Title: Gifted Programming and Effective GIEPs
1Gifted Programming and Effective GIEPs
- Pennsylvania Department of Education
- Annual Conference 2005
- February 24, 2005
- Presentation by Ron Schmiedel
- Pine-Richland High School
- rschmiedel_at_pinerichland.org
2Regulations for Gifted Education
http//www.pde.state.pa.us/gifted_ed/site/default.
asp
PA Statutes Gifted learners are children with
exceptionalities and in need of specially
designed instruction.
Chapter 16 BEC Basic Education Circular Legal
requirements governing special education for
gifted students
- Guidelines
- Assist local education agencies in meeting the
requirements of the State Boards regulations
3Definition of Gifted Students
- A student who is exceptional under section 1371
of the School Code (24 P.S. 13-1371) because the
student meets the definition of mentally gifted
in this section, and needs specially designed
instruction beyond that required in Chapter 4
(relating to academic standards and assessment).
This term applies only to students who are of
school age as defined under 11.12 (relating to
school age).
4Mentally Gifted
- Outstanding intellectual and creative ability the
development of which requires specially designed
programs or support services, or both, not
ordinarily provided in the regular education
program.
5Themes
- Responsibility of the School District
- Based on the unique needs of the student
- Acceleration, enrichment, or both, as appropriate
- Services according to their intellectual and
academic abilities - Yielding meaningful benefit and student
progress -
- HOW?
6The Gifted Program Should be developed with
purpose
- Gifted Program
- Is the structure/framework that enables
programming options for individual gifted
students - Not only a pull-out or enrichment program
- Programming for the gifted
- Diagnostic-prescriptive
- Aligns the structure of the gifted program to the
individual needs of each identified gifted
student as opposed to plugging the student into
the gifted program - GIEP - Specially Designed Instruction
7Developing a Gifted Program
- National Standards
- PA Regulations
- Chapter 16
- Basic Education Circular
- Guidelines
- Steering Committee (Guiding Coalition)
- Program goals
8Seven Primary Goals for Gifted and Talented
Children (Passow, 1958)
- To deal competently with themselves, their fellow
men, and the world about them as human beings,
citizens, parents, and participants in the good
life. - To build a sound liberal foundation to sustain
the rigorous development of specialized
competencies at the higher levels they can
handle.
9Seven Primary Goals for Gifted and Talented
Children (Passow, 1958)
- To foster self-direction, independence, a love of
learning, and a desire to create and experiment
with ideas and things - To provide the self-understanding, inner
consistency, and ethical standards to see their
own uniqueness in terms of responsibility to
society..
10Seven Primary Goals for Gifted and Talented
Children (Passow, 1958)
- To stimulate critical thinking and a scientific
approach to solving their persistent problems. - To nurture an appreciation of the cultural
heritage bequeathed by societies through the
ages. - To motivate the desire to meet the special
expectations society has for individuals with
unique talents
11Levels of Service In Programming
- Services offered to all students
- Services offered to many students
- Services offered to individuals or small groups
by specialists in school - Outside services or unusual in-school options
offered to individual students - Treffinger 1986
All services should be responsive to the
identified needs of the student.
12 Level IV
Type III
Applicable to a smaller population
Type II
Level III
Level II
Type 1
Options become more specialized
Level I
With-in the regular curriculum
13Applicable to a smaller population
Individualized
Options become more specialized
Systematic
With-in the regular Curriculum
14Independent Study
Acceleration
A.P. Classes
Honors Classes
Differentiated Classroom
School-wide Enrichment
Regular Education
15Acceleration
Acceleration
Enrichment
Affective Needs
Enrichment
Affective Needs
Career Investigation
Career Investigation
- Through a variety of service delivery options!
