Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are more than one person disagreeing with you, please stop pretending you don't see that. So "conspiracy" it is.
A conspiracy is an agreement to commit a crime or wrongful act. A random bunch of bigots isn't a conspiracy.
Anonymous wrote:There are more than one person disagreeing with you, please stop pretending you don't see that. So "conspiracy" it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's nonsense to suggest anything about "truly gifted" not becoming bored. Gifted children are not born with an instruction manual, development plan, or some mystical universal secret of staying entertained wired into their heads. Like any kid they too need to be nurtured and guided in constructive directions as they develop. Anyone who does not understand that knows nothing about child development.
I know plenty about child development. Have a PhD in early childhood education, actually.
Being gifted does not present with boredom. Gifted children generally don't settle for boredom. They find something to do.
So, please, spare me the condescension about what I know and what I don't know.
So you're here to defend the system, rather than address the fact that the system doesn't meet the needs of many gifted kdis?
Got it.
Where did you read all that into her post? She was addressing your narrow question about the link between gifted ness and boredom.
The statements I bolded are what suggests a hidden agenda. The research on giftedness doesn't back up her statements. She's flatly wrong.. Anyone fighting that hard with what the research shows is nursing an agenda.
No wonder it's impossible to talk to you. A poster with a PhD makes some statements that are accepted by many experts in her field. You see a conspiracy.
Anonymous wrote:I think her agenda is that her kids are not smart, so nobody else's are either. It is all fake. I feel sorry for her kids.
She does not sound too bright, despite repeated postings and insistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe she does not want to live in the suburbs, so the suburban schools are not good ones (in her mind).
We didn't want to move to the suburbs either, but we did. We faced up to the fact that DC schools weren't going to improve in time for our kids who are now teenagers. And we didn't want to demand the DC government tae away money from the poor or elderly to serve our kids. So we moved. It's called being a grown up.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe she does not want to live in the suburbs, so the suburban schools are not good ones (in her mind).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's nonsense to suggest anything about "truly gifted" not becoming bored. Gifted children are not born with an instruction manual, development plan, or some mystical universal secret of staying entertained wired into their heads. Like any kid they too need to be nurtured and guided in constructive directions as they develop. Anyone who does not understand that knows nothing about child development.
I know plenty about child development. Have a PhD in early childhood education, actually.
Being gifted does not present with boredom. Gifted children generally don't settle for boredom. They find something to do.
So, please, spare me the condescension about what I know and what I don't know.
So you're here to defend the system, rather than address the fact that the system doesn't meet the needs of many gifted kdis?
Got it.
Where did you read all that into her post? She was addressing your narrow question about the link between gifted ness and boredom.
The statements I bolded are what suggests a hidden agenda. The research on giftedness doesn't back up her statements. She's flatly wrong.. Anyone fighting that hard with what the research shows is nursing an agenda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:01, it is simply not true that "3-5% of kids have IQs of 140+" as you say. See this page from a well-regarded site for gifted kids: www.hoagiesgifted.org/underserved.html.
Scroll down to the table. The table shows that IQs of 130-144, which is the range for "moderately gifted," occur in about 1 of every 44-1000 kids. So IQs of 130 occur in about 2.3% (1/44) of kids. IQs of 144 occur in about 0.1% (1/1000) of kids. That's not 1%, that's 0.1% of kids. The categories of "highly," "exceptionally" and "profoundly" gifted kids are even rarer. There aren't as many cheetahs and ferraris as you think.
Let's take this further. Wikipedia says DC public schools have 44,000 kids. So multiply this by 2.3% and you get a total of 1,013 kids with IQs of 130 or above in the system. Spread over 13 grades K-12, this comes out to 78 kids per grade with IQs of 130 or higher. You can start to see how this isn't a huge priority for DC with so many other needs.
I agree completely with you that govt should spend more on education and less on defense et cetera. But wishing and picking fights on DCUM won't make it true.
That's one study, there are others that show higher percentages. Consider also that the DC metro area happens to attract many of the best and brightest professionals from around the country, as well as internationally - it stands to reason that DC's potential population of G&T could potentially be higher. But even so, 78 kids per grade is nothing to sneeze at. You do realize that DCPS manages to justify keeping schools open that have FEWER kids per grade than that? Those numbers basically could justify an entire DCPS school devoted solely to G&T.
And meanwhile, what's your proposal for meeting their needs? Basically all you've done is throw up complaints and objections, as opposed to solutions. If you are so concerned about clarifying things here, then clarify for us all whether you are part of the solution or just part of the problem - because to most of us it seems you are part of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's nonsense to suggest anything about "truly gifted" not becoming bored. Gifted children are not born with an instruction manual, development plan, or some mystical universal secret of staying entertained wired into their heads. Like any kid they too need to be nurtured and guided in constructive directions as they develop. Anyone who does not understand that knows nothing about child development.
I know plenty about child development. Have a PhD in early childhood education, actually.
Being gifted does not present with boredom. Gifted children generally don't settle for boredom. They find something to do.
So, please, spare me the condescension about what I know and what I don't know.
So you're here to defend the system, rather than address the fact that the system doesn't meet the needs of many gifted kdis?
Got it. And no agenda
Where did you read all that into her post? She was addressing your narrow question about the link between gifted ness and boredom.
The statements I bolded are what suggests a hidden agenda. The research on giftedness doesn't back up her statements. She's flatly wrong.. Anyone fighting that hard with what the research shows is nursing an agenda.