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The gifted student in the regular classroom

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Title: The gifted student in the regular classroom


1
The gifted student in the regular classroom
  • Julie Nelson- COE 8173

2
The Gifted Student in the Regular Classroom
  • Tyler daydreams in class, doesnt do his
    homework, yet always aces the tests.
  • Ashley reads eight books a day in school.
  • Samuels constant refrain is, Im done! Now what
    can I do?
  • Danika has a learning disability, yet she is two
    grades ahead in math.

What do you do?
(Winebrenner, 2001)
3
Where to Start
  • Learn to design learning tasks that are
    responsive to different styles of learning and
    different levels of ability.
  • Learn to manage a classroom in which students are
    working on different tasks simultaneously.
  • Gifted students learn the same standards, themes,
    units and/or concepts as the rest of the class.
    The simply require regular opportunities to
    become engaged with learning activities that
    require more depth and complexity.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
4
Planning
  • To set the stage for high achievement, it is
    essential that the academically advanced student
    be afforded an appropriate pace and level of
    instruction in the domains of talent.

(Stanley, 1991 Stanley Benbow, 1982)
5
Questioning
5
  • Gifted students
  • When human beings are not allowed to move beyond
    what they have previously accomplished, they
    often become bored, discouraged, frustrated, and
    angry and feel diminished as persons (Clark,
    2008)
  • All students
  • Renzulli (1977) School-wide Enrichment Model
  • All students should be given opportunity to
    challenge their minds and think critically

6
Questioning
6
  • Literal Questions that focus on recalling
    information
  • Should be minority not majority
  • Skill/Concept/Inference Questions
  • These questions require readers to infer answers
    by using clues in the text and their prior
    knowledge (Miller, 2002) Also, because the
    content is difficult, there will be opportunities
    for teaching children to actively listen and
    learn from each other (Miller, 2002).

7
Questioning (ctd.)
7
  • Critical/Extended/Strategic Thinking questions
  • Higher DOK levels
  • Way for teacher to know student is really
    comprehending material
  • Allows students to really think

8
One Way to Help
  • For content where its likely that some students
    have learned and mastered the material at an
    earlier time, compacting means
  • Finding the students areas of strength
  • Pretesting to determine which of the concepts
    they already know
  • Giving them full credit for that content
  • Allowing them to work on more challenging
    activities instead of the grade-level work
  • Known as compacting

(Winebrenner, 2001)
9
Compacting
  • Gifted students do not benefit from extra work
  • As soon as they figure out their prize for
    showing what they know is more work, they might
    stop demonstrating what they can do.
  • Compacting is remarkably successful with
    students who have become behavior problems and
    may be refusing to do their work.
  • Many behavior problems are caused by boredom and
    frustration.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
10
  • Gifted students usually prefer a reading program
    that offers choices about what they read and the
    activities they do.
  • Gifted students probably already know most of the
    writing skills/math skills youre planning to
    teach.
  • Pre-test first. See who needs to move ahead.
  • They will benefit most from contracts and
    alternate activities.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
11
  • How can I create these alternative activities
    when I hardly have time for everything I already
    have to do?
  • By using methods such as cluster grouping. In
    teams, a few of the teachers are primarily
    responsible for differentiating the curriculum
    for gifted students. The other teachers plan
    remediation activities. Each team gets together
    to discuss plans and then you decide which
    activities fit the learners in your classroom.
  • Ultimately, it is our job as teachers to make
    sure students will still be mastering all
    standards while being challenged in our
    classrooms.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
12
Contracts
  • Contracts are a great way to hold students
    responsible if the would like to work ahead, read
    ahead.
  • Example what if the student wants to read ahead?
  • They can complete a contract stating that they
    will not tell other students what happens in the
    story and that they will not participate in
    predicting activities.
  • Pass out contracts.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
13
Mini-Centers and Contracts
  • Mini-Centers can be a go-to thing for students
    to do if work is finished early. These should be
    based on an interest inventory done by students.
  • Students must fill out a student-contract for
    each activity they sign up for. This decreases a
    lot of projects that are started and never
    finished. It also teaches responsibility.

14
Self-Evaluations
  • After students complete activities, they must
    evaluate themselves before the teacher does.

15
How do I know what they want to learn?
  • Interest Inventories
  • A way to hold a students attention by focusing
    instruction on what students find interesting
  • Because he knows so much about the topic and his
    motivation is high, hes able to read a book of
    greater difficulty than a traditional assessment
    might indicate (Miller, 2002)
  • A way to show students you care

16
Interest Inventories
  • An example of making use of information from
    interest inventories
  • Get an index card, and then jot down their
    answers and align them side-by-side on the
    bulletin board. (Beers, 2003)
  • She also takes a Polaroid of each student and
    places it on the other side of the bulletin
    board (Beers, 2003).
  • Teacher and students work throughout the year on
    determining which card goes with each student
  • Shows students that their interests matter and
    will be incorporated in instruction
  • Will remind teacher throughout the year of
    individual interests
  • I havent thought a teacher cared who I was
    since the second grade (Beers, 2003).

17
Challenge of the Week
  • Each week there is a challenge. The teacher
    gives a prize to the students that complete the
    entire challenge correctly each week.

18
Games
  • Geogame is a game where the students are given
    clues about where in the world they are and it is
    up to them to research and figure it out
  • Other games that are for Logic Game days are
    chess, Blokus, and Cranium to name a few

19
Creative Expression
  • An example of a creative expression activity is
    when the students had to draw half of their face
    with the paper folded in half. They had to draw
    the other half afterward without consulting the
    first side. These were the winners.

20
More Enrichment Tools for the Regular Classroom
  • Thinkies
  • Thinkies are labeled Rubbermaid containers in
    the cabinet that students know they can grab if
    they have extra time. These tubs can range from
    Sudoku puzzles to riddles to mind-teasers. These
    activities usually take from about five to
    fifteen minutes to complete.
  • Something quick!

21
Conclusion
  • Gifted children are expensive and
    time-consuming. They usually need less sleep than
    you do, ask more questions than you can answer,
    want 100 percent of your attention 24 hours a
    day, have obsessive hobbies, are unstimulated by
    the school curriculum, react intensely to
    everything, endlessly long for a best friend who
    understands them completely, and hold
    perfectionist standards for themselves and you.
    But dont despair. They have a great sense of
    humor and their development is so remarkable that
    theyre exciting to watch grow.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
22
Conclusion
  • Challenge all of your students.
  • Give your students opportunities to demonstrate
    that they already know what youre about to
    teach, or can learn it in much less time than you
    have allotted.
  • Use compacting.
  • Create instructional groups that are flexible and
    change their composition depending on the
    content.
  • Offer meaningful choices whenever possible.
  • Focus on open-ended tasks and questions.
  • Encourage independent research based on topics in
    which the students are passionately interested.
  • Be sensitive to what gifted kids need.
  • Take advantage to learn more about gifted kids
    and their exceptional learning needs.

(Winebrenner, 2001)
23
References
  • Beers, K. (2003). When kids can't read.
    Portsmouth, NH Heinemann.
  • Clark, B. (2008). Growing up gifted. Upper Saddle
    River, NJ Pearson, Merrill Prentice Hall.
  • Miller, D. (2002). Reading with meaning.
    Portland, ME Stenhouse Publishers.
  • Stanley, J.C. (1991). An academic model for
    educating the mathematically talented. Gifted
    Child Quarterly, 35, 36-42.
  • Winebrenner, Susan.(2001). Teaching gifted kids
    in the regular classroom. Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Free Spirit Publishing.
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