16Programming for the Gifted
- The structure of the gifted program should be
comprehensive a full continuum of services
17 Gifted Program
Counseling services
Independent Study
Pull-out
Student Government
Tiered Assignments
Mentorships
Enrichment
Clubs
Acceleration
Grouping
School in a School
College classes
Testing out
Resource room
Consortium
Gifted Center
Specialized Curriculum
Differentiation
Learning contracts
Magnet School
Distance Learning
Grade skipping
18AccelerationAccess to higher level learning
activities than typically provided in regular
education to students of the same age
- Early Admission to Kindergarten and/or First
Grade - Grade Skipping
- Subject-Matter Acceleration
- Curriculum Compacting
- Honors Level Courses
- College Level Options
- Advanced Placement
- College in the High School
- Concurrent/Dual Enrollment
19Acceleration
- Credit by examination
- Early entrance into Middle School, High School,
or College - Early Graduation
20Enrichment
- In-depth learning experiences that enhance the
curriculum and are based upon individual student
strengths, interests, and needs - Seminars
- Independent projects
- Alternative assignments
- Outside of the classroom
21Curriculum Differentiation
- Effective differentiation requires consideration
given to grouping practices - Flexible grouping - Arranging students by
interest or need - Cluster grouping Ability grouping within a
heterogeneous classroom - Cooperative learning groups
22Differentiation
- Is two fold
- Group/class
- The curriculum, instruction and/or assessment is
modified to better suit the needs of the class or
group - An honors level class must be different from a
regular level class - Individual
- The curriculum, instruction and/or assessment are
modified to meet the needs of the individual
students in the class
23Differentiation
- Content
- Extension of core learning, using both
acceleration and enrichment strategies - Exposure to challenging and specialized resources
- Stress higher-level thinking, creativity, and
problem solving skills - Set high standards that demand rigorous
expectations for student work and performance
demonstration
24Differentiation
- Process
- Promote independent, self directed, and in-depth
study - Encourage the application of advanced research
and methodological skills - Focus on open ended tasks
- Allow student-centered discussions, Socratic
questioning, and seminar type learning - Provide students with the freedom to choose
topics to study and the methods to use in
manipulating and transforming information
25Differentiation
- Product
- Encourage the development of products that
challenge existing ideas and produce new ones - Promote products that are comparable to those
made by professionals in the designated field - Require that products represent application,
analysis, and synthesis of knowledge - Provide opportunity to create products/solutions
that focus on real-world issues - Establish hi-level and exemplary criteria to
assess student performance and products
26Differentiation
- Learning Environment
- Encourage the development of social and
self-awareness - Encourage self-directed learning to promote the
development of independent research - Encourage a tolerant and supportive environment
that fosters a positive attitude - Enable the pursuit of higher-level learning
through the extension of classroom activities
into the real-world - Provide access to resources and materials that
meet the students level of learning
27Differentiation
Learning Environment
Content
Process
Product
Encourage a tolerant and supportive environment
that fosters a positive attitude Enable the
pursuit of higher-level learning through the
extension of classroom activities into the
real-world Provide access to resources and
materials that meet the students level of
learning
Establish hi-level and exemplary criteria to
assess student performance and products Provide
opportunity to create products / solutions that
focus on real-world issues Require that products
represent application, analysis, and synthesis of
knowledge
Promote independent, self directed, and in-depth
study Encourage the application of advanced
research and methodological skills Focus on open
ended tasks Allow student-centered discussions,
Socratic questioning, and seminar type learning
Extension of core learning, using both
acceleration and enrichment strategies Stress
higher-level thinking, creativity, and problem
solving skills Exposure to challenging and
specialized resources Set high standards that
demand rigorous expectations for student work and
performance demonstration
28Other Programming Options
- Independent Studies
- Curriculum Compacting
- Pre-assess
- Demonstrate mastery
- Alternative activity
- Enrichment Activities
- Mentorships
- Shadow Studies
29Gifted Program
- A combination of acceleration and enrichment
provides the greatest opportunity for flexible
programming to meet the needs of gifted students. - No matter the Program, programming options and
specially designed instruction must be responsive
to the identified needs of the individual gifted
student.
30Gifted Program
- Must be comprehensive cannot be limited to
enrichment alone, one academic area, one program
option, or solely extracurricular activities. - School districts must decide what program options
are needed to provide specially designed
instruction for each gifted student.
31Needs
- By definition needs are intellectual and academic
- Student taught at their instructional level as
evidenced through meaningful progress
32Student profile
33Gifted Education
- Acceleration, enrichment, or both, as appropriate
- Based on the unique needs of the student
- Yielding meaningful benefit and student
progress -
34Accomplished through the GIEP