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The State of the Art of Gifted Education

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Title: The State of the Art of Gifted Education


1
The State of the Art of Gifted Education
  • Joyce VanTassel-Baska, College of William and
    Mary
  • National Science Board
  • August 24, 2009
  • Washington DC

2
Outline of presentation
  • The general educational landscape
  • The intersections with gifted education
  • Research on giftedness and talent development
  • Applications to policy and practice
  • Special issues and problems

3
The Educational Landscape of Schools
  • Content standards have been reduced to lower
    level skill attainment in many states.
  • Instruction is driven by the use of low level
    materials implemented with rigidity to prepare
    for state assessments.
  • Equity and excellence are still viewed as
    dichotomies.
  • Individual differences are obscured by group
    norms.
  • Little teaching of science, social studies or the
    arts occurs.

4
Whats wrong with this picture?
  • Discouragement of innovation/experimentation in
    teaching practices,
  • Attention focused on a few students who may make
    AYP,
  • Students losing valuable instructional time in
    unchallenging curriculum dominated by reading,
  • A climate of fear for teachers and principals
    with little reward, less so in our current
    economy.

5
How are gifted students faring in this climate?
  • Languid performance on NAEP across the last ten
    year period (Loveless, 2008)
  • Lack of attention from teachers (Farkas
    Duckett, 2008)
  • Little differentiation of curriculum or
    instruction being actualized (Westberg et al,
    1993, 2004)
  • Gifted services have been cut or curtailed in
    many states. (State of the States, 2006-7)
  • US students lag in advanced math and science
    course-taking and achievement (TIMMS, 1995)

6
Shared concerns
  • Challenging curriculum, instruction, and
    assessment
  • Teacher quality
  • International competitiveness
  • Working with students from poverty

7
Research on giftedness and talent development
  • What do we know?

8
Gagnes Differentiated Model of Giftedness and
Talent
INTRAPERSONAL CATALYSTS

PERSONALITY Autonomy Self-Confidence Self Esteem,
etc.
MOTIVATION Initiative Interests Persistence
GIFTEDNESS Aptitude Domains Intellectua
l Creative Socioaffective Sensorimotor
Others
TALENT Fields of Talent (sample) Arts Athletics
Sports Business Commerce Communications Crafts
Trades Education Health Services Science
Technology Transportation
___ ___ ___
Learning/Training/Practice
___ ___ ___
SIGNIFICANT FACTORS Persons Places Interventions E
vents Chance
___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___
ENVIRONMENTAL CATALYSTS
9
A System for Talent Development (Stanley, 1985)
10
Talent Search Findings
  • Younger students can perform at levels comparable
    to older students in a shorter amount of time in
    areas of strong aptitude (Stanley, 1976
    Olszewski-Kubilius , 1998 Colangelo , Assouline
    Gross, 2004).
  • Accelerative, short term, and intensive learning
    experiences are retained well by gifted learners
    and allow them to advance academically in math,
    science, the humanities and social science
    coursework (Lynch, 1992 Stanley et al. 1991
    Stocking Goldstein, 1992 Swiatek , 2007).
  • Scoring in the top 1 of students in ability on
    the SAT at middle school and accelerating ones
    studies predicts creative achievement over 30
    years later, career tilt, and areas of
    accomplishment (Wai, Lubinski Benbow,2009
    Lubinski , 2009).

11
The Talent Development Process (Insight from
Bloom, 1985)
  • Early exposure to the field
  • Right teacher at the right time (romance, rigor,
    master)
  • Role of schools as facilitative or blocking (not
    directly nurturing)
  • Progressive development characterized by high
    standards, much time and much hard work
  • Role of home environment in developing work ethic
    and sense of excellence (parental modeling)

12
Adolescent Talent Development Csikszentmihalyi,
1993
  • Talented students have personality traits
    conducive to concentration (e.g., achievement and
    endurance) as well as to being open to experience
    (e.g., awareness, or sentience, and
    understanding)
  • Families providing both support and challenge
    enhance the development of talent.
  • Talented teenagers liked teachers best who were
    supportive and modeled enjoyable involvement in a
    field.

