The Challenge of Challenging Gifted Students
CESA #11 WorkshopOctober 19, 2009
Dr. Stephen [email protected]
1
Goals for this morning
• Review basic concepts to develop a common language
• Examine the “emerging definitions” of giftedness
• Promote parent & teacher dialogue• Assess needs for workshops 2 & 3
2
2005 Gifted and Talented Definition
Gifted and talented children and youth are those students with outstanding abilities, identified at preschool, elementary, and secondary levels.
3
2005 Gifted and Talented Definition
These students are capable of high performance when compared to others of similar age, experience, and environment, and represent the diverse populations of our communities.
4
2005 Gifted and Talented Definition
These are students whose potential requires differentiated and challenging educational programs and/or services beyond those provided in the general school program.
5
2005 Gifted and Talented Definition
Students capable of high performanceinclude those with demonstratedachievement or potential ability inany one or more of the followingareas:
6
2005 Gifted and Talented Definition
General intellectualSpecific Academic subjectsCreativityLeadershipVisual and performing artsFrom the MGTDC (MDE) Advisory Committee
7
Giftedness is asynchronous development, placing the gifted child “out of phase” with:
SelfAge peersAt level tests, assessments, expectationsMuch of popular culture
(The Columbus Group, 1991)
8
Two examples of asychronicityA kindergarten teacher is explaining how
dinosaurs are discovered, and states, “A geologist is a scientist who studies these fossils.”
Jenny, age 4 says, “I don’t mean to be rude Ms. Mays, but it’s a paleontologist that examines the dinosaur bones.”
9
A middle school example
• The majority of the 200,000 middle school students who take the SAT and ACT score as well or better than high school seniors
• The stronger students from that cohort can absorb one year of a high school course in 3 weeks
• The strongest of those candidates can absorb one year of a high school course in 10 days
A Nation Deceived
10
Giftedness is “Abnormal”
11
Top 3 -10% of population in any given area of ability
Gifted People Are Different
• Neurosystem• Perception• Behavior• Environment
12
Neurology
• Larger Frontal Lobes• Faster synapses• More efficient processes
See Sanjay Gupta
13
My Beliefs About This Topic
• Gifted students exist, are an exceptional population, and require accommodations to be challenged in school
• Gifted students are the most underserved population in most schools (i.e., they learn the least)
• Serving them appropriately would benefit them and every other student in a school setting
14
The four achievement gaps
• Racial• Gender• Economic• Aptitude (between what is being learned, and
what could be learned with appropriate GT programs and services)
15
Gifts vs. TalentsF. Gagne
“Giftedness refers to measures of potential, of untrained natural ability, while talent is reserved specifically for
indices of achievement, of the performance attained as the result of a
systematic program of training and practice.”
(Gagne 1995)16
A Common G/T Vocabulary
17
Gifted Talented
• high aptitude • high achievement• nature • nurture• ability • performance• potential • environment• threshold • accomplishment• endowment • output
(Gagne 1995)
Rigor & Challenge
Differentiation
How Much Time is Wasted in a typical classroom for GT’s?
• 140 IQ = 50% of their time• 170 IQ = 99% of their time
18
Hollingworth (1942), Renzulli, Silverman (1991)
The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented: Classroom Practices Study
Approximately 40-50% of traditional classroom material could be eliminated for targeted students.
19
Gagne’s Metric SystemLevel Label Ratio IQ SD
5 Profoundly 1:100,000 165 + 4.3
4 Exceptionally 1:10,000 155 + 3.7
3 Highly 1:1,000 145 + 3.0
2 Moderately 1:100 135 + 2.3
1 Mildly 1:10 120 + 1.3
20
Questions and comments?
21
These ideas square with my beliefs. I’d like to
add. . ..
These are the ideas that are going around in my head.
This made me uncomfortable!
Some of the ideas with which I disagreed . . .
Why are GT’s Underserved?
22From Get Off My Brain, by Randy McCutcheon. Illustrations:Pete Wagner
Level 1 2 3 4 5 w/o DI
Coercive Egalitarianism
Forced regression toward the mean through indifference or neglect
Stephen Schroeder-Davis
23
24
Gifted Children
$0.03
Drug Abuse
Prevention $2
Reading First $3
No Child Left Behind $64Children with
Disabilities $32
Federal Education Budget
Training, preparation, programming
• No states have comprehensive policies in gifted education in all areas.
