I feel like the OP is saying that gifted kids are "at risk", if in a normal classroom, because they might get too bored and just stop working, etc etc.
I agree with that.
But I think people are hearing the OP and thinking the OP is saying the schools accept "at risk" kids who are gifted over "not at risk" kids who are gifted. "At risk" here meaning poor, etc etc.
I don't think that's what the OP is saying, though.
In 1st grade or so I was tested and put in the ELP program (CA in the mid-70s, that was their term and I never knew what it meant...was later changed to GATE). I left class and went to the junior high school and was exposed to extra things that the other kids weren't exposed to. Never seemed like a program that helped a kid do more work on whatever they needed for school, BUT just *other* things. I never understood the point. I didn't see why the other kids back at my elementary school didn't get to see this stuff. Some would do well with it, others wouldn't, but at least we'd all get the same chance.
I hated being pulled from my class. Very shy, didn't like how everyone looked at me when I left and came back. And it was weird, because I was NEVER the top performer in class, grades-wise. I had several friends who did much better, but didn't test into the ELP program. Kinda weird.
And then my brother, who is just brilliant, actually failed the test, because they had contexts that didn't work for him. Cartoons in the test, but we were PBS kids only. The test had changed in the 3 years between when I took it and when he took it, and the cartoon characters weren't in my test or I would have failed too. So weird, because he's possibly the most intelligent person I know.
AND it's not like my mind is a big problem-solving mind. Those brain teasers that get told...I never get them. If anything, I've realized in the last year, my brain is more weird than anything else. But the tests seemed to think that I had *something* going on, some extra oomph that my straight-A friends didn't have. If I hadn't been so shy and afraid of being seen...maybe some amazing things could have happened. As it was, I discovered boys, noticed that the boys I knew looked at me funny when I knew the answers and got good grades, so I dumbed myself down by the time 7th grade started, and stayed in the lower-end classes until the end of sophomore year when I had a "I can't take it anymore" moment and bumped myself up to Honors classes again (too scared and nervous for AP!).
Back to elementary school and comparing my B self to my A friends...
BUT I moved faster through the material than the other kids did, always, I was the one who finished the test first and then sat there until someone else did, waiting for others to turn it in so I didn't draw attention to myself. And I would read really fast (my brother reads faster, of course) and get the Reading work done. They never had extra work for me, so I got to just sit there. (that's where I think the G&T classes should help...MORE work for the kids to do! not *different* work) I was extremely bored in class, and if I hadn't been a little rule-follower I might have gotten myself into trouble. So in a way I was "at risk", though I never would have even thought of dropping out or doing poorly on purpose...
I was popular in high school and I think you have a lot more fun in high school if youre popular, which is why I think it's important. High school years are tough on every kid but if you're unpopular, it would just make it so much harder.
By the time I got to my 20th high school reunion, and the 20th is where the cliques start wearing off, I realized that EVERYONE I talked to felt uncomfortable in HS, they didn't feel popular, they felt weird and different...even the ones that WERE popular...they felt just as awkward as the others did.
I want my son to look nice. I wouldn't give him a bowl cut like DH's mom did (though DS has ASKED for a bowl cut b/c he thinks it would make him look like Harry Potter in the first movie, and he likes that look). I won't put him in horrible clothes. But if he's not into the popularity thing when he's older, who cares? It's 4 years of his life. That's it. The whole rest of your life is not high school....
I do know what the OP means by gifted kids being at risk for dropping out. I come from a family of high achievers who dropped out of high school. Funny, but of my siblings, it's the smart but not gifted ones who graduated in the normal way from high school. The three of us who were in TAG dropped out or got adult diplomas, but all ended up getting advanced degrees in later life. Go figure. My smartest sister dropped out at 13, yet got a 1600 on her SAT (back in the day when that was the max). I guess what I'm trying to get at is that gifted and good grades/school success don't always go together, especially for teens.
Reminds me of a friend from HS! We knew she did well, and we knew she was bored out of her skull. She was a year older than the rest of us, so we weren't in her classes, but we knew she had a time limit on school. She dropped out half a year before graduation. She had read a book called something like Guerilla Homeschooling and decided to just teach herself b/c she could do a better job of it (and since we both went to the same school, I AGREE!!!!).
She later got her GED, and then teaching credentials, and she's now an elementary school teacher.
And she's a bonafide member of MENSA...
The kids school did not have a gifted program, never much heard of it before the DIS. Even so 99% of the graduates go on to college, most to the top schools. To me it sounds kind of strange reading and hearing about "gifted" children. Just something not right about it.
Sounds like your school IS a G&T school. Having 99% of graduates go to college is an amazing figure! (then again my 75% high school helped me b/c the college thought "hmm, she must be really determined, since not everyone goes to college from there")