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Murray County Program for Gifted Students

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Title: Murray County Program for Gifted Students


1
Murray County Program for Gifted Students
  • Beth ThornburyGifted CoordinatorAugust 1, 2007

2
There are plenty of misconceptions about gifted
education..
3
Why do we have Gifted Education in the State of
Georgia?
  • State Law OCGA 120-2-152 SPECIAL EDUCATION
    SERVICES
  • SBOE Rule 160-4-2-.38 EDUCATION PROGRAM FOR
    GIFTED STUDENTS
  • SBOE-approved Regulations for Gifted Education
    Programs

4
SBOE Rule 160-4-2-.38
  • Established in 1996
  • 108 increase in the gifted population in ten
    years (4.5 to 9 of K-12 population)
  • Total K-12 enrollment has increased by about 30
    during that time period.

Source Linda Andrews, Georgia State Gifted
Specialist, DOE
5
Students Identified as Gifted in GA
  • -- 59,806
  • -- 67,407 (13)
  • -- 73,534 (9)
  • -- 81,042 (10)
  • -- 89,182 (10)
  • -- 95,524 (7)
  • -- 98,251 (3)
  • -- 104,673 (7)
  • -- 106,596 (2)
  • -- 114,265 (7)
  • -- 124,586 (9)

Source Linda Andrews, Georgia State Gifted
Specialist, DOE
6
Gifted Program Participation by Ethnic Group
Since Implementation of Multiple-Criteria Rule
  • 1996 2006 ( growth)
  • White 51,022 83,988 (65)
  • Black 5813 17,786 (206)
  • Asian 2093 6852 (227)
  • Hispanic 432 2895 (570)
  • Native American 80 183 (129)
  • Multi-Racial 366 2561 (600)

Source Linda Andrews, Georgia State Gifted
Specialist, DOE
7
Statewide Gifted Education Allotment
  • Fiscal Year 1998
  • 70 million

Fiscal Year 2006 170 million
(The largest Gifted Education
budget in the
country!)
8
Gifted Education Policies by State
Gifted Education Policies vary by state. Only Six
(6) states, including Georgia, mandate and fully
fund Gifted programming.
(6)
(20)
(4)
(11)
(9)
  • Site Reference Davidson Institute
    www.gt-cybersource.org

9
Nomination
  • Nominations are often made by classroom teachers
    however, any responsible person who has knowledge
    of a students intellectual functioning may
    nominate that student for further consideration.
    This includes administrators, counselors,
    parents, peers, or themselves.

10
Nomination
  • Automatic referral procedure Students scoring
    at or above 90th percentile on the ITBS (Total
    Reading, Math, or Composite) or CogAT (any part)
    are considered.
  • Planned Experience
  • Given in kindergarten and first grade.

11
SBOE Rule 160-4-2-.38
  • Mental Ability
  • CogAT, OLSAT, Naglieri
  • Achievement
  • ITBS, Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement
  • Creativity
  • Renzulli Rating Scales, Torrance Test of Creative
    Thinking
  • Motivation
  • Renzulli Rating Scales, GPA

12
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13
Identification
  • Option 1, the Psychometric Approach
  • The student may qualify on the basis of mental
    ability and achievement assessment results only
    (regardless of the assessment results in
    creativity and motivation). In this case the
    mental ability test score must be a composite or
    full-scale score of K-2nd (99th) 3rd -12th (96th)

14
Identification
  • Option 2, the Multiple-Criteria Approach
  • The student may qualify by meeting the standards
    in any three of the four data categories, at
    least one of which must be on a nationally-normed
    standardized test. Component scores (e.g.,
    Nonverbal Ability), as well as full scale scores,
    may be used in the area of mental ability.
    However, component scores must meet the criteria
    specified in the Gifted Education Regulations

15
THE GOALS OF EXCEL
  • To provide an atmosphere for tasks which
    challenge the students interests and capacity
    for learning.
  • To develop inquiry, critical thinking, and
    problem solving skills and techniques.
  • To provide opportunities for communication with
    their intellectual peers.
  • To provide experiences which stimulate the
    student to become self-directed.
  • To allow for and encourage student planning and
    involvement.
  • To provide opportunities for exploration of the
    fine arts.
  • To provide experiences by which the gifted
    student comprehends his or her responsibility to
    the community.
  • To provide activities for development of career
    and lifelong learning potential.
  • To stay current with advances in technology as it
    applies to research and acquisition of knowledge.

16
Direct Services
  • Resource Class (K-5)
  • Advanced Content Class (6-12)
  • Cluster Grouping (K-12)

17
Resource Class (K-5)
  • Academic content foundation
  • Interdisciplinary enrichment activities
  • Identified gifted students only
  • Limited class size
  • Teacher must have the gifted endorsement.
  • Limited to ten segments per week

18
Advanced Content Class (6-12)
  • May include other high achieving students who
    meet locally established criteria
  • Reduced class size (21)
  • Homogeneously grouped on the basis of achievement
    and interest in a core academic content area.
  • Course description and syllabus document
    appropriateness of curriculum.

