Title: LEARNING SUPPORT SERVICES
1LEARNING SUPPORT SERVICES
- GIFTED PRESENTATION
- October 28, 2008 and
- October 30, 2008
- Revision 10/10/2008 755 AM
2LEARNING SUPPORT SERVICES
- Introduction of OCDSB staff and Facilitator
- Superintendent Cathy Nevins and Neil
Yorke-Slader - Facilitator Jim Kennelly
- Staff Learning Support Services
- - Nancy Reid, Gifted Learning Support
Consultant - - Rachelle Sintic, Gifted Learning Support
Consultant - - Dylan Smith, Gifted Itinerant Teacher -
Elementary - 4. Principals are here to listen, learn and
perhaps add to the conversation but not to
advocate for their school or gifted programs
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3INTRODUCTION
- WHY ARE WE HERE?
- As a result of declining enrolment and the need
to ensure the OCDSB is meeting the needs of
students by offering programs that are both
viable and sustainable, Board approved a
consultation plan on 24 June 2008 to aid in
decision-making regarding the number and location
of secondary Gifted Centres. Currently,
specialized gifted programs are available in five
secondary schools. It is the intent of staff that
the secondary gifted program will continue to be
offered where viable. - As part of the approved consultation plan,
parents of all OCDSB students who have been
identified through the Identification, Placement,
and Review Committee (IPRC) process as being
gifted are being surveyed to help us identify the
factors that are most important to parents when
making the decision whether or not enroll their
child in a specialized gifted program in
secondary school.
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4PURPOSE
- WHAT IS THE PURPOSE?
- The purpose of this evening is to listen to
parents regarding our gifted programming. - First, we will share some information with you.
Then our facilitator, Jim Kennelly will lead us
through the questions that we have developed.
Then we will wrap up this evenings session. - Information gathered on October 28th and 30th,
through consultation will be part of a report
that is scheduled to go to the Board of Trustees
in December 2008. - What staff want, and we believe parents want is
sustainable gifted programming in our secondary
schools. To have sustainable programming, we
need a sustainable mass of students from grade 9
to grade 12 to ensure that there are classes
available in many subjects and grades for our
gifted students.
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5PURPOSE
- Over the past number of years, a number of
initiatives have been undertaken regarding
secondary gifted programming. First, we have the
Bendel Services report of 2006 and we will share
the highlights. - Then we have the questions that staff asked the
secondary schools with gifted students in the
fall of 2007. - Now we have the survey letters that have been
sent home with our identified gifted learners and
this evenings consultation. - In addition, we have gathered samples of data
from schools offering gifted programs to share
the trends. - The information gathered from schools, surveys,
and consultation will be the bases of a report to
the Board of Trustees with recommendations for
gifted centers in the future.
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6BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- WHAT IS THE BACKGROUND?
- In the fall of 2005 staff from Learning Support
Services was directed to examine the number and
location of the Secondary Gifted Centres with a
view to implementing proposed changes for the
2007-2008 academic year. The examination was to
take the form of four phases including an initial
review by staff, a consultative stage with
various groups inside and outside the system, a
decision-making stage and finally an
implementation stage. This 2006 report represents
the first stage. In specific terms this review
was designed to do the following - i. To review the historical patterns and
projected enrolment patterns of the Secondary
Gifted Centres. - ii. To review best practices and challenges.
- iii. To review the impact of changes (actual and
proposed).
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7BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- Methodology Data Sources
- The data base for the review came from several
sources and is both quantitative and qualitative
in nature. In terms of the former, information on
enrolment was gathered from individual schools,
from the Planning Department and from Curriculum
Services. In terms of the latter, interviews were
held with the school staff (generally principals
from Gifted Centres and four principals from
schools not designated as Gifted Centres) as well
as with central staff associated with the
Secondary Gifted Program. Documents collected
included artifacts from the Ministry of
Education, the central offices of the
Ottawa-Carleton District School Board and from
individual schools. Finally, materials from
research on gifted education were also used to
support observations, findings and
recommendations.
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8BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- Methodology Data Sources
- This report includes references to specific
schools in the presentation of quantitative data,
specifically enrolment figures and patterns from
the Secondary Gifted Centres and lists of course
offerings from both the Centres and from other
schools in the system. Whenever possible,
however, to avoid comparisons between and among
schools, and to protect the individuals who
offered opinions or suggestions or provided
school-based materials, the names of schools have
been removed. This report is intended as an
examination of program issues, not as a comment
on the successes or challenges facing one school
in comparison to another.
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9BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- The recommendations of the review were
implemented as follows - The OCDSB confirm its decision to maintain the
secondary gifted centre as a program delivery
option by establishing its status as a system
program and by addressing it in the context of a
system-wide program rationalization model. - Policy P.105.CUR and Procedure PR.629.CUR be
reviewed to determine whether or not the addition
of Enriched and Advanced Placement courses should
be subject to more central direction - Policy P.077.PLG and Procedure PR.569.PLG be
reviewed in the context of the OCDSBs attempts
to support program viability at the Secondary
Gifted Centres.
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10BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- The recommendations of the review were
implemented as follows - The OCDSB examine the inclusion of Enriched and
Advanced Placement courses in Policy P/.105.CUR
and Procedure PR.629.CUR and that part of the
examination of the issue include clear
definitions of Enriched and Advanced Placement
courses and course packages. - The OCDSB reduce the number of Secondary Gifted
Centres from six to four.