13
Eminence Literature
  • Early exposure to like-minded children and adults
    is propitious for talent development (Cox, 1926
    Simonton, 2000)
  • Serious study with a tutor/mentor/coach followed
    by intensive practice over time leads to high
    performance in selected domains (Bloom, 1985
    Gardner, 2004 Ericcson, 2007)
  • Psychological states and habits of mind
    positively or negatively impact the talent
    development process (Csiksenmihalyi, 2000
    Oschle, 2000 Dweck, 2007).

14
Program and Instructional Findings
  • Enhanced use of critical and creative thinking
    and student-centered work produces higher
    academic achievement for gifted students across
    years (Moon Feldhusen, 1994 Delcourt, 1994
    VanTassel-Baska et al., 2004).
  • Compacting and grouping studies continue to
    suggest the benefits of both approaches (Rogers,
    2007 Reis et al, 1998 Gentry Owen, 1999).

15
Instructional Studies cont.
  • Using instructional approaches that match
    aptitudes produces stronger learning effects for
    the gifted (Rogers, 2007 Sternberg, 2006)
  • Using inquiry-based approaches to learning
    enhances both motivation and achievement
    (Gallagher, Stepien Rosenthal, 1992
    VanTassel-Baska et al., 1998)

16
Studies of Scientific Talent Development
  • Early models and mentors
  • Challenging school programs and opportunities
  • Competitions
  • Collaborators
  • Access to science resources
  • Internal curiosity, commitment, and spirit of
    creativity
  • --Subotnik et al, 1993 Simonton, 1992
    Feiss, 2004

17
Student IBO Quotes
  • Advice to those who wanted to pursue a career in
    science or math
  • Get in on all the contests you can itll teach
    you what youre good at and where your limits
    are. And we do all have limits, and thats okay,
    so dont panic if you dont win them all. And
    dont forget to have fun, either.
  • Take as many advanced classes as you can as early
    as possible dont listen to others when they try
    to tell you what you can and cannot do. Try to
    earn recognition in science, competitions, and
    seize any research opportunity you can find. If
    you get discouraged because your schools
    scientific community is a community of one, seek
    refuge in your studies until you can find peers
    you identify with, but never compromise who you
    are to fit in with your school community.
  • Seize your own opportunitiescreate a niche for
    yourself and above all, Do Not let the dogma of
    the educational system encumber your interests,
    talent, and dreams.

18
Student IBO Quotes
  • Cite the factors that most inhibited the
    development of your science talent
  • Inability to accelerate, parents believe more in
    having fun than in working hard, advanced courses
    unavailable before high school, no opportunity
    for me to do extensive research near home.
  • The elementary schools gifted program consciously
    avoided any accelerated learning. When I was
    young, I connected the idea of school less with
    learning than with laborious projects that must
    be meticulously colored in.

19
Implications for Future Research What dont we
know?
  • What doses of intervention (intensity) are
    necessary for gifted learners to thrive in a
    school learning context?
  • How late can interventions occur and still have
    an important impact on life trajectory?
  • What combination of interventions is most
    propitious for the gifted at differential stages
    of development?

20
Applications of Researchto Policy and Practice
  • Between the idea and the reality falls the
    shadow.
  • --T.S.Eliot

21
State Policy Components A Patchwork Quilt
  • Only 18 states have an endorsement or
    certification for teachers of the gifted.
  • Only half the states have a fulltime person
    working in gifted education.
  • Only a handful of states include a policy on
    acceleration as part of their service delivery
    mechanisms.
  • Only a few states include special provisions for
    the identification and service of students from
    low income backgrounds.

