47
S Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom North Carolina AIG Coordinators’ Institute Julia Link Roberts, Ed.D. Mahurin Professor of Gifted studies Western Kentucky University [email protected]

Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

  • Upload
    brosh

  • View
    28

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom. North Carolina AIG Coordinators’ Institute Julia Link Roberts, Ed.D . Mahurin Professor of Gifted studies Western Kentucky University j [email protected]. What does a child not learn?. If during the first five or six years - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

S

Growing Gifted Learners: Through the

School/ClassroomNorth Carolina AIG Coordinators’ Institute

Julia Link Roberts, Ed.D.Mahurin Professor of Gifted studies

Western Kentucky [email protected]

Page 2: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

What does a child not learn?

If during the first five or six years of school, a child earns good grades and high praise without having to make much effort, what are all the things he doesn’t learn that most children learn by third grade?

Page 3: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

S

What is academic success for

intellectually and academically gifted

students?

Page 4: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Levels of Academic Success

• LEVEL 3• Learns with satisfaction and joy (becomes

a lifelong learner)

• LEVEL 2• Earns high grades on assignments that

challenge (completes assignments that require effort)

• LEVEL 1• Gets good grades with ease (completes

assignments with little effort)

Page 5: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

What is Academic Success

• Parents• Elementary Teachers• Middle School Teachers• High School Teachers• Decision-Makers

Page 6: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 7: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

The goal of school is for children to learn.

Page 8: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 9: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Differentiation Why do it? Why not?

Page 10: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 11: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 12: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 13: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 14: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 15: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 16: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 17: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 18: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 19: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 20: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 21: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 22: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 23: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 24: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 25: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 26: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 27: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 28: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 29: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 30: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 31: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 32: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 33: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 34: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 35: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 36: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 37: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 38: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom
Page 39: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

The goals of differentiating are to ensure continuous progress and to create

lifelong learners.

Page 40: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Revised Bloom Taxonomy

Create

Evaluate

Analyze

Apply

Understand

Remember

Page 41: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

1. Students write a poem about the seasons.

2. Students create a poster demonstrating the water cycle.

3. Students write and give a speech about local history.

4. Students predict the next pattern in a sequence.

5. Students draw a political cartoon.

Page 42: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

• Teach students what they don’t already know!

• Can’t learn “it” if you already know “it.”

Page 43: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Preassessment

Page 44: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Challenges in Your School

Making the mission statement real

Grouping to provide idea-mates for students

Offering appropriately challenging instruction for all children

Providing a range of services to develop talents

Page 45: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Strengths don’t look needy.

How do you convince other teachers and school administrators that children with gifts and talents have needs?

Page 46: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

The guiding mission of the North Carolina State Board of Education is that every public school student will graduate from high school, globally competitive for work and postsecondary education and prepared for life in the 21st century.• What should that look like for

academically gifted students?

Page 47: Growing Gifted Learners: Through the School/Classroom

Ponder in your group

How can you ensure that intellectually and academically gifted students are prepared to graduate globally competitive for work and postsecondary education?

What plan could you make to encourage parents to support academic challenge (continuous progress)?

What barriers do you face in getting children to show academic growth in your school – classrooms, too? What can you plan and with whom to minimize the problem?