1 / 11

A Plan for the Gifted Services and Talent Development Program

A Plan for the Gifted Services and Talent Development Program. Plainview-Elgin-Millville Community Schools. Overview. Development/Advisory Committee How Do We Pay for This? Why Do We Need This? What Does It Mean? Who Is It For? When Does This Happen?. Development/Advisory Committee.

lmarcy
Download Presentation

A Plan for the Gifted Services and Talent Development Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Plan for the Gifted Services and Talent Development Program Plainview-Elgin-Millville Community Schools

  2. Overview • Development/Advisory Committee • How Do We Pay for This? • Why Do We Need This? • What Does It Mean? • Who Is It For? • When Does This Happen?

  3. Development/Advisory Committee • Committee members: • Gary Kuphal, Superintendent • Jake Donze, Curriculum Director • Angie Matiash, 7-8 representative • Julie Buehler, G/T Specialist and 4-6 representative • Stacy Montgomery, PreK-3 representative • Tracy Olson Moran, G/T Program coordinator and high school representative • Committee history • Past year: Research • Past four months: Plan Development

  4. How Do We Pay for This? • The district has received $21,675 this year in funding specifically marked for gifted and talented education. • $8,106.00 of this money is currently spent on teacher salaries; for the teacher who provides service and the gifted/talented coordinator. • This is reserved fund money. The carry over from this year ($13,569.00 ) will help support our program next year. • Additional money will be needed from staff development (another reserved fund) to provide staff training and curriculum writing time.

  5. Why Do We Need This? • Needs Assessment Results: • We are not meeting the intellectual needs of our brightest students. • School District Mission Statement: Empowering All Learners for Life • We are compelled by our obligation to the appropriate education of all our students.

  6. What Does It Mean? • The program has two parts: • Gifted Services: direct services in the classroom for identified students • Giftedness is a biologically-rooted concept and serves as a label for a high level of intelligence. It indicates an advanced and accelerated development of functions within the brain. • Talent Development: opportunities open all to all students to develop their talents • Talent Development involves the deliberate and planned effort to provide all children with a responsive learning environment so that all of their talents and abilities will have the opportunity to develop at maximum levels.

  7. Who Is It For? • Identification Process • 1. We create a nomination pool of students with high potential and /or performance, which is as inclusive as possible. To be included in the nomination pool, students must have at least four of the following, dependent on the area of giftedness: • one teacher evaluation • one parent evaluation • NWEA reading score at least two grade levels above current grade level • NWEA math score at least two grade levels above current grade level • MCA reading score at least two grade levels above current grade level • MCA math score at least two grade levels above current grade level • Successmaker testing results at least two grade levels above current grade level • Student portfolio of work • Student audition • Anecdotal piece by additional teacher or community leader

  8. 2. We collect information on each pool member to determine his/her strengths, weaknesses, and educational needs (secondary screening). To be included in the program, members of the nomination pool must complete a/an: • Student self-evaluation • Kranz Talent Identification Instrument • Slosson Intelligence Test • Interview with g/t program coordinator • The selection committee utilizes all data and then determines which students are in the program. • We allow students to appeal placement/selection decisions via a review by a separate appeals committee. • Students in the program will be reassessed every two years for changes in their performance, using the four secondary screening criteria and current teacher evaluations. • Non-selected pool members are eligible to reapply annually during the identification cycle.

  9. When Does This Happen? • School Year 08-09 1. General staff development and parent communication 2. Develop program 3. Staff recruitment 4. Identify students for program • Summer 09 1. Teacher training for program 2. Curriculum development for K-2 program • School Year 09-10 1. Implement program for identified students 2. Continue talent development 3. Continue staff development • Summer 10 1. Continue teacher training for program

  10. Discussion Questions, Comments, Ideas

More Related