gifted programming elementary teachers ginger o’brien, gifted programming development and support

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Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

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Page 1: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Gifted ProgrammingElementary Teachers

Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Page 2: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

According to our Special Education Plan . . .

Screening – WJIII: Passage Comprehension, Applied

Problems, Academic Knowledge

> at or above the 85th percentile in any one of

these

> collect work samples, present information to ALT and Psych. Ed. Consultant

to decide if C-CAT or WISC-IV administered

Page 3: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Giftedness

An unusually advanced degree of general intellectual ability that requires differentiated learning experiences of a depth and breadth beyond those normally provided in the regular school program to satisfy the level of educational potential indicated.

Special Education A Guide for Educators 2001

Page 4: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

According to Professionally Speaking. . .• Professionally Speaking – Gifted

Page 5: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Who is gifted anyway?

He fidgets to beat the band but can solve a four-by-four Rubik’s cube in less than five minutes. She goes the extra mile in all her school assignments, even in subjects that bore her mightily. What unites these very different children is that they’re both gifted.

Page 6: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Simply put, they’re so smart that they need to be taught differently.

“What is the best way to teach gifted children? It all depends on how each child

learns best.”

(Professionally Speaking, March 2012)

Page 7: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Common approaches:

• Acceleration – moving ahead• Compacting – assess for mastery – provide other independent

learning options• Ability groupings – different groups for different subject areas• Enrichment – opportunities to go deeper and wider into subjects• Withdrawal programs and congregated classrooms – time with intellectual peers

We provide a combination of these approaches . . .

Page 8: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

It’s about differentiated instruction . . .• The Ontario Curriculum indicates what must be assessed. If students

have already mastered concepts, we need to provide other learning opportunities. After a pre-assessment, we determine our students’ instructional needs and the result directs our teaching.

Page 9: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Characteristics of giftedness:

• learn at faster rates• find, solve and act on problems more readily• manipulate abstract ideas and make connections

(Van Tassel–Baska, 1988)

Page 10: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

What is curriculum differentiation for gifted?

(according to NSW Dept. of Ed.)• Gifted students need the opportunity to work through the curriculum at a faster

pace and need less time on basics and revision. A differentiated curriculum is a program of activities that offers a variety of entry points for students who differ in abilities, knowledge and skills. In a differentiated curriculum teachers offer different approaches to what students learn (content), how students learn (process) and how students demonstrate what they have learned (product).

Page 11: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

What resources to do we have?

• 0.5 Gifted Support Teacher • Public website with links to resources for students, teachers, parents• Congregated learning opportunities for junior/intermediate students• On-line community of learners

LDCSB Gifted Web Site

Page 12: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Students who are registered in enrichment modules in grades 5, 6, 7 & 8 have access to an on-line community

Desire2Learn

Page 13: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

The vision . . .

Create a community for gifted students to give them opportunities to interact with like peers – on line and in person(i.e., consistent group of students participates Grade 5, 6, 7, 8)

Page 14: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

What about permission to participate?• Permission forms will be posted on D2L so only students who are

registered in enrichment modules class lists will have access • (SPST please remind student and Classroom Teacher)• Student downloads form and gets it signed by parent/guardian• SPST scans and emails signed form to Gifted Support Teacher and

gives hard copy to Classroom Teacher

Page 15: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

What about the money?

• Please ask student to bring any field trip fees required to enrichment module

Page 16: Gifted Programming Elementary Teachers Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Programming Development and Support

Questions?

• Contact Ginger O’Brien, Gifted Program Development and Support [email protected]