Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS can't even meet the needs of average students never mind the gifted. The majority of kids in DCPS in all testing grades are below grade level in reading and math including high schoolers. Quite understandable why they don't bother with gifted education since they are woefully inadequate in teaching anyone.
Which is why focusing on in-class differentiation that ensures all kids are taught at the right level is the right answer. It doesn't have to be either/or.
Differentiation is obviously not working at all since DCPS has pathetically low proficiency rates in reading and math for large swaths of its students. Then you have large cohorts of families bailing on DCPS in order to meet their kids' educational needs.
No. Differentiation isn't happening in most DCPS. Skipping from nothing to "let's just pull out the advanced kids" doesn't address the bigger problem. And differentiation, done right, can actually address all of the issues (except, perhaps, for the profoundly gifted, whom we can all agree make up an incredibly small portion of the population--maybe 1 or 2 kids per school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS can't even meet the needs of average students never mind the gifted. The majority of kids in DCPS in all testing grades are below grade level in reading and math including high schoolers. Quite understandable why they don't bother with gifted education since they are woefully inadequate in teaching anyone.
Which is why focusing on in-class differentiation that ensures all kids are taught at the right level is the right answer. It doesn't have to be either/or.
Differentiation is obviously not working at all since DCPS has pathetically low proficiency rates in reading and math for large swaths of its students. Then you have large cohorts of families bailing on DCPS in order to meet their kids' educational needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really 20% of kids in AAP in fairfax county? Where are you getting this 20% of kids number 11:20?
Also, why on earth do you assume everyone in AU Park with a graduate degree is smarter than everyone in the suburbs to get this idea that all of AU Park would be in the top 20% of say MoCo or Fairfax? They have plenty of million+ homes there as well you know. Seems off base.
Because you have SOME sort of economic diversity in the suburbs, even in wealthier areas.
In AU park you have NONE--it is such a tiny area. I don't know a SINGLE person who isn't college educated. Not one. Come to think of it, not a single person who doesn't have a graduate degree.
Anonymous wrote:In this town, what is considered gifted? I recently received my kid's academic assessment from two different testing centers, C2 Education and Huntington. He is two grades ahead in math, and almost a full two grades below in reading. Two different evaluations, same results. I bet most of these parents claiming that their DC are gifted are not. They just read or do math at a higher level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Where well-heeled PTAs pony up for teachers aides, or pay for enough stuff so that schools can afford them past K (e.g. at Janney, Murch and Brent) gifted elementary school kids are increasingly pulled out for enrichment systematically."
Not true at Janney. The advanced kids are offered the option of doing more challenging homework, and have the opportunity on certain assignments/projects to do more work, but there aren't pull outs for the advanced kids.
And differentiation is far different from gifted education, and it doesn't ensure that all kids' needs are being met.
Agreed. I have 3 kids at Janney and there are not routine pull outs for advanced kids. Kids have been given more difficult spelling words or math work to do but that's about it. However, this serves the population just fine because 75% of the kids at the school
are those that would have been identified as "gifted and talented" in a large suburban school district like Fairfax which identifies something like 20% of the kids as "gifted".
At Janney every parent I know was an overachiever themselves and were in some sort of gifted and talented program. Their offspring are very bright and have had every advantage from birth on. Of the dozen so Janney kids i know who took the WIPSI at age 4/5 (with thoughts of maybe going to private school),
all were within the 95-99.9% range. We laugh on my block because all 6 Janney kids were tested in the 99% (we laugh because certainly these tests are highly susceptible).
Anyway, that all said, I don't know a single Janney kid who I'd truly consider "gifted" or a prodigy. You know the "doing advanced Algebra in second grade" type. These kids (who would really need a gifted program) are exceedingly rare---probably less than 10 per grade level in DC or even less than that.
It would seem a bit extreme to start an entire school to serve less than 100 kids city wide. For better or worse, what you have at Janney or other NWDC public elementary schools ARE "gifted programs" if gifted means what it has come to mean in most districts-----"very bright kids working a few grade levels ahead but not extreme academic prodigies".
If 75% of the kids would be identified as "gifted and talented" they are not truly G&T.![]()
What's "truly G&T"? Are MoCo and Fairfax identifying "truly G&T"? Or just bright/working well above grade level? Because what PP is saying is that in a school like Janney, most of the kids are working above grade level, and many score in the 95th+ percentile when tested. That doesn't make them "gifted."
I think MoCo does; it pulls the top 3-4% out, and it only gets more selective as it goes along. In a county with as many smart well educated kids as MoCo has, pulling the top 3-4% is going to be a VERY smart kids. Fairfax is closer to 20%; obviously a very different program and probably not for the "gifted".