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11BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- The recommendations of the review were
implemented as follows - a) The impact on the schools capacity to deliver
programs to non-gifted students, - b) The location of the school and the
availability of transportation of one site
relative to another gifted site, - c) The possibility that other program changes
not related to gifted education would have a
positive/negative impact on overall school
enrolment of the schools where the Centres would
be moved. - The above three criteria be considered in the
removal of the Secondary Gifted Program from two
of the current five sites.
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12BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- The recommendations of the review were
implemented as follows - The OCDSB through Curriculum Services and
Learning Support Services undertake a project to
assist schools in differentiation programs to
address individual needs in a systematic fashion. - The OCDSB examine the nature of evaluation
practices in the Gifted Centres to ensure there
are consistent with the written and taught
curriculum but, at the same time, that they
address the legitimate concerns about lower marks
and implications for post-secondary placements.
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13BENDEL SERVICES REPORT HIGHLIGHTS
- The recommendations of the review were
implemented as follows - The District and the Gifted Centres work together
on a staff development plan that assists teachers
in meeting the individualized needs of gifted
students. That plan should focus on
differentiation in all three aspects of
teaching/learning i.e., curriculum, instruction
and evaluation. - The OCDSB establish, in consultation with Gifted
Centre principals, a minimum standard for gifted
course load at the Centres.
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14QUESTIONS WE ARE FACING
- QUESTIONS ASKED OF SECONDARY SCHOOL STAFF IN
2007-2008 - At each site, we asked the following questions
- How many gifted students do you have in each
grade level - Do you have congregated classes? If yes, how
many at each grade level are fully in the
congregated program - Based on your statistics, are students opting out
of partial integration (50 or more of their
course selection in gifted) in grade 11. And if
the answer to this question is yes, what is their
reason for this switch to the academic program.
(If you have Advanced Placement or other enriched
courses please identify if they are choosing
these courses over gifted)
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15QUESTIONS WE ARE FACING
- At each site, we asked the following questions
- Are students opting out of certain subjects only
in congregated gifted classes? - Do you offer other programs such Advanced
Placement or other?
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16GIFTED NUMBERS SECONDARY
- Gifted Students
- As of 20072008 Overall
- Bell 254 grade 9 40
- Glebe 72 grade 9 16
- Gloucester 62 grade 9 5
- Lisgar 337 grade 9 92
- Merivale 103 grade 9 21
- Ridgemont 11 grade 9 1
- By grade 11, the students are taking whatever
courses they want and not necessarily gifted.
Many are taking advanced placement. - 6
- As of 20082009 Overall
- Bell 211 grade 9 55
- Glebe 76 grade 9 11
- Gloucester 47 grade 9 7
- Lisgar 340 grade 9 86
- Merivale 93 grade 9 17
- Ridgemont 0 grade 9 0
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17SECONDARY GIFTED INFORMATION 2008-2009
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18SECONDARY GIFTED INFORMATION
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19SECONDARY GIFTED INFORMATION
- The following sites do not offer a specialized
gifted program yet have the following number of
gifted students - 2007-08 2008-09
- Nepean 48 59
- Colonel By 82 103
- (538 students in IB program)
- Canterbury 78 27
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20SECONDARY GIFTED INFORMATION
- Gifted Numbers Over Time
- 2005 2007 2008/09
- Bell 262 254 211
- Glebe 125 72 76
- Gloucester 104 62 47
- Lisgar 314 337 340
- Merivale 148 103 93
- Ridgemont 23 11 0
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21STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AND SPECIAL EDUCATION
- PROVINCIAL OVERVIEW
- The Special Education agenda is the same as the
overall student achievement agenda Improved
student achievement - Demographics (2005-2006)
- 13.72 of the total student population, or
290,725 students were reported to be receiving
special education programs and services - 43 of identified students are in the learning
disabilities category of exceptionality - Approximately 82 of all students (86 secondary)
receiving special education are placed in regular
classrooms for more than half of the
instructional day - Gifted represents 13.4 of the students identified
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22STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AND SPECIAL
EDUCATIONQUESTIONS FOR PARENTS TO ADDRESS
- What if the Board was to demand that as part of
access to the gifted program, parents and
students committed to four years of gifted
courses? - Why? Then principals would have the critical
mass necessary to plan their staffing and
timetables. - What if programs without critical mass were not
offered but students could take an advanced
placement for the same course? - Why? Principal can not afford to staff gifted
programs without a critical mass of students
(critical mass 18 students) - What if students who transferred to access the
gifted program then opted out of gifted
programming were transferred back to their home
school? - Why? Many students transfer then take one
semester of gifted programs and then opt out of
gifted programs and take academic stream classes. - What if schools with gifted programming offered
only Language Arts or Math gifted programs and
the rest were academic? - Why? The data gathered indicates that students
in gifted programs take gifted English and Math
but will take academic programs in other
subjects. - To offer gifted programs, secondary schools need
85-90 students for 3 classes. What if a school
could drop their gifted programming if they only
had 40 students? - Why? Without a critical mass, staffing and
timetabling is very difficult if not impossible.
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