GT

G/T Identification and Personalized Service Plans

All identified G/T students grades 6 – 8 will be enrolled in a self-contained, grouped class per grade level. This class will be identified as GT ELAR (English, Language Arts & Reading) with an option for GT Science. At this time, the State requires GT options in all 4 core content areas.

Teachers are required to have 30+ hours of training in GT techniques and complete regular updates of 6 hours per year to maintain their certification.

Texas State Plan for the Education of Gifted Talented Students - 2019



Student Service Plans are stored in AWARE / Eduphoria.

Personalized Service Plan Example.pdf

Science Curriculum

The district worked with science teachers and a Science Instructional team for several years to develop a G/T curriculum. The curriculum focuses on adapting current LISD science with several key attributes of G/T students and learning, including:

- curiosity, creativity, challenge, connections, choice, collaborate, and compact

The first step in curriculum compacting is to identify the content, skill areas, standards, or benchmarks students have mastered. Compacting works particularly well in subjects or topics that are easily pre-tested such as math, vocabulary, and map skills. Questions in these subjects generally require one right answer. It is easy, therefore, to determine who knows the information and who does not.

GT Science Attributes

ELA Curriculum

6TH GRADE

CRAFTING OUR STORIES

  • Unit 1 - Independence

  • Unit 2 - Cultivating Wonder

  • Unit 3 - Taking Risks

  • Unit 4 - Relationships

Sixth graders are embarking on a new chapter in their lives as they leave their familiar elementary schools, assume new responsibilities, and navigate new social experiences. The overarching theme of “Crafting our Stories” empowers sixth graders to see themselves as authors of their lives -- gaining independence, becoming curious about the world around them, taking risks, and building relationships.

7TH GRADE

BELOW THE SURFACE

  • Unit 1 - Identity

  • Unit 2 - Perseverance

  • Unit 3 - Perspectives

  • Unit 4 - Transformation

There’s always more. In a fast-paced world rich with information and packed with hectic schedules, it’s easy for our lives to be stretched a mile wide and an inch deep. When we are satisfied with the surface, we miss out on seeing the world for the beautifully complex place that it is. In 7th grade, we want to challenge our students to think deeply to see that things are not always the way they appear on the surface. There’s always more to see when you take time to look.

8TH GRADE

IT'S ALL RELATED

  • Unit 1- Choices & Outcomes

  • Unit 2- Conflict & Character

  • Unit 3- Power & Influence

  • Unit 4- Appearances & Reality

One thing always leads to another. Nothing is isolated; everything is connected. We want our students to see that no one thing is really just one thing; it’s many things with a myriad of outcomes and a universe of possibilities. In eighth grade, our students will investigate the complexities pertaining to the interconnectedness of the world around us.

Depth and Complexity

Depth and complexity Workshop.pdf
FacilitatingtheUnderstandingofDEPTHandCOMPLEXITY.pdf
Voss-High-Level-Differentiated-Questioning-with-Depth-and-Complexity-Icons.pdf
Copy of depthcomplex.pdf

Twice Exceptional Students

Myths about GT Students

Myth No. 1: Intelligence is inherited and does not change. Gifted students, therefore, do not need any special services.

All of us do inherit certain traits, intelligences and talents. But these need to be developed and nurtured throughout life for them to grow and reach their full potential. A beautiful flower inherits certain traits. But if it is not watered and fed and if it does not get the right amount of sunlight, it does not develop as it could. The same is true for gifted children.

Myth No. 2: Giftedness can easily be measured by intelligence tests and tests of achievement.

Giftedness is difficult to measure. This is why schools and school districts try so many different ways to identify gifted students. Tests are often culturally biased and may reflect ethnicity, socioeconomic status, exposure and experiences rather than true giftedness. Other children may be gifted but are not good at taking tests. They may not score well on standardized tests but may be gifted, especially in creative and productive thinking.

Myth No. 3: There is no need to identify gifted students in the early grades.

Many school districts do not begin identifying gifted and talented students until third grade. There is a belief among some educators that giftedness cannot be properly identified in the early grades. However, the National Association for Gifted Children programming standards start with pre-kindergarten. The group’s early childhood network position paper says that “providing engaging, responsive learning environments … benefit all children, including young gifted children.”

Photos: Inside a 'genius school' in 1948

Myth No. 4: Gifted students read all the time, wear glasses and/or are physically and socially inept.

From Jason, the cartoon character in the “Foxtrot” comic strip, to Sheldon on the TV show “The Big Bang Theory,” we can see this stereotype in action. But like all other kids, gifted children come in many varieties. Some are successful in sports or music, and some are physically attractive. Some have many friends, while others have only a few. Some are extreme extroverts, while others are introverts. There is no one type of person or personality we can pinpoint as gifted.

Myth No. 5: Gifted kids are all model students – they’re well-behaved and make good grades.

This statement reflects another stereotype about gifted students. Some gifted children are model students. They are compliant, follow directions, never misbehave and make straight A’s. But many others challenge teachers, do their own thing instead of the assigned work, procrastinate until the last minute when doing long-range assignments, get low grades, are disorganized and have poor study skills.

Myth No. 6: All gifted students work up to their potential.

Most schools have their share of gifted underachievers. These students have the potential for excellence but - for a variety of reasons - do not fulfill that potential. Gifted underachievers may decide they will only do the minimum requirements and choose the easy work instead of more challenging tasks. They often lack study and organizational skills because in the early grades they don’t need to develop them. Some get discouraged when the work doesn’t come easily, and others don’t want to look gifted because it isn’t “cool.”

Myth No. 7: Teaching gifted students is easy.

Some believe that a good teacher can easily teach any student. If this were the case, good teaching with no special training would be all that is needed to teach gifted students. However, in my many years of teaching graduate-level courses in gifted education, I have found that good teachers add to their skills and learn new strategies and techniques targeted particularly to meeting the needs of the gifted. Most teachers of the gifted tell me this is the hardest, most challenging, most exhausting and most rewarding teaching they have ever done.

Myth No. 8: Gifted students will get by on their own without any special help from the school.

I hear this myth often, especially in times of budget cutting. Some people claim that gifted students come from wealthy families who can meet their children’s needs. Others assert that the expense of providing gifted programs cannot be justified. In general, the assumption is that gifted students will succeed regardless of the quality of the education they receive. This is simply not true. Gifted students require special services and programs to ensure the growth rather than the loss of their outstanding abilities.

Myth No. 9: It never hurts gifted students to teach others what they already know.

If gifted students already know the grade-level standards, it may seem logical to have them teach others. This is faulty logic. It assumes that teaching struggling students is something gifted kids innately know how to do. Most gifted students do not know how to tutor others. They often are frustrated that struggling students don’t understand what they perceive as easy. Peer tutoring using gifted students also takes away time they should be using for more advanced work, more rigor and more higher-level thinking.

Myth No. 10: All children are gifted.

If all kids are gifted, then there is no need to identify gifted students and no need for any special programs for gifted. I strongly believe that all children have distinctive and unique qualities that make each one valuable. This does not mean, however, that all children are gifted. Being identified as gifted simply means that certain children have needs that are different from most others at their age and grade level. All gifted students need programs and services to ensure their growth rather than the loss of their outstanding abilities.

Carolyn Coil. Posted by Schools of Thought editors