Anonymous wrote:Won't happen because the racial makeup wouldn't match the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you did your research you'd see that most commonly-found GT programs (gifted pull out programs) have a very low rate of effectiveness. Therefore what is their real purpose in which they are "effective"? Mostly just further segregating students. Advanced students' needs can and should be met. However, traditional programs such as what many on here are advocating for is not the answer.
source / citation, please?
https://books.google.com/books?id=ZIZJiXMUYS0C&pg=PA114&lpg=PA114&dq=gifted+programs+lack+of+efficacy&source=bl&ots=dJISs91xOw&sig=C-AW_dDdpBm-n26bXhdLe2CNQw0&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjC4sOe24HKAhVCPT4KHZFEBpQQ6AEIJzAB#v=onepage&q=gifted%20programs%20lack%20of%20efficacy&f=false
The book you cite uses out of date research from 25 years ago.
Here is more recent research on the effectiveness of flexible ability grouping:
https://www.nagc.org/resources-publications/gifted-education-practices/grouping
DCPS is doing a disservice to gifted disadvantaged students by not offering effective, rigorous gifted education IMO since gifted education via private schools and other venues are less accessible to them. Gifted students from well off families will find a way and have the means to get their student an education to meet their needs.
It is also truly unrealistic and not an effective use of a teacher's time to place students who are years and years apart academically in the same classroom. Who do you think the teacher is going to focus on??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the Census, there are only 24,000 kids aged 10-14 in DC--and that's a major overstatement of how many high schoolers there will be in a few years since families will send kids to private school or move out of the District. Even if they all went to public high school, about half would be in charters. The top 1% of DCPS kids would only be 24 kids per grade, which is not enough to run a very interesting high school--especially since the top couple dozen most gifted kids in DC are not going to be gifted in the same way: some are going to want to do physics research and some are going to write plays and some are going to build computers and some want to learn Hindi and study international relations.
I think the DCPS application high schools plus AP at Wilson and IB at Eastern offer rigorous curricula, though the schools each have aspects that make them not a great fit for certain kids. A motivated student can also use the resources of the universities, agencies, organizations, etc. in the city to do a whole lot more.
Fixing the pipeline seems like a useful step--identifying smart kids at early grades and working with them in ways parents like. And there could be improvements (different ones for each school) at SWW, Banneker, Wilson, Eastern, etc. But building a whole new TJ-like school makes a lot less sense to me than working on McKinley Tech, which has the same aims.
Have you talked to the top IB Diploma candidates at Eastern lately, or their IB Diploma Program Coordinator? Do you know that the "rigorous curricula" you describe led to a first-year IB Diploma pass rate in the mid 20s, versus in the high 30s in the better suburban programs (the IB Diploma Point pass range is 24-45)? This year, half the Diploma candidates couldn't earn the minimum 24 points. Flash forward ten years, and little is likely to have changed at the rate we're going.
You're not fooling me because I've volunteered in Eastern's fraught IB Diploma Program. Nobody else should be fooled either. Not a good fit for certain kids, my foot. Try middle class kids, period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you did your research you'd see that most commonly-found GT programs (gifted pull out programs) have a very low rate of effectiveness. Therefore what is their real purpose in which they are "effective"? Mostly just further segregating students. Advanced students' needs can and should be met. However, traditional programs such as what many on here are advocating for is not the answer.
source / citation, please?
https://books.google.com/books?id=ZIZJiXMUYS0C&pg=PA114&lpg=PA114&dq=gifted+programs+lack+of+efficacy&source=bl&ots=dJISs91xOw&sig=C-AW_dDdpBm-n26bXhdLe2CNQw0&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjC4sOe24HKAhVCPT4KHZFEBpQQ6AEIJzAB#v=onepage&q=gifted%20programs%20lack%20of%20efficacy&f=false
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/district-introduces-gifted-programs-to-push-talented-students-keep-families/2015/06/06/4132f25e-ffc8-11e4-833c-a2de05b6b2a4_story.html
The SEM approach is really not the same thing. The bottom line is that we do need to track some students. Its just completely wrong to expect kids who perform two levels above grade to be in the same classroom with kids two levels behind. the achievement gap in DC might be the highest in the country, if a school ever needed tracking its this one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you did your research you'd see that most commonly-found GT programs (gifted pull out programs) have a very low rate of effectiveness. Therefore what is their real purpose in which they are "effective"? Mostly just further segregating students. Advanced students' needs can and should be met. However, traditional programs such as what many on here are advocating for is not the answer.
source / citation, please?
Anonymous wrote:According to the Census, there are only 24,000 kids aged 10-14 in DC--and that's a major overstatement of how many high schoolers there will be in a few years since families will send kids to private school or move out of the District. Even if they all went to public high school, about half would be in charters. The top 1% of DCPS kids would only be 24 kids per grade, which is not enough to run a very interesting high school--especially since the top couple dozen most gifted kids in DC are not going to be gifted in the same way: some are going to want to do physics research and some are going to write plays and some are going to build computers and some want to learn Hindi and study international relations.
I think the DCPS application high schools plus AP at Wilson and IB at Eastern offer rigorous curricula, though the schools each have aspects that make them not a great fit for certain kids. A motivated student can also use the resources of the universities, agencies, organizations, etc. in the city to do a whole lot more.
Fixing the pipeline seems like a useful step--identifying smart kids at early grades and working with them in ways parents like. And there could be improvements (different ones for each school) at SWW, Banneker, Wilson, Eastern, etc. But building a whole new TJ-like school makes a lot less sense to me than working on McKinley Tech, which has the same aims.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/district-introduces-gifted-programs-to-push-talented-students-keep-families/2015/06/06/4132f25e-ffc8-11e4-833c-a2de05b6b2a4_story.html
Anonymous wrote:If you did your research you'd see that most commonly-found GT programs (gifted pull out programs) have a very low rate of effectiveness. Therefore what is their real purpose in which they are "effective"? Mostly just further segregating students. Advanced students' needs can and should be met. However, traditional programs such as what many on here are advocating for is not the answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Won't happen because the racial makeup wouldn't match the city.
Because only rich white kids are "truly gifted"![]()