T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
693.1 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Mon Feb 11 1991 10:40 | 11 |
| IMHO-We as parents are the ones who are gifted and the children are our
gifts. I believe there is much to much emphasis put on things such as
"gifted" or "advanced". People develop different areas at different
times. One who might be considered academically advanced could be
emotionally behind. In the movie "BIG" last night we saw some good
examples on this. That movie started me thinking about different kinds
of behavior.
Peace,
Mike
|
693.2 | My 11 year old is going... | MLCSSE::LANDRY | just passen' by...and goin' nowhere | Mon Feb 11 1991 11:57 | 34 |
|
Hi,
My father's wife keeps telling us about her grandchild who "has
been proven giften" over and over and over again... in fact, she rarely
mentions her other grandchildren, just this gifted one. I have, on
several occasions, wanted to tell her "all children are gifted" but I
just haven't had the nerve (family dynamics).
Anyway, my daughter brought home a brochure from the same type of
deal, only it's a summer camp called "College Academy". It goes for 3
weeks in the summer and they learn all kinds of neato things. My
daughter expressed an interest in going. So, I sent for the
application and sent it to school (for this one you have to get the
teacher or someone to acknowledge that the person is in the top 10% of
their class). Her's came back with the "top 5%" marked... needless to
say I'm a proud mom...
So, she'll go to this camp and my other daughter will also go to a
camp. However, I agree, my other daughter should have the same
opportunity.
The way I look at it though, is that the daughter who brought home
the pamphlet, brought it to my attention and expressed an interest to
go. My other daughter brought home the same pamphlet, and said she
wasn't interested (she's only in 2nd grade - the other one is in 5th
grade).
I don't know if I've said anything here... just related my
experience.
jean
|
693.3 | G&T is different things in different places | ICS::NELSONK | | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:22 | 33 |
| There are a zillion tests that you can have your kid take to
determine if s/he is G&T (gifted and talented). Most school
districts do at least a little bit of this kind of testing. The big
advantage is that it places kids in classes where they're given
challenges appropriate to their abilities. For example, if tests show
that Susie is gifted in math, she can be placed in an advanced class
and/or given special projects that will nurture that gift and give her
the kind of mental stimulation she needs. The idea is, she won't be
bored to tears in a "regular" math class and won't be disrupting the
rest of the students. In some high schools, kids can also take
advanced placement classes that apply toward college credit. My
youngest brother rolled up the 12 credits of American history and world
culture he needed to graduate a semester early - a blessing, since he
put himself through.
G&T means different things in different school districts and in
different areas of the country. If you think your kids are smart and
you want to have them tested, I would ask what your school district
means by G&T, what services will there be for the child, etc., etc.
Take your child's personality into consideration, too. It's no good
being in a G&T class if it means being a social outcast. (On the other
hand, don't let them get away with playing dumb just to be popular!)
Resist the pressure to turn them into "the family genius." No kid
needs the pressure; neither do you. School is not just about academic
development, it is about social development as well.
Most important of all, if testing does show that your child is G&T,
keep after the school to provide her/him with appropriate classes,
supplemental reading, etc., etc. Don't let her/him fall through the
cracks.
Been there,
Kate
|
693.4 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:52 | 23 |
| One important thing to remember is that because of the different
developmental speeds, your gifted / talented child today may not
continue to be so throughout school. Your child may simply be
very well advanced for her/his age.
While it is right to nurture and help a child who shows advanced
development, whether long term gifted or not, be aware that it is
very easy to change that nurturing to "pushing" and that may cause
problems. It is also important to ensure that while you stimulate your
child in the areas in which he / she excels, ensure that the child
still gets not only an otherwise well balanced education, but also
has a well balanced social life.
Take this from someone who has experienced pushing .. someone who was
allowed to focus too introspectively during childhood.
Also if your child slows down, try to be aware there are any number of
reasons why the child may stop producing "gifted" results, and it is
critical at this stage not to push too hard.
More thoughts later.
Stuart
|
693.5 | Gifted Does Not = Successful. How Far Do We Go? | MR4DEC::POLAKOFF | | Mon Feb 11 1991 13:09 | 41 |
|
When I was in school, one of my classmates, "Sheila," was obviously
academically gifted. She excelled in everything--(this is going back
to grade school). She was the best in math, the best in social
studies, the best in english. She was a brain. She was also sweet,
and socially mature. Most of us "regular kids" enjoyed being around
her--both in school and after school. She was popular and well-liked
(dismissing the stereotype of brains being "socially backward or
nerdy).
Her family sold their house and moved away when we were in 7th grade.
They moved to a town that had a very exclusive private school
expecially for gifted children. Sheila had a younger sister (1 year
younger) who also appeared to excel in most things. The big arguement
around 6th graders was--who is smarter--Sheila or "Debbie?" The family
moved so that Debbie too, could attend the exclusive school for budding
geniuses.
Well, unfortunately, Debbie did not pass the entrance exams for the
private school and was denied admission. The talk around town was all
about how terrible it was that the parents of Sheila and Debbie
uprooted the whole family for this particular school--and now Debbie
had to go to a public school that wasn't as good as the one they moved
away from--how Debbie was going to suffer the rest of her life in
shame--how terrible it was for their parents to do such a thing--how
the mother of Sheila and Debbie was pushing them--all that kind of
stuff. I remember I just felt terribly sorry for Debbie and wondered
how she would be able to live at home after being such a failure to her
family.