I was in a top-5% gifted program at a high-achieving high school, and we were all "very bright," but there wasn't some steep drop-off between us and the honors kids. Again, we're not talking about truly gifted in these scenarios. We're talking about very smart kids who happen to make it above an arbitrary cut-off point on a test. I just don't buy that there's anything significant gained by pulling those kids out and tracking them separately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS can't even meet the needs of average students never mind the gifted. The majority of kids in DCPS in all testing grades are below grade level in reading and math including high schoolers. Quite understandable why they don't bother with gifted education since they are woefully inadequate in teaching anyone.
Which is why focusing on in-class differentiation that ensures all kids are taught at the right level is the right answer. It doesn't have to be either/or.
Anonymous wrote:
I've thought about this some more and I stand by my statement that Janney's population is about 75% kids who would be admitted to a traditional, suburban district's Gifted and Talented program (which would admit about the top 20% of the cross section of kids). They're very bright and very capable of working several grade levels ahead but not prodigies.
Unfortunately the price of admission to this G&T program is the ability to afford to buy/rent a million dollar house in AU Park. Which is ALL sorts of wrong, I agree 100%. Unlike traditional school districts you can't test in, you must buy in to this peer group in DC. And for many if you can't afford (or chose not to) buy in, many Charter schools fulfill the same purpose of self-segregation by academic talent/ambition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The crazy thing about this discussion is that most of you demanding it wouldn't have a kid test into one of these programs. Everyone here thinks their snowflake is special but reality is they may not be. Reading a grade level above does not make a kid gifted. Queue the hundreds of parents that had their DC tested when considering private in 3,2,1.....
BINGO
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it really 20% of kids in AAP in fairfax county? Where are you getting this 20% of kids number 11:20?
Also, why on earth do you assume everyone in AU Park with a graduate degree is smarter than everyone in the suburbs to get this idea that all of AU Park would be in the top 20% of say MoCo or Fairfax? They have plenty of million+ homes there as well you know. Seems off base.
Because you have SOME sort of economic diversity in the suburbs, even in wealthier areas.
In AU park you have NONE--it is such a tiny area. I don't know a SINGLE person who isn't college educated. Not one. Come to think of it, not a single person who doesn't have a graduate degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Where well-heeled PTAs pony up for teachers aides, or pay for enough stuff so that schools can afford them past K (e.g. at Janney, Murch and Brent) gifted elementary school kids are increasingly pulled out for enrichment systematically."
Not true at Janney. The advanced kids are offered the option of doing more challenging homework, and have the opportunity on certain assignments/projects to do more work, but there aren't pull outs for the advanced kids.
And differentiation is far different from gifted education, and it doesn't ensure that all kids' needs are being met.
Agreed. I have 3 kids at Janney and there are not routine pull outs for advanced kids. Kids have been given more difficult spelling words or math work to do but that's about it. However, this serves the population just fine because 75% of the kids at the school
are those that would have been identified as "gifted and talented" in a large suburban school district like Fairfax which identifies something like 20% of the kids as "gifted".
At Janney every parent I know was an overachiever themselves and were in some sort of gifted and talented program. Their offspring are very bright and have had every advantage from birth on. Of the dozen so Janney kids i know who took the WIPSI at age 4/5 (with thoughts of maybe going to private school),
all were within the 95-99.9% range. We laugh on my block because all 6 Janney kids were tested in the 99% (we laugh because certainly these tests are highly susceptible).
Anyway, that all said, I don't know a single Janney kid who I'd truly consider "gifted" or a prodigy. You know the "doing advanced Algebra in second grade" type. These kids (who would really need a gifted program) are exceedingly rare---probably less than 10 per grade level in DC or even less than that.
It would seem a bit extreme to start an entire school to serve less than 100 kids city wide. For better or worse, what you have at Janney or other NWDC public elementary schools ARE "gifted programs" if gifted means what it has come to mean in most districts-----"very bright kids working a few grade levels ahead but not extreme academic prodigies".
If 75% of the kids would be identified as "gifted and talented" they are not truly G&T.![]()
What's "truly G&T"? Are MoCo and Fairfax identifying "truly G&T"? Or just bright/working well above grade level? Because what PP is saying is that in a school like Janney, most of the kids are working above grade level, and many score in the 95th+ percentile when tested. That doesn't make them "gifted."
I think MoCo does; it pulls the top 3-4% out, and it only gets more selective as it goes along. In a county with as many smart well educated kids as MoCo has, pulling the top 3-4% is going to be a VERY smart kids. Fairfax is closer to 20%; obviously a very different program and probably not for the "gifted".