Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But does the school wide model work?
I think the answer to that necessarily depends on what you are asking. What do you mean by "work"? Isn't the point that different educators have different goals for gifted and enrichment programs?
It definitely doesn't work for those whose goal is to segregate.
I don't know of any long term studies correlating test score increases, if that's what matters to you.
To me, it seems great. Kids get exposure to new challenges. And it's completely flexible. I like it.
Come on, the bone-headed DC model aggresively segregates by race and class, without segregation as the goal. Most white families who start in DC public flee long before HS for lack of challenge and peer groups parents see as desirable, and few Asians will touch the system from the get go. There are 150 Asians in all DCPS and 300,000 in the burbs.
your post is racist and untrue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, I think they are worthwhile. I have a 152 IQ and was truly, truly bored in class in elementary school, despite having been moved up a grade. Gifted classes were wonderful -- but I can't imagine most kids having the attention span or ability to do most of the work we did in those classes. We did things like write computer programs and decrypt encoded messages when I was 8 years old. I just don't know if that sort of stimulation is required for kids who are having trouble with multiplication tables and spelling. It's like asking a normal person to run a marathon -- it's a challenge that people in top condition can take on, not exercise for everyone. I am sure this will be an unpopular opinion, and I'm sure not every gifted program was as rigorous as the one I was in.
+1
I can't stand Jay Matthews. He is consistently wrong on educational issues.
I've been following the comment thread, and he just complimented someone who suggested that the gifted kids should "stay with all the other kids and help the kids that needed extra help."
Ugh, that is just so very, very wrong, yet Matthews and many others keep suggesting it. It is *not* the responsibility, job or burden of one kid to fix another kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, I think they are worthwhile. I have a 152 IQ and was truly, truly bored in class in elementary school, despite having been moved up a grade. Gifted classes were wonderful -- but I can't imagine most kids having the attention span or ability to do most of the work we did in those classes. We did things like write computer programs and decrypt encoded messages when I was 8 years old. I just don't know if that sort of stimulation is required for kids who are having trouble with multiplication tables and spelling. It's like asking a normal person to run a marathon -- it's a challenge that people in top condition can take on, not exercise for everyone. I am sure this will be an unpopular opinion, and I'm sure not every gifted program was as rigorous as the one I was in.
Anyone can run a marathon with training. It's not something special. Humans are built to run distances. We evolved as harassment hunters.
Your metaphor fails.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, I think they are worthwhile. I have a 152 IQ and was truly, truly bored in class in elementary school, despite having been moved up a grade. Gifted classes were wonderful -- but I can't imagine most kids having the attention span or ability to do most of the work we did in those classes. We did things like write computer programs and decrypt encoded messages when I was 8 years old. I just don't know if that sort of stimulation is required for kids who are having trouble with multiplication tables and spelling. It's like asking a normal person to run a marathon -- it's a challenge that people in top condition can take on, not exercise for everyone. I am sure this will be an unpopular opinion, and I'm sure not every gifted program was as rigorous as the one I was in.
+1
I can't stand Jay Matthews. He is consistently wrong on educational issues.
I've been following the comment thread, and he just complimented someone who suggested that the gifted kids should "stay with all the other kids and help the kids that needed extra help."
Anonymous wrote:Eh, I think they are worthwhile. I have a 152 IQ and was truly, truly bored in class in elementary school, despite having been moved up a grade. Gifted classes were wonderful -- but I can't imagine most kids having the attention span or ability to do most of the work we did in those classes. We did things like write computer programs and decrypt encoded messages when I was 8 years old. I just don't know if that sort of stimulation is required for kids who are having trouble with multiplication tables and spelling. It's like asking a normal person to run a marathon -- it's a challenge that people in top condition can take on, not exercise for everyone. I am sure this will be an unpopular opinion, and I'm sure not every gifted program was as rigorous as the one I was in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But does the school wide model work?
I think the answer to that necessarily depends on what you are asking. What do you mean by "work"? Isn't the point that different educators have different goals for gifted and enrichment programs?
It definitely doesn't work for those whose goal is to segregate.
I don't know of any long term studies correlating test score increases, if that's what matters to you.
To me, it seems great. Kids get exposure to new challenges. And it's completely flexible. I like it.
Come on, the bone-headed DC model aggresively segregates by race and class, without segregation as the goal. Most white families who start in DC public flee long before HS for lack of challenge and peer groups parents see as desirable, and few Asians will touch the system from the get go. There are 150 Asians in all DCPS and 300,000 in the burbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But does the school wide model work?
I think the answer to that necessarily depends on what you are asking. What do you mean by "work"? Isn't the point that different educators have different goals for gifted and enrichment programs?
It definitely doesn't work for those whose goal is to segregate.
I don't know of any long term studies correlating test score increases, if that's what matters to you.
To me, it seems great. Kids get exposure to new challenges. And it's completely flexible. I like it.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone spell out for me what gifted programs DC schools offer? I know there are magnets like the School without Walls but am not clear on the rest of what's available and how it differs by school, especially in middle school.
I'm a MoCo mom but we've been considering a move back into the cityt.
Anonymous wrote:The DCPS approach (Schoolwide Enrichment Model) at the schools that it has been established at (according to their website) Ross, Hardy, Stoddert, Eaton, Murch, Stuart-Hobson, Kelly Miller, West, Johnson, and Sousa seem to be in line with the more "for all" approach advocated by Jay Mathews and supported by the research he mentions that shows that it is nonsense to use a random IQ line to decide if a kid should or should not be included in special programming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But does the school wide model work?
I think the answer to that necessarily depends on what you are asking. What do you mean by "work"? Isn't the point that different educators have different goals for gifted and enrichment programs?
Anonymous wrote:But does the school wide model work?