Well, twenty-some-odd years later I was watching a Phil Donohue show
and lo and behold--there was Debbie. She had just won a Pulitzer Prize
in journalism. Never did find out what happened to Sheila--I've never
seen her on tv or heard her name mentioned.
Goes to show, being gifted is fine--but it's not necessarily a marker
for doing great things in life or for excelling in particular areas.
Bonnie
|
693.6 | One *very* negative experience with Gifted... | CRONIC::ORTH | | Mon Feb 11 1991 13:53 | 39 |
| My wife had a *very* negative experience with being labeled as gifted,
when in late grade school. She excelled in math, and got straight A's
at all times. When she was in 6th grade, her school developed an
accelerated program for 7th and 8th graders, and she was slotted into
it in 7th grade. Basically, it taught 7th grade math the first half of
the year, and 8th grade math the second half of the year. Then, in 8th
grade, they learned Algebra I, or freshman high school algebra. In the
first half of 7th grade, she brought home her first B...not big
problem, but a sign that she was beginning to fall behind. In the
second half of 7th grade, while now pushing ahead to 8th grade math,
she reoutinely got C's. She bagen to compalin to her parents about not
being able to keep up and understand. In 8th grade she was put into the
Algebra course, and things went downhill rapidly. She got a D the first
marking period and failed the next. Finally, the teacher acknowledged
that there was a problem (her parents had been making waves for a
while), if a previously straight A student was failing in just over a
year's time. She got tutoring help, and managed to get D's her last two
marking periods. The absolutely amazing thing is that, when she went to
High School the next year they wanted to put her ahead into Algbra II!
This, despite, 3 D's and one F in Algebra I! Her parents took a firmly
negative stand on this and met with incredible pressure form school
officials in the form of, "You'll embarrass her if you force her to
repeat it.", and "The kids'll tease her and call her stupid if you make
her repeat." Her parents insisted though, and, by repeating, she pulled
her grades up again (from a C, to a B and then two A's that year). She
was never teased, and *most importantly* she **Learned** the material!
If she'd pushed ahead, not only would she have been set up for more
failures, but hse would have learned *nothing*! After that year of
returning to understanding and getting good grades (and, by the way,
building up her confidence in herself again), she was able to go on to
honors courses, which are basically the same course others get, but
with a bit harder material thrown in. She excelled.
So don't believe that being labeled gifted is always better...it isn't!
Let them be themselves and work to the best of their capabilities. Seek
help when necessary, and supplement with more challenging material when
necessary. But (IMHO) "labeling" is never a good thing.
--dave--
|
693.7 | Being a geek isn't fun either! | MLCSSE::LANDRY | just passen' by...and goin' nowhere | Tue Feb 12 1991 11:42 | 28 |
|
Dave,
I agree with the thought that labeling is a very negative thing. I
just want to make it clear, though that it is important also to try to
give a child enough of a challenge to make school interesting. During
the first quarter of the school year, my daughter goes crazy because it
seems to her all they're doing is repeating what they learned the end
of the previous year (which is somewhat true). So for her to get into
some sort of accelerated class might be good.
Anyway, the camp that she's going to "College Academy" does not
teach college courses to kids in grades K-12. They just have some fun
stuff to learn in a different environment. I don't know why the
requirement is for the child to be in the top 10% of their class, but
it is.
I did not grow up with having to worry about being called "gifted".
I was more concerned with being called "geeky". Which wasn't easy
either.
So, I think the thing is to just teach our children to accept
eachother for what they are.
jean
|
693.8 | Kid's College ?? | DECEAT::CAMPOS | | Thu Feb 14 1991 16:12 | 11 |
| re: .0
Jane,
Could you include some more info. re: Kid's College?
Phone number, address, etc.
Much appreciated,
kc
|
693.9 | KIDS COLLEGE info (NH) | CGHUB::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:51 | 43 |
| From the Winter Semester brochure:
KIDS COLLEGE - A World of Creativity & Excellence Through Learning and
Exploration
Using the facilities of:
New Hampshire College, Nashua, NH
Notre Dame College, Manchester,NH
Derryfield School, Manchester, NH
For Gifted and Talented Children Age 4 - 13
KIDS COLLEGE is a non-profit organization which proviceds a college
setting where gifted students explore new ideas or intensively study
a topic with others of like abilities. Enrichment activities are
planned to broaden and challenge their individual potential.
...
Address: KIDS COLLEGE, P.O. Box 281, Hollis, NH 03049-0281
Registrar: Nancy Riley (603)465-3422
Some of the courses - most are one 2-hr session on a Saturday:
Fun with Fossils
Aerobics for the Brain
Watercolor Painting
Hand Puppetry
Creating Tall Tales and Noodlehead Stories
***********************************************************************
The Winter semester is almost over and sounds like it's full. The next
schedule, for April, comes out in March.
I've talked to many people about this in the last week and now I feel
that these programs are for kids who are really into learning and
exploring new things. I am no longer concerned with the designation
as "gifted".
Kids College accepts recommendations from 2 educators in place of
testing. I'm most comfortable going that route.
|