Anonymous wrote:OP here. To the poster who thinks im trying to pick a fight, trust me Im not. I am truly curious why this idea has not gained more steam with DCPS management. there are so many driven and well organized parents in DCPS who put so much effort into starting Charters, enrichment programs or saving their local under performing school that it surprises me that a group hasn't formed to demand test-in advanced classes, for younger kids. I grew up in another state and was in a test-in gifted and talented program starting in third grade. It was great and I am glad I had the opportunity and challenges that came with it. By high school, everyone was more leveled at in some courses more than others. I know a few students in DCPS who have been allowed to skip a grade but that to me is not a good long term solution for kids. I think the schools in ward 1 are surrounded by some of the most educated parents in the City and its quickly gentrifying but so many of the DCPS schools do not reflect this at all. My kid is still a couple of years from DCPS so I am really trying to understand this issue. It just doesnt make much sense to me to have a group of third graders in one class where half are reading, barely, at kindergarten level and the rest are reading at a fifth grade level. Unless the expectation is that the more advanced kids are supposed to tutor the others. Which is really screwed up too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most threads, no matter the topic, someone always circles back to the fact that DC does not have test-in gifted/advanced classes especially at the elementary level. I just read on a middle school thread that Deal is no longer offer "honors" courses etc. I get that DCPS is very politically correct and wants to keep ALL kids together regardless of ability but don't they realize that they would keep a heck of a lot more high SES families in the school system if they offered a legit program like most surrounding counties. Its just a a fact that the smarter kids will be bored in a class that teaches to the most struggling studends. ANd in DC that is signficant. So my question is what would it take for DCPS to actually offer gifted classes? And why aren't more parents organizing and demanding this? I suspect its because they worry about appearing racists/classist or elitist. But it may be the thing that finally saves DCPS from losing another 5k students. I keep thinking a test-in model at an underperforming school would do wonders to bring in more parents, money and volunteers which could benefit the entire school.
Am I missing something? Why aren't parents demanding this? (And Im not talking about DCPS and their bs "enrichment programs" a couple of hours a week either). Im sure I will get flamed for this but I think a ton of parents are thinking the same thing but just afraid to bring it up at a PTA meeting.
If DCPS opened a test-in G/T elementary school and your child was selected, how far would you travel? What if the school was opened in the old Savoy elementary school located in Ward 8, but directly across from a subway station, would you enroll your child? Or, would you require the new test-in G/T school to be placed in Wards 1-4, and maybe 6?
It makes more sense for such a school to be centrally located in the city. It also makes more sense for their eventually to be more than such school.
Anonymous wrote:Rhee and Henderson have both answered this question before. There is only so many dollars to go around and in a system like DCPS, the money has to go to those struggling the most. That's just the way it is folks.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is that parents want to rate and rank their children into a public school system. You can't do that at any private school. When I hear parents say they want gifted and talented programs, it is all well and good. But there's not enough of gifted and talented students in one grade level to make a school viable.
To make any school viable you would need about 500 kids tested per entry grade level, just to weed out 250. That ain't happening in this city, I don't care how many strollers you see at the park.
It ain't happening. No way, no how.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because no one calls it that.
I think OP really doesn't know much about gifted programs and is indeed just looking to pick a fight. The simple fact that he/she is talking about "gifted classes" is testimony to that. The presumption behind "gifted" and "talented" programs is that some kids (I think estimates range from 3-5%) ARE gifted. They don't need to occasional class here and there but an entirely separate program.
But I think what OP is asking is why there (presumably) aren't enough advanced classes. That there aren't is just plain wrong; though possibly there aren't enough. Middle schools and more so high schools in DC (and in truth many elementary schools) do offer advanced options in various formats. For political reasons, no one calls that "gifted and talented" but if you took the time to compare, say, Fairfax' definition of G&T (http://www.fcps.edu/is/aap/column/columnlevelIV.shtml) to what DC does on the ground, there isn't much difference, just differently framed and different lingo.
Now, maybe the problem is that, in search of "advanced classes", you'll need to read up a little and know what you're looking for. You won't find what you're looking for neatly labelled in DC.
I feel like you and I live in parallel universes. I have visited and studied five DCPS middle schools, and aside from Deal, I just don't see the kind of programs that are in abundance in Montgomery, Arlington and Fairfax. Please describe the course sequence for a very bright child at Hardy/Stuart Hobson/Jefferson/Eliot Hine.
My point exactly, not neatly labeled, no clear course sequence. But all of these offer multiple ways in which an advanced learner can go above and beyond the basic standards. By "multiple", I mean that your advance learner may take tracked math classes, non-tracked reading but advanced book clubs, and some extended advanced research or science project.
If you take the time to read through the Fairfax plan, then you find great deal of labeling, but it and substantively boils down to the same thing.
By "you need to know what you're looking for", I mean that you really have to unpack how some of the options you enumerate offer advanced learning opportunities. They do so quite differently. Hardy & Stuart-Hobson have a similar take and Eliot-Hine and Jefferson have another one. The first two are more directly premised on tracking, the latter two on ability-grouping (http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/brown-center-chalkboard/posts/2013/04/03-ability-grouping-tracking-loveless). And if you are dead-set on your child fully maximizing on advanced offerings, pick a school where everybody else isn't already an advanced learner.
Maybe this isn't what you mean by G&T programs (as opposed to advanced courses/opportunities). But if it isn't, then Fairfax doesn't have one either, just calls it that. (I don't know about MoCo.)
Anonymous wrote:I don't think we need a special program for G/T kids. I do think we need a richer, more challenging curriculum that offers more substance than simply testing the hell out of reading and math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most threads, no matter the topic, someone always circles back to the fact that DC does not have test-in gifted/advanced classes especially at the elementary level. I just read on a middle school thread that Deal is no longer offer "honors" courses etc. I get that DCPS is very politically correct and wants to keep ALL kids together regardless of ability but don't they realize that they would keep a heck of a lot more high SES families in the school system if they offered a legit program like most surrounding counties. Its just a a fact that the smarter kids will be bored in a class that teaches to the most struggling studends. ANd in DC that is signficant. So my question is what would it take for DCPS to actually offer gifted classes? And why aren't more parents organizing and demanding this? I suspect its because they worry about appearing racists/classist or elitist. But it may be the thing that finally saves DCPS from losing another 5k students. I keep thinking a test-in model at an underperforming school would do wonders to bring in more parents, money and volunteers which could benefit the entire school.
Am I missing something? Why aren't parents demanding this? (And Im not talking about DCPS and their bs "enrichment programs" a couple of hours a week either). Im sure I will get flamed for this but I think a ton of parents are thinking the same thing but just afraid to bring it up at a PTA meeting.
If DCPS opened a test-in G/T elementary school and your child was selected, how far would you travel? What if the school was opened in the old Savoy elementary school located in Ward 8, but directly across from a subway station, would you enroll your child? Or, would you require the new test-in G/T school to be placed in Wards 1-4, and maybe 6?
It makes more sense for such a school to be centrally located in the city. It also makes more sense for their eventually to be more than such school.