Anonymous wrote:Watkins does differentiate using advanced readers units for students in grades 2-5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading all these replies from posters whose kids are at different schools, it seems to me you can't say "DCPS ignores advanced learners" -- this is a school-by-school issue.
Some schools apparently do a great job meeting the needs of advanced learners, while others evidently don't.
I think my own child's school does a great job, and I admit I get frustrated when prospective parents (whose children are still just in ECE!) express dissatisfaction because the principal isn't receptive to their questions about a G&T program.
If your child is an advanced learner, and you find that advanced learners are not well-served at your child's school, work with other parents, teachers, & the administration to find a solution -- whether that be additional training in differentiation, pull-outs, some kind of G&T program, or whatever.
But don't assume that any given DCPS is failing to meet the needs of advanced learners because it doesn't have the kind of program you assume is the only way to do that.
Do you mind saying which school this is?
Watkins ES. The administration pointedly told a PTA meeting they're not going to entertain this concept. Differentiation in the classroom is all you get, even in a classroom where there're behavioral issues, including apparently knife assaults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading all these replies from posters whose kids are at different schools, it seems to me you can't say "DCPS ignores advanced learners" -- this is a school-by-school issue.
Some schools apparently do a great job meeting the needs of advanced learners, while others evidently don't.
I think my own child's school does a great job, and I admit I get frustrated when prospective parents (whose children are still just in ECE!) express dissatisfaction because the principal isn't receptive to their questions about a G&T program.
If your child is an advanced learner, and you find that advanced learners are not well-served at your child's school, work with other parents, teachers, & the administration to find a solution -- whether that be additional training in differentiation, pull-outs, some kind of G&T program, or whatever.
But don't assume that any given DCPS is failing to meet the needs of advanced learners because it doesn't have the kind of program you assume is the only way to do that.
Do you mind saying which school this is?
Watkins ES. The administration pointedly told a PTA meeting they're not going to entertain this concept. Differentiation in the classroom is all you get, even in a classroom where there're behavioral issues, including apparently knife assaults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading all these replies from posters whose kids are at different schools, it seems to me you can't say "DCPS ignores advanced learners" -- this is a school-by-school issue.
Some schools apparently do a great job meeting the needs of advanced learners, while others evidently don't.
I think my own child's school does a great job, and I admit I get frustrated when prospective parents (whose children are still just in ECE!) express dissatisfaction because the principal isn't receptive to their questions about a G&T program.
If your child is an advanced learner, and you find that advanced learners are not well-served at your child's school, work with other parents, teachers, & the administration to find a solution -- whether that be additional training in differentiation, pull-outs, some kind of G&T program, or whatever.
But don't assume that any given DCPS is failing to meet the needs of advanced learners because it doesn't have the kind of program you assume is the only way to do that.
Do you mind saying which school this is?
Anonymous wrote:Reading all these replies from posters whose kids are at different schools, it seems to me you can't say "DCPS ignores advanced learners" -- this is a school-by-school issue.
Some schools apparently do a great job meeting the needs of advanced learners, while others evidently don't.
I think my own child's school does a great job, and I admit I get frustrated when prospective parents (whose children are still just in ECE!) express dissatisfaction because the principal isn't receptive to their questions about a G&T program.
If your child is an advanced learner, and you find that advanced learners are not well-served at your child's school, work with other parents, teachers, & the administration to find a solution -- whether that be additional training in differentiation, pull-outs, some kind of G&T program, or whatever.
But don't assume that any given DCPS is failing to meet the needs of advanced learners because it doesn't have the kind of program you assume is the only way to do that.
Do you mind saying which school this is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's excellent differentiation at my kids' JKLMM school; it is a particular focus of the principal's, and he has sent teachers for training to ensure they are able to teach kids at different levels in the same room. Both of my kids are advanced in reading--one reading 4+ grades above his grade level--and they are both challenged and engaged.
I'd much rather have my kids in diverse classrooms where each kid is taught as his/her level than in a pull-out G&T program.
If you are in a JKLM school then its really a different issue. By and large, the entire class is high SES and prepared to learn.
Not necessarily. Not at Murch, at least, which is the school I was discussing above. Yes, large portion of school is high SES. But it's not nearly as uniform as at other JKLM schools. And from my experience pretty much every classroom has a range of learners from below grade level to very far above.
But, yes--you can't underestimate the value of family investment. It's not that Murch kids are uniformly high-ability or uniformly high-SES. It's that the families are uniformly invested in their kids' educations and provide support/continuity at home.
[b]Honey, Murch is 9% FARMS which is pretty low and very far from the DCPS average.
http://profiles.dcps.dc.gov/Murch+Elementary+School
Anonymous wrote:^^ So the recommendation is to let G & T / honors students rot, or move out of the city? When you have a class with kids acting out and occupying the teacher's entire time, who's learning? When do we stop catering exclusively to the bottom?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's excellent differentiation at my kids' JKLMM school; it is a particular focus of the principal's, and he has sent teachers for training to ensure they are able to teach kids at different levels in the same room. Both of my kids are advanced in reading--one reading 4+ grades above his grade level--and they are both challenged and engaged.
I'd much rather have my kids in diverse classrooms where each kid is taught as his/her level than in a pull-out G&T program.
If you are in a JKLM school then its really a different issue. By and large, the entire class is high SES and prepared to learn.
Not necessarily. Not at Murch, at least, which is the school I was discussing above. Yes, large portion of school is high SES. But it's not nearly as uniform as at other JKLM schools. And from my experience pretty much every classroom has a range of learners from below grade level to very far above.
But, yes--you can't underestimate the value of family investment. It's not that Murch kids are uniformly high-ability or uniformly high-SES. It's that the families are uniformly invested in their kids' educations and provide support/continuity at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much does it matter to be 'challenged' at school as a kid?
I feel like I was never really challenged until grad school, and it was fine for me. I had more time to do other things, reading other books I liked, going places with my parents w/o stressing about homework, etc.
Me too! That said I went to an excellent public school - lack of challenge is one thing, but at least the school was safe, and reasonably stimulating.