. I've read posts here saying 20-40%. I'd have to go searching for posts... I could see 20-40% would be "Talented" in some way but full on tested as Gifted? I dunno. The avg is 1-2%, iirc.
_________________________
"Too often we give children answers to remember rather than problems to solve." -Roger Lewin
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#20646 - 07/20/08 05:22 AM
Re: "Tracking" ?
[Re: Dazed&Confuzed]
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Member
Registered: 09/19/07
Posts: 3654
Loc: here! Where else? (Duh!)
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Just to clarify, because that 20-40% number could be confusing to some...
Allegedly 40% of the kids in my particular district test as GT (top 2% of the population). Frankly, I am not sold on our district's numbers. I think ebeth's district claims similar figures, and maybe someone else (can't recall...???). But our districts are unusual, and such high numbers can actually work to the detriment of HG+ kids, since schools don't tend to have a good understanding of LOGs, so they tend to say "All our kids are GT, why should yours get special treatment?"
But obviously the national average of GT kids in any given district is...2%! YMMV.
Oh, and some districts define services for a larger "chunk" at the top: 5% or 10% or even 15%. If they define GTness based on who they serve, then that might inflate figures, too. That's not the case in our school. They use the 130 cutoff that supposedly defines the top 2%. We do live in a well-educated suburban environment with lots of graduate degrees. I'm sure the number of GT kids is higher than average, but 38% higher? I'm skeptical!
Oh, and they take math and verbal scores for IQ and/or achievement, not just full scale IQ, like some places. That probably boosts numbers, too.
Edited by Kriston (07/20/08 05:31 AM) Edit Reason: Added last two paragraphs.
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#20647 - 07/20/08 05:35 AM
Re: "Tracking" ?
[Re: Kriston]
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Member
Registered: 06/25/08
Posts: 50
Loc: New York, Hudson Valley
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[quote=Kriston]Just to clarify, because that 20-40% number could be confusing to some...
Allegedly 40% of the kids in my particular district test as GT [end quote]
40% with 130 IQ or above, yes?
How many children in your District?
Public school?
_________________________
"Too often we give children answers to remember rather than problems to solve." -Roger Lewin
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#20648 - 07/20/08 05:46 AM
Re: "Tracking" ?
[Re: RPM9]
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Member
Registered: 09/19/07
Posts: 3654
Loc: here! Where else? (Duh!)
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Yes, the public school district. They claim 40% of their population tests as GT, or 130 or above on *either* achievement or IQ tests in *either* math or verbal. (I think. I'm not an expert about what they accept, so take some of this with a grain of salt. I'm not sure how the achievement tests factor in exactly, but I know they give them and use them, as that's how they do the state-mandated GT IDing in 3rd grade.)
I AM sure of that 40% figure because the school official in charge of the GT ID process spoke to our parents' group. She was questioned long and hard about it, as you might imagine!
I think some districts use only full scale IQ to determine GTness, and that would miss a large chunk of kids. The non-GAI scores often pull down the FSIQ. Also accepting achievement test scores and not just IQ probably changes things...although maybe this is how most districts ID? I don't imagine they give out IQ tests, do they? Dunno.
Our public school district serves nearly 8000 students according to their webpage.
And in case it matters, DS7 went to K and about 6 weeks of 1st grade there before we ran into serious problems and pulled him out for homeschooling. He will be HSd again this year, so we're not currently in the district.
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