Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?
OP - Don't do this to yourself. Your child is smart but what you describe does not indicate that she/he needs to be treated differently or sent to a "private school for a gifted elementary school child." Any good public or good private in your area will work for Kindergarten -- and you can re-assess his/her situation each year if particular issues arise that suggest a change would be beneficial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?
I would be very surprised if a preschooler learned all of the state capitals completely on her own initiative, so who has been pushing all of this academic learning? Further, much of what you described may be rote memorization rather than true understanding (which is very common in "gifted" preschoolers/kindergartners, and tends to level out very quickly once they're expected to translate that memorization to logical reasoning, making connections, etc.). Your daughter may be able to recite all of the state capitals, but does she understand what a capital is, what purposes it serves, now it functions, etc.? She may know her multiplication tables, but can she read a multi-step word problem and understand how to translate that into the proper functions? Can she face a real-world problem where she's not specifically being coached/tested in math and understand how to apply her math skills there to find a solution to her problem?
She reads maps for pleasure. Any maps. Yesterday I came home finding a metro map on the dining table, which she read when she had her lunch. So she understands how to read the legend and symbols of the maps. We have a puzzle of US states with capitols and she just played with them. She knows that 4 apples for 8 kids implies each kids has 1/2 an apple. She loves playing Monopoly and often serves as our Banker, gives us change and reads our Chance and Community Chest cards. She loves to write short stories on her own and can spell words like "brown", "competition", "throat". She is eager to learn anything. She can calculate 3-4=-1 and understand the meaning of a negative numbers. Lately she loves to change the temperature setting on my phone from Farenheit to Celcius and knows how to calculate 34F=1C or 30F=-1C (because I once told her that 2 degrees in F is about 1 degree in C).
I will be happy if she can go to our public K, which would be logistically so much easier for me. What I do not want is that she will be ignored and not challenged, given that she knows the materials already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?
I would be very surprised if a preschooler learned all of the state capitals completely on her own initiative, so who has been pushing all of this academic learning? Further, much of what you described may be rote memorization rather than true understanding (which is very common in "gifted" preschoolers/kindergartners, and tends to level out very quickly once they're expected to translate that memorization to logical reasoning, making connections, etc.). Your daughter may be able to recite all of the state capitals, but does she understand what a capital is, what purposes it serves, now it functions, etc.? She may know her multiplication tables, but can she read a multi-step word problem and understand how to translate that into the proper functions? Can she face a real-world problem where she's not specifically being coached/tested in math and understand how to apply her math skills there to find a solution to her problem?
She reads maps for pleasure. Any maps. Yesterday I came home finding a metro map on the dining table, which she read when she had her lunch. So she understands how to read the legend and symbols of the maps. We have a puzzle of US states with capitols and she just played with them. She knows that 4 apples for 8 kids implies each kids has 1/2 an apple. She loves playing Monopoly and often serves as our Banker, gives us change and reads our Chance and Community Chest cards. She loves to write short stories on her own and can spell words like "brown", "competition", "throat". She is eager to learn anything. She can calculate 3-4=-1 and understand the meaning of a negative numbers. Lately she loves to change the temperature setting on my phone from Farenheit to Celcius and knows how to calculate 34F=1C or 30F=-1C (because I once told her that 2 degrees in F is about 1 degree in C).
I will be happy if she can go to our public K, which would be logistically so much easier for me. What I do not want is that she will be ignored and not challenged, given that she knows the materials already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?
I would be very surprised if a preschooler learned all of the state capitals completely on her own initiative, so who has been pushing all of this academic learning? Further, much of what you described may be rote memorization rather than true understanding (which is very common in "gifted" preschoolers/kindergartners, and tends to level out very quickly once they're expected to translate that memorization to logical reasoning, making connections, etc.). Your daughter may be able to recite all of the state capitals, but does she understand what a capital is, what purposes it serves, now it functions, etc.? She may know her multiplication tables, but can she read a multi-step word problem and understand how to translate that into the proper functions? Can she face a real-world problem where she's not specifically being coached/tested in math and understand how to apply her math skills there to find a solution to her problem?
Anonymous wrote:The key to having a "gifted" or advanced child thrive is putting them in a school with a small teacher - student ratio, which allows the teachers to spend quality time with each child and understand and work with the child's strengths and weaknesses. Find a school with a broad and rich curriculum that exposes the child to new things and instills a love of learning. You actually don't want a school for gifted kids. You want a school environment that allows your child to be challenged but still learn social and emotional skills with their peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public. Honestly. The strongest kids are in public. The bright kids who didn't get into the public programs? Those are the kids in the "private gifted schools."
Really? My preschooler can read, write, spell, add, subtract, multiply, divide and she is not yet in K. She can read clocks, knows days, weeks, months and years. She loves maps and even knows the 50 US states with capitols, the different continents and oceans. Public can meet her needs?