• only 77 of 3500 HEIs offer GT courses
• 18 states offer no teacher preparation
• Only 11 mandate GT fundingNAGC National Conference Report, 2007
25
NCLB and GT’s
• Remedial, deficit-based• Teach what is tested (narrowing curriculum, which
“homogenizes” talent)• One-size-fits all education to a HIGHLY diverse
population• Curriculum reduced to basic skills emphasis• Goals are statistically impossible to meet• “Adequate yearly progress” does not apply to, refer to,
or even acknowledge needs of- GTs• No incentive to challenge high ability studentsSee M. Gentry
26
27
High-Achieving Students in the High-Achieving Students in the Era of NCLBEra of NCLB
Thomas B. Fordham Institute
28
BackgroundBackground• First two studies of a multifaceted research
investigation of the state of high-achieving students in the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) era.
• Part I: An Analysis of NAEP Data, by Tom Loveless: achievement trends for high-achieving students since the early 1990s and, in more detail, 2000.
• Part II: Results from a National Teacher Survey, by Steve Farkas and Ann Duffett: reports on teachers’ own views of how schools are serving high-achieving pupils in the NCLB era.
29
High-achieving students made minimal High-achieving students made minimal progress since 2000progress since 2000
• While the nation’s lowest-achieving youngsters made rapid gains from 2000 to 2007, the performance of top students was languid.
29
30
31
32
Struggling students command attention…Struggling students command attention…
• Teachers are much more likely to indicate that struggling students, not advanced students, are their top priority.
32
33
• Low-achieving students receive dramatically more attention from teachers.
34
but that doesn’t reflect teachers’ own viewsbut that doesn’t reflect teachers’ own views• Teachers believe that all students deserve their fair
share of attention.
34
35
ImplicationsImplications
• Languid growth of high-achieving students is associated with the introduction of NCLB (and, earlier, with state accountability systems).
• Most teachers, at this point in our nation’s history, feel pressure to focus on their lowest-achieving students.
Teachers: does the Fordham study reflect your reality?
1. Share agreements! 1. Share disagreements!
36
Yes, in these ways No, because
The nature of the curriculum
• Mass produced, typically at “grade-level”• “Spirals,” with frequent repetitions• Paced (at best) for the average learner• Requires a high degree of differentiation, flexibility
and accelerative options to work for advanced learners
37
Grouping Definitions: Tracking
• Tracking: sorting students, usually once a year, by ability level and then scheduling all of their classes together:
• Uni-dimensional• Inflexible• Permanent (at least for that year)• Placement criteria may be invalid or irrelevant
38
What would happen if GT’s were challenged appropriately?
39
Learners begin here
Challenging, differentiatedCurriculum for all
Gifted learner’s faster learning pace
Achievement “gap” increases due to appropriate growth for all students
40
41
What Zone Am I In?
• Too Easy• I get it right away…• I already know how…• This is a cinch…• I’m sure to make an
A…• I’m coasting…• I feel relaxed…• I’m bored…• No big effort
necessary…
42
On Target I know some
things…
I have to think…
I have to work…
I have to persist…
I hit some walls…
I’m on my toes…
I have to re-group…
I feel challenged…
Effort leads to success…
Too Hard I don’t know where
to start…
I can’t figure it out…
I’m spinning my wheels…
I’m missing key skills…
I feel frustrated…
I feel angry This makes no
sense…
Effort doesn’t pay off…
THIS is the place to be… THIS is the achievement zone…
The “emerging view” of talent development focuses on:
• Environment• Effort• Coaching• “luck”• The “10,000” hour rule• Could be misconstrued to discount aptitude
43
The four sources of the emerging view on an aptitude continuum
• “Talent is Overrated” (Colvin, 2008) essentially denies the validity of heritable (intellectual) traits focusing on (deliberate) practice, hard work and passion
• “The Talent Code” (Coyle, 2009) reluctantly acknowledges, but heavily discounts, heredity (aptitude), focusing on ”deep practice,” ignition, master coaching, and myelin (!)
