Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They don't vary "considerably" - unless someone is doing something very very wrong when they administer the test, or the person being tested is having a very, very off day. The variation that one would normally see would be something like 125, 127, 122 from one year to the next... I wouldn't expect to see a change of 10 points no matter what - that would be a red flag that something is wrong.
I don't know if you can compare the different cog abilities tests directly, but trust me there was variation from high average to low gifted and the percentile change ranged over 15% from one test to the other. I don't have reason to believe the test administration was flawed. There is a wide percentile range from high average to low gifted potentially if you're coming out on the low end of high average on one test. Anyway, I don't think these things are the be all and end all. Furthermore, if you look on DCUM you'll see whole threads devoted to discussions of prepping for the WISC-IV so there are too many tested who've been exposed to the material. That skews the results.
Anonymous wrote:They don't vary "considerably" - unless someone is doing something very very wrong when they administer the test, or the person being tested is having a very, very off day. The variation that one would normally see would be something like 125, 127, 122 from one year to the next... I wouldn't expect to see a change of 10 points no matter what - that would be a red flag that something is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you want your local public elementary school to perform free psychologist-led IQ tests on all children? (If it was an option, that is.) Ostensibly for the purposes of putting children into different groups and offering those with IQs of above a certain amount (let's say 130) to take part in special small group instruction?
This is already happening. No IQ test needed. In fact IQ is irrelevant to the differentiated instruction - actual performance and ability are the measure; and since those are variable, the groups can/do change with the needs and development of the child.
Differentiation becomes near impossible when you have kids in the same class who are academic years and sometimes decades apart in ability. Kids with greater academic abilities will be left to their devices for the most part as teachers focus their efforts on struggling students. Also, by dividing a class into groups, it effectively means students get less direct instructional time with the teacher than when students are grouped by ability into different classrooms. Any teacher worth their mettle knows this.
People keep telling me that, but I guess we've just been really lucky with the 9 teachers DCs have had so far.
Differentiation can work really well as long as teachers balance time between different groups of students.However most posters on DCUM are convinced the only way their kid can be properly challenged is if their speshull snowflake is in a special snowflake classroom with a moat around it to keep the dumb kids out. Or pull outs so they can at least go off in another room for part of the day. I'm not sure if it's an ego thing (getting to brag your kid is in a gifted class, or because most people on DCUM have really incorrect notions on gifted/talented education (ie testing kids at 5, or worse using the CAS as proof of being gifted)
Differentiation in practice in DCPS is bullshit and everyone knows it. They throw the term around, and pat themselves on the back thinking they address all needs when the sad, actual reality is that they teach to the middle and ignore the high achievers and the kids that are struggling. Anyone who thinks otherwise is deceiving themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish they would give IQ tests to adults so that only those with an IQ over 130 had the best jobs. The rest could be our worker bees. No reason not to start it in elementary school. That way there's no deceiving one another that "you can do anything when you grow up."
"You can do anything when you grow up" is a big fat lie. I am 5 feet tall, I could never be a great basketball player, no matter how hard I tried.
Same with IQ, whether we like it or not.
IQ can change. Adult height does not.
Not really. Outside of early stages of development, IQ typically doesn't change in any great leaps and bounds after that, it only tends to vary by a few percentage points. And likewise, no amount of coaching or test prep will ever give an average person genius IQ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish they would give IQ tests to adults so that only those with an IQ over 130 had the best jobs. The rest could be our worker bees. No reason not to start it in elementary school. That way there's no deceiving one another that "you can do anything when you grow up."
"You can do anything when you grow up" is a big fat lie. I am 5 feet tall, I could never be a great basketball player, no matter how hard I tried.
Same with IQ, whether we like it or not.
IQ can change. Adult height does not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you want your local public elementary school to perform free psychologist-led IQ tests on all children? (If it was an option, that is.) Ostensibly for the purposes of putting children into different groups and offering those with IQs of above a certain amount (let's say 130) to take part in special small group instruction?
This is already happening. No IQ test needed. In fact IQ is irrelevant to the differentiated instruction - actual performance and ability are the measure; and since those are variable, the groups can/do change with the needs and development of the child.
Differentiation becomes near impossible when you have kids in the same class who are academic years and sometimes decades apart in ability. Kids with greater academic abilities will be left to their devices for the most part as teachers focus their efforts on struggling students. Also, by dividing a class into groups, it effectively means students get less direct instructional time with the teacher than when students are grouped by ability into different classrooms. Any teacher worth their mettle knows this.
People keep telling me that, but I guess we've just been really lucky with the 9 teachers DCs have had so far.
Differentiation can work really well as long as teachers balance time between different groups of students.However most posters on DCUM are convinced the only way their kid can be properly challenged is if their speshull snowflake is in a special snowflake classroom with a moat around it to keep the dumb kids out. Or pull outs so they can at least go off in another room for part of the day. I'm not sure if it's an ego thing (getting to brag your kid is in a gifted class, or because most people on DCUM have really incorrect notions on gifted/talented education (ie testing kids at 5, or worse using the CAS as proof of being gifted)
Differentiation in practice in DCPS is bullshit and everyone knows it. They throw the term around, and pat themselves on the back thinking they address all needs when the sad, actual reality is that they teach to the middle and ignore the high achievers and the kids that are struggling. Anyone who thinks otherwise is deceiving themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish they would give IQ tests to adults so that only those with an IQ over 130 had the best jobs. The rest could be our worker bees. No reason not to start it in elementary school. That way there's no deceiving one another that "you can do anything when you grow up."
"You can do anything when you grow up" is a big fat lie. I am 5 feet tall, I could never be a great basketball player, no matter how hard I tried.
Same with IQ, whether we like it or not.
Anonymous wrote:The title of your post made me LOL (laugh out loud).
I see what you did there!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you want your local public elementary school to perform free psychologist-led IQ tests on all children? (If it was an option, that is.) Ostensibly for the purposes of putting children into different groups and offering those with IQs of above a certain amount (let's say 130) to take part in special small group instruction?
This is already happening. No IQ test needed. In fact IQ is irrelevant to the differentiated instruction - actual performance and ability are the measure; and since those are variable, the groups can/do change with the needs and development of the child.
Differentiation becomes near impossible when you have kids in the same class who are academic years and sometimes decades apart in ability. Kids with greater academic abilities will be left to their devices for the most part as teachers focus their efforts on struggling students. Also, by dividing a class into groups, it effectively means students get less direct instructional time with the teacher than when students are grouped by ability into different classrooms. Any teacher worth their mettle knows this.
People keep telling me that, but I guess we've just been really lucky with the 9 teachers DCs have had so far.
Differentiation can work really well as long as teachers balance time between different groups of students.However most posters on DCUM are convinced the only way their kid can be properly challenged is if their speshull snowflake is in a special snowflake classroom with a moat around it to keep the dumb kids out. Or pull outs so they can at least go off in another room for part of the day. I'm not sure if it's an ego thing (getting to brag your kid is in a gifted class, or because most people on DCUM have really incorrect notions on gifted/talented education (ie testing kids at 5, or worse using the CAS as proof of being gifted)