Hey Guys I normally dont post on the community board but with my vacation just about planned I have made my way over here.
Anyhow.. I am having an issue with my DD. I am a single military mother. Because I am gone alot I have done alot to make sure my DD has every advantage I can give her. Which meant pre-school and then lots of time at library, zoo, muesums and such with Mommy when I am home. My house TV stays on Disney JR or PBS...
Well she started Kindergarden this year and she is way tooooo advanced for the class. They are counting to 25, she is counting 200+ (i normally make her stop then lol cause i got the point). She is spelling simple words and reading alot more then her class. Shapes and colors she has got that. She is even doing simple addition and subtraction.... Her class is still baby steps..while is running.... She is also the olderst in class since she has a december birthday
so my problem... she is getting board in class and getting in trouble. She finishes her work and wants to help others or wants to play and talk. She has + marks in everything but listening and following directions...
What can I do for her? I dont want to punish her, but i dont know how to fix this and the teachers keep telling me I should talk to her and work with her on listening and following directions.
Also in that vain of reading what mom said, mom NEVER used the word gifted to describe her DD. Mom just said that the DD was given Advantages before starting K. Actually in post #11 mom says her DD wasn't ahead because she was gifted, but because mom had worked with her.(sorry started this post without quoting her first)
Sorry that has bothered me since the beginning of the thread. It was the second poster that said the little girl was gifted.
Now I truly think mom was willing to listen to reasonable help for her DD, but like usual around here the she got very little of that and a lot of people telling her all the stuff she is doing wrong.
Now for mom if you are still reading, playing school with her might help. Also I remind my DD to listen to the teacher and sit still in class as we wait for the bus in the mornings, every day.
Another thing the teachers around here send home behavior reports every day, so my DD likes to know hers says GOOD DAY on it. With my sons school they just give each child a color on the behavior chart like blue is best, green is ok, orange you did something to go down a color(like talking in class), yellow was two things, and red was a call home. For us blue and green were ok, orange we talked about and only one in in a month( figure everyone can have a bad day). We never got past that in K. So maybe the teacher could do something like that for her. For my son it helped to see where he was with the colors, and if they went down a color they had the ability to work at bringing the color back up.
Just some ideas.![]()
She may not have used the word gifted, but in her second post she said that hoped that she could get the school on her side about moving her daughter to 1st grade. So it was definitely implied.
Actually, skipping a grade implies academically advanced, not gifted. There is a difference. Due to asynchronous development, grade skipping actually hurts many gifted children more than it helps them. Enrichment programs that allow them to explore new ideas and global thinking are what helps them. Advancing for one or two classes can help--a child doing algebra in 4th grade should not be held to doing 4th grade math, but that doesn't mean that same child is ready for 8th grade writing or science.
Yes. Rote memorization (as mentioned with the counting to 200) is not a sign of giftedness, nor is knowing shapes and colors in kindergarten. My three year old can do that. He is definitely not gifted--ha ha! If the child moves up to first grade based on knowing colors, shapes, numbers and starting to read....she will likely be behind once the next quarter starts. I think of my neighbor, who has her daughter taking classes through Sylvan Learning Center. She is diagramming sentences at third grade, knows her parts of speech, etc. She didn't get into the gifted program because she doesn't fit the criteria of seeking out knowledge, being a critical thinker, etc. I teach Honors classes and there are many pieces of the puzzle, but I often refer to this chart to remind paretns and teachers the difference between a high achiever and a truly gifted child.Actually, skipping a grade implies academically advanced, not gifted
2 of my children are considered gifted and the other has always been considered advanced.
First off - I really get rubbed the wrong way by parents of "gifted" or "advanced" children who use the excuse of "they're bored" (which you spelled board) as an excuse for bad behavior - especially when it distracts other children in the classroom. Why on earth should she not be held accountable for that??
Also - Kdg. is way to early to tell if your daughter is truly gifted. As others have mentioned - they all come to the classroom with different experiences and maturity levels.
Talk to the teacher to see if you can send in workbooks, or have her read or if there are extra problems she can do to challenge herself and keep her busy. She absolutely needs to know she cannot bother the teacher and other students just because you feel - or if she is in fact - gifted.
I think what rubbed people the wrong way how the op presented the question. We all love our children and want what's best - so she's no better or different than any other Disers.
She was also insinuating that her daughter should not be punished or corrected for her disruptions like other students in the class because her daughter is gifted. Not giving a thought as to his this affects the other student who are trying to learn.
