Report urges acceleration for gifted students
Report urges acceleration for gifted students"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
A report by a group of experts on gifted education makes an impassioned plea for schools to allow exceptionally bright children to skip grades, start school early, or take other steps to
push ahead their learning. Read an executive summary of the report “A Nation Deceived: How Schools Hold Back America’s Brightest Students.” The full report is also available. “Those of us
who do research in this field have been very aware of the fact that, despite the research on the positive effects of acceleration, it’s just not translating to practice,” said Nicholas
Colangelo, a co-author of the report, “A Nation Deceived: How Schools Hold Back America’s Brightest Students.” The two-volume study, released on Sept. 20, includes a layman’s version and a
more detailed research report that corrals evidence for the group’s assertions. Mr. Colangelo and his two co-authors identify 18 different strategies schools can use to help speed up the
usual learning progression for academically gifted learners. They range from relatively rare practices, such as grade skipping, to more popular strategies such as Advanced Placement courses
for high school students. Yet, for the most part, the report maintains, general educators often resist making adaptations for their smartest students, even though research suggests that
doing so is effective. “The most common refrain our parents and students hear is ‘wait,’ ” said Jane Clarenbach, the director of public education for the National Association for Gifted
Children, a Washington-based group that formally endorsed the report. “It’s either ‘Wait for their classmates to catch up,’ or ‘We’re going to cover that subject three weeks from now,’ or
‘Wait until next year.’ ” CONCERN FOR CONSEQUENCES An estimated 3 percent to 5 percent of children nationwide are considered academically gifted, the report says, which is defined as having
an IQ over 125. But the report says no data are available on how many such children are being denied accelerated learning opportunities. Speaking for regular educators, Paul D. Houston, the
executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, based in Arlington, Va., said the report’s perception of the situation may be fairly accurate. “Generally, there
probably is some reluctance to accelerate,” he said. In addition, he said, many educators are concerned about the social, as well as academic, consequences of accelerating students’
learning. “If you accelerate a kid two or three years past his peer group, does that create a problem in terms of social development or not?” he said. Addressing the needs of the nation’s
brightest students, Mr. Houston said, has as much to do with good teaching as anything else. That’s why he questions whether students need to leave their same-age classmates for special
classes for the gifted in order to delve more deeply into learning. “You can talk about the American Revolution fairly superficially,” Mr. Houston said, “or you can talk about the whole
issue of what democracy is in a very deep way.” Mr. Colangelo said some of educators’ reluctance to allow bright students to accelerate their learning beyond that of their peers comes from
their philosophical beliefs about equity. And he said that is the case even when teachers are familiar with research findings that support acceleration. “It’s one of those issues where
attitude trumps evidence,” said Mr. Colangelo, who is also an education professor at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. EDUCATION LAW’S IMPACT A prime example, Mr. Colangelo said, is the
No Child Left Behind Act. In the federal education law’s quest to raise the achievement levels of the nation’s lowest-performing students, the law ignores the needs of top academic
performers, Mr. Colangelo and other proponents of acceleration contend. To make the case for expanding accelerated-learning opportunities, the study’s authors point to research showing that
students who have been allowed to skip ahead in school outperform equally bright students who stay with their own age group. The average achievement difference, according to one review in
the report of several such studies, amounts to almost a grade level. _The report was conducted with financial support from the Radnor, Pa.-based John Templeton Foundation. _
Trending News
Drivers urged to pay car tax ahead of major ved changes next monthThe standard rate will increase by £10 for most cars which were first registered on or after April 1, 2017. For cars reg...
England scrum-half unavailable after he confirms move to new zealand for 2024 season - ruckWILLI HEINZ WILL TAKE THE FIELD FOR THE CRUSADERS IN THE 2024 SEASON, CONTINUING HIS STELLAR RETURN TO SUPER RUGBY. The...
Spatio-temporal changes in the causal interactions among sustainable development goals in chinaABSTRACT Extensive efforts have been dedicated to deciphering the interactions associated with Sustainable Development G...
Page Not Found很抱歉,你所访问的页面已不存在了。 如有疑问,请电邮[email protected] 你仍然可选择浏览首页或以下栏目内容 : 新闻 生活 娱乐 财经 体育 视频 播客 新报业媒体有限公司版权所有(公司登记号:202120748H)...
Closer look: venison sandwiches; allergies; and moreCloser Look with Rose Scott November 4, 2016 Friday on “Closer Look with Rose Scott and Jim Burress”: * 0:00: Atlanta Jo...
Latests News
Report urges acceleration for gifted studentsA report by a group of experts on gifted education makes an impassioned plea for schools to allow exceptionally bright c...
Nature - volume 416 issue 6876, 7 march 2002AMAZING GRACE Two satellites that will chase one another around the globe are poised to map the Earth's gravitation...
Reinforcement learning deficits exhibited by postnatal pcp-treated rats enable deep neural network classificationABSTRACT The ability to appropriately update the value of a given action is a critical component of flexible decision ma...
Miami Key Largo Race Archives - Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailorsFEATURE May 26th, 2020 While the manpower needed to host a proper windward leeward race is beyond what health restrictio...
Interview with ahmed bin fareed: "we still believe that a two-state solution is best solution for yemen"INTERVIEW WITH AHMED BIN FAREED, REPRESENTATIVE OF THE SOUTHERN TRANSITIONAL COUNCIL (STC) OF YEMEN IN THE EUROPEAN UNIO...