• “Mindset” (Dweck, 2006) overtly acknowledges aptitude, but focuses on effort, persistence, and risk-taking (a “growth” mindset)
• “Outliers” (Gladwell, 2008) overtly and consistently acknowledges aptitude,but focuses on environment, practice, mentors, and “luck”
44
Gifts Talents
10,000 hour ruleDaniel Levitin, Michael Howe, Malcolm
Gladwell, and Many, many others
45
46
Developmental Process K-12
Intrapersonal CatalystsMotivation•values•interests•efforts•persistence•work habits
TemperamentPersonality
Physical attributes
Giftedness(potential)•Intellectual
•Creative •Socio-Affective
•Sensori-Motor
Talents(Skills)
Academic•Language•ScienceArts•Visual•Drama•Social action•Chess•Video gamesSportsLeisure
Milieu: physical, cultural, social, familial
Persons: parents, teachers, mentors, peers
Provisions: programs, activities, services
Events: encounters, awards, accidents
Gagne’s Talent Development Model
Another interpretation: “Talent is Overrated” (Colvin, 2008)
“Deliberate practice is difficult. It hurts.”
“Deliberate practice” is focused, intense, specific practice designed to increase performance (+ hard work + passion) = talent
How are gifted students to engage in deliberate practice and hard work, let alone develop passion, without challenging school experiences?
47
Another interpretation: “Mindset” Dweck, 2006)
“Those with the growth mindset found setbacks motivating. They’re a wake-up call.”
How are gifted students to experience setbacks and mistakes without challenging school experiences?
48
Another interpretation: “The Talent Code” (Coyle, 2009)
“Deep practice . . . takes events we would normally strive to avoid-namely, mistakes-and turns them into skills.”
How are gifted students to experience “deep practice” without challenging school experiences?
49
Another interpretation:”Outliers” (Gladwell, 2008)
What does the “Hamburg Crucible” and the 10,000 hour rule imply for gifted students and talent development?
50
The Beatles’ “Hamburg Crucible”
From 1960 - 1962 the Beatles played in Hamburg, Germany:
• Five trips• 270 nights• 8 hours per night, 7 nights a week• 1,200 live performances in 18 months
51
The Beatles’ “Hamburg Crucible”2
Does this mean that any four musicians playing 1,200 live performances, could equal the Beatles’ legacy?
52
What do you think?
The Beatles’ “Hamburg Crucible”3
Lennon: “We had to try even harder, put our heart and souls into it . . . we had to play for 8 hours and so we really had to find a new way of playing.”
53
The Beatles’ “Hamburg Crucible”4
Biographer Philip Norman, “They learned not only stamina. They had to learn an enormous amount of numbers-cover versions of everything you can think of-not just rock and roll, a bit of jazz too. When they came back, they sounded like no one else. It was the making of them.”
54
The Beatles’ “Hamburg Crucible”5
Author Gladwell: “The Beatles are undeniably talented. Lennon and McCartney had a musical gift of the sort that comes along once in a generation.”
Have you ever heard of “Rory and the Hurricanes”? They too were in Hamburg for a long time - but didn’t become the Beatles.
55
56
Developmental Process K-12
Intrapersonal Catalysts
Work ethic
Passion and
Persistence
Degree of Giftedness(potential)Can’t be fulfilled without appropriatecurriculum challenges and GTprogramsand services!
(Skills)Academic•Language•ScienceArts•Visual•Drama•Social action•Chess•Video gamesSportsLeisure
Milieu: physical, cultural, social, familial
Persons: parents, teachers, mentors, peers
Opportunities: programs, activities, services
Events: encounters, awards, accidents
Luck
10,000 hours
GT’s should “succeed” by learning, not by exceeding an arbitrary standard
Gagne’s Formula from 1995 (!)
Aptitude + Catalysts + Practice = Achievement
57
High Aptitude/Catalysts/Practice
Less Aptitude/Catalysts/Practice
Virtually everyone can improve significantly in virtually any endeavor, but that does not mean everyone is gifted. It does mean that all students needan appropriately challenging education to thrive!
Related questions
If you were to practice with the same intensity and for the same duration, could you eventually equal:
• Tiger Woods?• Maya Angelou?• Steven Spielberg?• Could you become an Olympic swimmer?
58
My Conclusions & Recommendations
• Heritable differences are real, and need to be accommodated from grade K - College graduation
• Gifted students are an exceptional population, requiring specialized programs and services if they are to optimize their development
• Appropriate teacher training and classroom differentiation work, but need to be applied to all students
• Teachers need to understand and practice “high-end” differentiation if schools are to work for GTs (our afternoon session)
59
On to the NAGC proposal
This fall, a select committee of GT experts submitted a new, expanded definition of giftedness to the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC) in the hopes of gaining more federal funding and expanded support for gifted children. That (unpublished) definition follows.
60