If she would have had a different attitude or worded her post differently and asked for help or ideas to help keep her daughter occupied or disciplined I believe many of the answers would have come across as more friendly.
I always try to figure out the purpose of posts like this. Is it to belittle someone, or to make fun of gifted children? There is already so much negativity on these boards and in the general population about intelligent people. Should we all aspire to be average? Should talented people hide who they are so others won't feel bad?
Yes. Rote memorization (as mentioned with the counting to 200) is not a sign of giftedness, nor is knowing shapes and colors in kindergarten. My three year old can do that. He is definitely not gifted--ha ha! If the child moves up to first grade based on knowing colors, shapes, numbers and starting to read....she will likely be behind once the next quarter starts. I think of my neighbor, who has her daughter taking classes through Sylvan Learning Center. She is diagramming sentences at third grade, knows her parts of speech, etc. She didn't get into the gifted program because she doesn't fit the criteria of seeking out knowledge, being a critical thinker, etc. I teach Honors classes and there are many pieces of the puzzle, but I often refer to this chart to remind paretns and teachers the difference between a high achiever and a truly gifted child.
http://www.bertiekingore.com/high-gt-create.htm
Here is an example from the chart: A high achiever understands humor. A gifted learner creates abstract humor. In others words...A high achiever can count to 200. A gifted learner would manipulate the numbers in a creative way.
The issue seems to be that the child is bored, and I'm sure many others in the kindergarten class are. Most kids who have gone to preschool know letters, numbers, shapes, colors and are reading. Kids who don't have support at home might not. Your daughter sounds on track for kindergarten, but probably needs some enrichment, which the school should offer.
Most schools have AT (academically talented) programs, and if your child is truly gifted, she will likely be identified.
The breakdown of high achiever/gifted/creative learners is very interesting. Thank you for posting it.
Yes. Because in all likelihood the child is not that gifted. LeBron is gifted. Zuckerberg is gifted. Mila Kunis is gifted.
Counting to 200 is something the child was taught at a young age. We taught my son how to speak english, spanish and italian. Was my son super advanced because he already mastered 3 languages or did we just teach him three languages? It's not what you know or how you learned it...it's how you actually apply that knowledge.
I know what gifted means, thanks. I am just wondering why people are so sure that if a poster uses the word gifted, they should be mocked. There are truly gifted people in the world.
As was stated earlier, the OP didn't refer to her child as gifted and I have no idea if she is or if she isn't. It is just a general observation if a child is tested at a high IQ, it is acceptable to make fun of them and I was wondering why.
I think the OP got some good advise here, and I hope her DD has a very successful year in Kindergarten.
TAX GUY said:Its just my opinion, so take it for what its worth...
but would it be a matter of proving there is a gift (tested by others) and the parent or relative just SAYING their child is gifted?
Either way, I'm not gifted with anything nor is my son. We're all just average so I'm not throwing any stones to either side (gifted or not).
And then pray that they find the child is academically advanced, not gifted. Life will be much easier for both of them.
i thought about to be honest. They are doing state placement testing last week and this week... i am trying to wait on the results to see ... hopefully it will get the school on my side for moving her to first grade
It was suggested I take her to the doc to see about if she has ADD, but I really think its just cause she is board.


Maddening! Teachers jump on the "lets test the child" too fast!
For God's sake, this is October and your child started school, what the most 2 months ago? Give these children a chance to adjust to new surroundings, new teachers, new peers.
Perhaps she is bored...Through the years, have heard stories of children being bored, talking unnecessarily, etc...I would express to your child that talking will not be tolerated while the teacher is teaching. Once some testing comes back, I would communicate with the teacher that you suspect your child is bored. Perhaps the teacher can give your child additional assignments which are more challenging. In this case, at this EARLY STAGE OF THE SCHOOL YEAR, I would NEVER consider "testing" for ADD! IMO, "easy" outs for teachers that don't want to work with students!![]()
Absolutely the truth.
Most who don't see this don't have a truly gifted child, but an academically advanced one. The gifted child has a brain that's wired differently from his or her peers. And it can present so many issues over time.

all this time she worried he would be behind the other kids, he's actually 2 years ahead of them! He really is such a smart cookie though!! Thankfully the school district is accommodating and allows him to take upper level math and science classes while still doing the other normal classes with his peers.