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Are gifted students getting left out?
By
Carla Rivera, Los Angeles Times
Highly intelligent, talented students need special programs to keep
them engaged and challenged.
But
experts say too often they aren't even identified -- especially in
low-income and minority schools.
If you reviewed Dalton Sargent's report cards, you'd know only half his
story. The 15-year-old Altadena junior has lousy grades in many
subjects. He has blown off assignments and been dissatisfied with many
of his teachers. It would be accurate to call him a problematic
student.
But he
is also gifted.
Dalton is among the sizable number of highly intelligent or talented
children in the nation's classrooms who find little in the standard
curriculum to rouse their interest and who often fall by the wayside.
With schools under intense pressure from state and federal mandates
such as No Child Left Behind to raise test scores of low-achieving
pupils, the educational needs of gifted students -- who usually perform
well on standardized tests -- too often are ignored, advocates say.
Nationally, about 3 million kindergarten through 12th-grade students
are identified as gifted, but 80% of them do not receive specialized
instruction, experts say. Studies have found that 5% to 20% of students
who drop out are gifted.
There is no federal law mandating special programs for gifted children,
though many educators argue that these students -- whose curiosity and
creativity often coexist with emotional and social problems -- deserve
the same status as those with special needs.
Services
for gifted
students vary from state to state. In California, about 512,000
students are enrolled in the Gifted and Talented Education program,
which aims to provide specialized and accelerated instruction.
But many gifted students who might benefit from the program are never
identified, particularly those in economically disadvantaged
communities, advocates say.
Legislation
sponsored by state Sen. Louis
Correa (D-Santa Ana) aimed at training teachers to identify gifted
students from low-income, minority and non-English speaking families
stalled last year after estimates found that it could cost up to $1.1
million.
John C. Scribner, who is Correa's legislation director and also a
member of the Sacramento County Board of Education, noted that
opposition to gifted programs often comes from those who think other
low-income students will be shortchanged. But low-income gifted
students are doubly deprived, he says.
"There are students, usually from upper-income homes -- who will always
have advocates," Scribner said. "We want to give that same opportunity
to kids whose parents maybe are working two jobs, who aren't engaged
with the system but with survival and other challenges and whose
children end up without advocates."
Statewide, Latinos, who make up 48% of total student enrollment,
represent just 28% of students enrolled in gifted programs. African
Americans represent 7.6% of students and 4% of students enrolled in
gifted programs.
On the
other hand, Asians make up 8% of total student
enrollment and 17% of gifted enrollment; whites make up 29% of total
enrollment and 43% of gifted enrollment.
The reasons for the imbalance are varied. Schools attended by lower
income and minority students tend to have fewer gifted programs and
less qualified teachers. In addition, better educated and more affluent
parents are more likely to demand an advanced curriculum or hire
outside psychologists to test their children.
Some administrators and teachers have other reasons not to identify
students as gifted: They philosophically don't believe that students
should be classified that way or they don't want the responsibility of
providing special services for them.
California is asking districts to develop strategies to address the
under-represented student populations, such as making greater use of
group-administered tests that measure abstract thinking and reasoning
ability in the second and third grades, said state Department of
Education gifted program consultant Sandra Frank.
But even in districts with GATE programs, funding is usually
insufficient to cover a full range of services for all the students who
need them, advocates say. Currently, only 800 of the state's 1,353
school districts apply for GATE funding.
Broader public support for enhanced services is hindered by the
perception that smart kids don't need help, said Elizabeth Jones Stork,
president of the Institute for Educational Advancement, a South
Pasadena nonprofit that supports gifted programs.
Pipeline To Success, a program founded by Stork's group in 1999, is
seeking to change that perception. Working with the Pasadena Unified
School District, the program provides gifted students such as Dalton
with after-school activities, college tours and referrals for financial
aid.
More
than 200 students have graduated from the program, with 94%
of them going to four-year colleges.
In most respects, Dalton is a typical teenager. A student at Blair
International Baccalaureate School, he lives in Altadena with his
grandmother and likes science fiction, sports, hiking and his computer.
Through
the Pipeline program, Dalton has gone on college tours,
attended leadership camps and taken a journalism course.
But at 15, he wonders where he will be five or 10 years from now. He
worries about the world's problems and says he wants to do something
significant with his life or at least make people happy.
Staying
motivated, though, is a constant struggle: "It's a problem I still have
if I don't see the usefulness of something," he said.
Dalton's strong sense of justice and idealism are common hallmarks of
gifted children, said California Assn. for the Gifted President Marilyn
Lane. Many can have sharp mood swings. Some have dyslexia, attention
deficit disorder or other disabilities.
They are also apt to push the limits at home and at school, challenging
parents and teachers and generally opposing structure and authority.
Raising a gifted child can be a chore, said Karen Bagnard, Dalton's
grandmother and legal guardian since he was 5. A psychological
evaluation early on pegged Dalton as exceptionally bright, she said. In
elementary school he was moved ahead a year.
But
Bagnard, an artist who
designs notecards with whimsical images of mermaids, animals and
fairies, said that like any other boy, he still must be goaded to pick
up his room and do his homework.
"On some levels, he's a piece of work, but overall he's a delightful
kid," she laughs. "His start in life was pretty bumpy and by all rights
he should be a messed up kid, but he's really smart, really funny and
very secure."
Dalton recently mentioned that he and three friends are trying to start
up a band, but that someone is always missing from practice.
Further
conversation reveals that in addition to the drums, he plays the
saxophone, clarinet and piano, and that a few months after taking up
the trumpet, he earned a seat in the Pasadena Unified School District's
all-star band that marched in the 2006 Rose Parade.
In school, the nadir was eighth grade, where he tuned out in almost
every class because, he says, the material was too basic and
instruction amounted to just taking notes. While he never considered
dropping out, he was likely what experts call an emotional dropout.
The one bright spot that year was an algebra class in which his
teacher, Minh Tran, challenged GATE pupils with complex equations and
allowed them to lead discussions.
Tran, now a school counselor, is still a mentor to Dalton and says the
teenager has an intelligence "you just can't teach." But he added that
Dalton doesn't always give his best effort in class. "I had to sit down
with him and tell him sometimes you have to take care of things just
because it's your job. You don't always get to pick and choose in life."
Unlike some of his friends, Dalton is not concerned with getting into a
prestigious college. He may go to a community college to improve his
grade point average. Maybe he'll take a year off and hike the Pacific
Crest Trail or maybe hike around the world. He's considering becoming a
park ranger.
"The whole expectation thing makes me angry," he said. "I feel like
what you can do doesn't make you who you are. It's what you do do. It's
not the destination but what you learn on the journey."
Source: Los
Angeles Times May 12, 2008
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Related
Talent Development
Resources pages :
High Ability...........Highly
Sensitive
Gifted
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Articles:
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gifted/talented...........Articles:
Teen/Young Adult
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Intensity
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sensitivity
Intensity
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sensitivity resources :
articles sites books
Introversion
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shyness.
Introversion
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Perfectionism
Depression
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Self-tests
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Misdiagnosis
And Dual Diagnoses Of Gifted Children And Adults


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