Ginny Favers
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2011
- Messages
- 2,030
I think what alot of people are not realizing, is that being qualified as 'gifted' according to most states programs, is not calculated because you have a high Iowa test score or you are in the top % of your class or because you can do HS math in 7th grade or read at HS level in 3rd grade.
It is more of the way a gifted child thinks. They can think 'outside the box' in a way most children can not. They have ways of solving and analyzing things that most their age (or even older) can not. Yes, they do take into consideration all of the test scores from over the years before being tested for the program. Here, there is a set of guidlines before you can be tested and accepted. Test scores, grades, teacher referrals are looked at. As well as going thru a case study with the school phsycologist (to make sure you are mature enough to handle the workload and such). They give a multitude of tests (not all are basic reading/writing/math), some are basic but others are learning how the child thinks and how they are able to solve things. They are given an IQ test as well that must be met with a certain score.
Here they are set up with an IEP. I have to go to a meeting for my son every few months to sign off (state required) paperwork that he is being offered certain rights and curriculum under state guidlines. He is in a regular class of about 150students and there are only 2 out of his 10th grade class that is in the program. There are about 6 total from his highschool in the program.
My DD(20) is very intelligent. She graduated salutatorian at the top of her class. And is now on the all A honor roll at the University she attends. She is always discussing with her brother how she should have been in the program because she is so smart. Which is absolutely true, she is really smart. However, I do see a difference between them. There is just something about the way DS 'thinks' about things. They both have the same basic book smarts but like I said that is not what being gifted is all about.
I remember the last IEP meeting. The gifted teacher told me that she has never met a student that can 'think' about things the way my son does. She looked at me and said your son is very intriguing. It was kinda mysterious. lol But after I thought about it, I understood what she was talking about. It is such an indepth way of thinking that boggles an 'average' persons mind. lol
I will say, that to the kids at school he is just a normal school buddy like the next kid. He fits right in and although they know him as the smartest kid in the class, he is also the goofiest, easiest to talk to and get along with schoolmate. He has a wide range of friends and this is why the psychologist is so important when going down this path. They certainly need to be ready for it.
I will never forget the test I took in third grade before I was one of 3 children in my grade admitted into the "Academically Talented" program. I found it to be so incredibly fun and interesting. It was not book-smarts (as I find myself to be only average with those things), but it was like a bunch of puzzles. At the time I had no idea what it was for... I just found it to be so enjoyable. And the program itself was a lot of fun, too-- we got do "stories with holes in them" and design board games and have our own news program. While much of school bored me, that program excited me!