  • State of the States,

    2006-2007

22
Other State Policies that may benefit the gifted
  • Advanced Placement
  • Dual enrollment
  • Waivers for coursework
  • Testing out

23
Need for Coherent Systems
  • School systems that align all facets of the
    school (e.g., finance, curriculum, instruction,
    decision-making) produce higher achievement gains
    among students (Hoy Miskel, 2001).
  • Systems of curriculum, instruction, assessment,
    and professional development must work together
    to enhance achievement (Clune, 1993 Ball
    Cohen, 2000 McLaughlin Mitra, 2001).

24
Professional development study findings
  • Little intensive time is committed to the
    professional development of teachers (2 days per
    year on average in their specialty area)
  • Professional development is often not related to
    other aspects of the instructional system.
  • Lack of follow-up at the school and classroom
    level hinders teacher change in practices.
  • --Stanford and NSDC Report, 2009

25
How People Learn
  • New knowledge is constructed based on existing
    conceptions and beliefs
  • Usable knowledge is connected and organized
    around important concepts that support transfer
    of learning
  • The use of deliberate learning strategies to
    scaffold instruction
  • - National Research Council, 2000

26
Research-based Models in Practice
  • Using concept maps
  • Articulation of thinking
  • Promoting higher level thinking
  • Making connections
  • Using metacognition
  • Source William and Mary curriculum units of
    study, 1996-2009

27
Strategies for Aligning Curriculum for the Gifted
with Content Standards
28
What do We Know about Curriculum for High End
Learning?
  • Coherence in design is necessary (blueprint).
  • Tryouts and pilots are critical.
  • Providing training directly on materials helps
    implementation.
  • Use of cognitive learning models helps students
    internalize higher level thinking.
  • Fidelity of implementation is essential to assess
    an innovation.
  • Differentiated curriculum and instruction matter!


  • --VanTassel-Baska, 2008

29
Implementation problems
  • Fidelity
  • Lack of sufficient and consistent professional
    development
  • Teacher knowledge and skills in content pedagogy
  • Leadership
  • Sustained innovation

30
(No Transcript)
31
What is Differentiated Curriculum for the Gifted
in the Context of Standards?
  • Features
  • Acceleration
  • Complexity
  • Depth
  • Creativity

32
Goal of assessment-driven instruction To raise
the mean for all and the variance for top students
Student A
Proficient
Student B
We must expect progress for all students.
33
Authentic assessment approaches for the gifted
  • Off-level testing with high ceiling
  • Performance-based assessment
  • Portfolio of work

34
Self Perception as a Filter to Adult Achievement

Adult Creative Productivity
Educational Attainment
Occupational Attainment
Self Perception
Self Perception
Self Perception
35
Life Trajectories
  • High achieving students from poverty less likely
    to graduate and go on to college or graduate
    school than more advantaged counterparts.
  • Students from poverty more likely to choose
    careers commensurate with background rather than
    ability or achievement.
  • --The Achievement Trap, 2007

36
Promising Identification Approaches with Gifted
At-Risk Learners
  • Traditional measures (ability and achievement)
  • Non-traditional measures (nonverbal tests and
    performance-based assessment)
  • Nomination by knowledgeable community members
    (e.g. pediatrician, social worker)
  • Use of individual profile data

37
Key Services for PromisingLow Income/Minority
Students
  • Early identification and nurturance
  • Personalized Learning
  • Tutoring, mentoring, counseling
  • Value-added Learning Opportunities
  • Extended time, out-of-school opportunities
  • Family Involvement
  • Access to intellectual, cultural, and social
    capital

38
  • Learning is not attained by chance. It must be
    sought for with ardor and attended to with
    diligence.
  • Abigail Adams

39
Center for Gifted EducationSchool of
EducationThe College of William Mary
  • Joyce VanTassel-Baska, Ed.D.
  • Professor Emerita
  • 427 Scotland Street
  • Williamsburg, VA. 23185
  • (757)221-2362
  • cfge_at_wm.edu
  • www.cfge.wm.edu
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