19
Cluster Grouping (K-12)
  • Identified gifted students placed as a group into
    an otherwise heterogeneous classroom.
  • Teacher must have the gifted endorsement.
  • One or two segments per day

20
Documentation of Cluster Group Instruction
  • Separate lesson plans
  • Individual student contracts that show
  • Students NEED for advanced curriculum in that
    content area
  • Learning objectives for the gifted student
  • Alternative curriculum activities
  • Dates and amount of time student will be engaged
    in the higher-level activities
  • Means by which learning will be assessed

21
Indirect Services
  • Collaborative Teaching (K-12)
  • Joint Enrollment/Postsecondary Options

22
Collaborative Teaching (K-12)
  • Direct instruction may be provided by a regular
    classroom teacher.
  • Substantial, regularly scheduled collaborative
    planning between the content area teacher and the
    gifted specialist

23
Collaborative Teaching, contd
  • One full period each day (or weekly equivalent)
    that gifted specialist devotes to curriculum
    extensions for every three classes in which
    he/she has collaborative teaching
    responsibilities.
  • Total number of gifted students whose instruction
    is modified through this model may not exceed an
    average of eight per class.

24
Documentation of Collaborative Model
  • Separate lesson plans
  • Time log of collaborative planning
  • Individual student contracts

25
Joint Enrollment/Postsecondary Options
  • Enrollment in college, university, or technical
    school may serve as the gifted instruction that
    districts are required to provide for qualified
    students.
  • FTE funding generated while away from the regular
    school campus is awarded to the postsecondary
    institution.
  • Students must meet state regulations for
    attendance and be present on the secondary campus
    for at least three instructional segments.

26
Gifted Education Funding
  • Show me the MONEY!
  • GADOE Website
  • http//techservices.doe.k12.ga.us/admin/reports/fi
    nancial.htm

27
FY 2008 WEIGHTS FOR FTE FUNDING FORMULA
Category/Program FY2008
Weight Kindergarten 1.6556000 Grades
1-3 1.2841000 Grades 4-5 1.0319000 Grades
6-8 (Middle Grades Program) 1.0157000
Grades 9-12 1.0000000 Kindergarten Early
Intervention Program (EIP) 2.0448000 Primary
Grades 1-3 (EIP) 1.7992000 Upper Grades 4-5
(EIP) 1.7934000 Grades 6-8 (Middle School
Program) 1.1204000 Gifted Education 1.6642000
Remedial Education 1.3109000 Vocational
Lab 1.1859000 Postsecondary Options (Dual
Credit) N/A Study Hall (Non-state funded)
N/A Other (Non-state funded) N/A
28
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29
12 Gifted Education FTEs (72 segments)
Teacher Allotment
23 Regular High School Education FTEs (138
segments) Teacher Allotment
30
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31
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32
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33
12 Gifted Education FTEs (72 segments)
Teacher Allotment
20 Regular Middle School Education FTEs (120
segments) Teacher Allotment
34
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35
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36
What can we do to enhance gifted education?
  • Elementary
  • Challenge Rigor Rising Tide Lifts All
    Ships!
  • Effective enrichment curriculum
  • Standards based and tied to foundational goals of
    Excel
  • Attend to the needs of each individual childs
    strength and talent.
  • From you..?

37
What can we do to enhance gifted education?
  • Middle School and High School
  • Appropriate, challenging and rigorous curriculum
  • Attend to the needs of each individual childs
    strength and talent.
  • From you.?

38
Differentiation
  • No child left bored
  • Sally M. Reis http//www.aasa.org/publications/saa
    rticledetail.cfm?ItemNumber8205snItemNumber950
  • A Nation Deceived
  • Nicholas Colangelo http//www.nationdeceived.org

39
How should instruction look different for gifted
students?
  • Effectively differentiated curriculum must vary
    in ways that match the differences we find in
    learners
  • Cognitive abilities
  • Prior knowledge
  • Opportunities to learn
  • Learning rate
  • Developmental differences
  • Levels of abstraction

From Sally Krisel,Hall County, GA Schools
40
Curriculum Differentiation
  • Differentiation is the fit or match of the
    curriculum to the needs of the learner.
    Differentiated instruction is not a strategy. It
    is a total way of thinking about learners,
    teaching, and learning. . . . Differentiated
    instruction promotes high-level and powerful
    curriculum for all students, but varies the level
    of teacher support, task complexity, pacing, and
    avenues to learning based on student readiness,
    interest, and learning profile. (Tomlinson, 2000)

From Sally Krisel,Hall County, GA Schools
41
Gifted Advocacy
  • Promote creative endeavors.
  • Promote open mindedness toward new ideas.
  • Encourage students to develop strengths rather
    than worry about weaknesses.

42
Gifted Advocacy
  • Join Georgia Association for Gifted Children!
    www.GAGC.org
  • It would be great to get a Murray County Chapter
    started!

43
TED.COM
  • Extraordinary evidence of human creativity and
    innovation in children.
  • All children, especially gifted students, have
    tremendous talent
  • and we must not forget that talent needs to be
    developed.
  • Children starting school this year will retire in
    2065 and
  • we are educating them for the future- NOW.
  • Future is unpredictability.
  • Creativity is as important in education as
    literacy and we should
  • treat it with the same status.
  • Intelligence is diverse.
  • Intelligence is dynamic and wonderfully
    interactivity!
  • Intelligence is distinct!
  • - Sir Ken Robinson www.ted.com
  • http//www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/66

44
Thank-you!
  • Please give me your comments and questions
  • Beth Thornbury, Gifted Coordinator - Murray
    County Schools
  • beth.thornbury_at_murray.k12.ga.us

Murray County Excel Website
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