Kirby
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2000
- Messages
- 13,313
I worked as a teaching assistant in my children's elementary school in the late 90's. The children chosen for the G & T class scored high on their critical thinking skills. Most of them made good grades and quite a few did not behave well in school. It was a relief for their teacher to have them leave for their G & T class.
I wish they would bring back the honors program in our middle school and high school. So many kids taking the pre-AP and AP classes are failing at least one class. A lot of them take the class because their parents make them. There are no prerequisites to take the classes like their would be for honors classes.
We do have the Global classes for those those driven students with type A personalities. They do well no matter what class they take.
I wish they would bring back the honors program in our middle school and high school. So many kids taking the pre-AP and AP classes are failing at least one class. A lot of them take the class because their parents make them. There are no prerequisites to take the classes like their would be for honors classes.
We do have the Global classes for those those driven students with type A personalities. They do well no matter what class they take.

, and it certainly didn't help me identify or guide me into pursuing the career that I actually had a passion for
.
. I am definitely all for programs that focus on certain segments of the population (e.g. smart kids, foreign language kids, special ed kids, average kids), and it makes me really mad when some kids are held behind because other kids are not as advanced academically. But phrasing is everything, and the term "Gifted and Talented" seems to me to belong back in the days when students were allowed to pick and choose their teammates for PE (with the same kids ALWAYS being picked last
). "Gifted and Talented" is only a step better than just calling them "The Smart Kids", which makes everyone else feel like "The Dumb Kids".
)
