Goals
and Objectives of Our Gifted Program:
*
*Definition
of the Gifted Student:
“One
who has superior intellectual development and is capable of high performance.”(
School Board of Broward County)
*
The Sunset
Lakes Gifted Program will
strive to:
·
provide an educational program that
will develop the student’s academic, social, emotional, and leadership
capabilities
·
foster the student’s strengths and
unique special talents as productive life long learners
·
promote experiences
that intensify learning so that students are better prepared to increase
student achievement through the acquisition of enhanced thinking and problem
solving skills
- encourage academic acceleration of able students
through innovative teaching strategies focusing on the infusion of critical
thinking skills
- foster an understanding of self and others in a
multicultural society
- develop technologically based research skills that
will further enhance creative thinking skills
In Mrs. Raude’s Class the
Following
Learning Strategies Will Be Focused
Upon:
·
Creative Thinking
Skills
·
Critical Thinking
Skills
·
Student Planning
Strategies
·
Student Self
Evaluation Skills
·
Academic Achievement
·
Student Independence
·
Social
Responsibility and Service
Common Myths About
Gifted Students
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- Gifted
students are a homogeneous group, all high achievers.
- Gifted
students do not need help. If they are really gifted, they can manage on
their own.
- Gifted
students have fewer problems than others because their intelligence and
abilities somehow exempt them from the hassles of daily life.
- The
future of a gifted student is assured: a world of opportunities lies
before the student.
- Gifted
students are self-directed; they know where they are heading.
- The
social and emotional development of the gifted student is at the same
level as his or her intellectual development.
- Gifted
students are nerds and social isolates.
- The
primary value of the gifted student lies in his or her brain power.
- The
gifted student's family always prizes his or her abilities.
- Gifted
students need to serve as examples to others and they should always
assume extra responsibility.
- Gifted
students make everyone else smarter.
- Gifted
students can accomplish anything they put their minds to. All they have
to do is apply themselves.
- Gifted
students are naturally creative and do not need encouragement.
- Gifted children are easy to raise and a welcome addition
to any classroom.
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Truths About Gifted
Students
|
- Gifted
students are often perfectionistic and idealistic. They may equate
achievement and grades with self-esteem and self-worth, which sometimes
leads to fear of failure and interferes with achievement.
- Gifted
students may experience heightened sensitivity to their own expectations
and those of others, resulting in guilt over achievements or grades
perceived to be low.
- Gifted
students are asynchronous. Their chronological age, social, physical,
emotional, and intellectual development may all be at different levels.
For example, a 5-year-old may be able to read and comprehend a
third-grade book but may not be able to write legibly.
- Some
gifted children are "mappers" (sequential learners), while
others are "leapers" (spatial learners). Leapers may not know
how they got a "right answer." Mappers may get lost in the
steps leading to the right answer.
- Gifted
students may be so far ahead of their chronological age mates that they
know more than half the curriculum before the school year begins! Their
boredom can result in low achievement and grades.
- Gifted
children are problem solvers. They benefit from working on open-ended,
interdisciplinary problems; for example, how to solve a shortage of
community resources. Gifted students often refuse to work for grades
alone.
- Gifted
students often think abstractly and with such complexity that they may
need help with concrete study- and test-taking skills. They may not be
able to select one answer in a multiple choice question because they see
how all the answers might be correct.
- Gifted
students who do well in school may define success as getting an
"A" and failure as any grade less than an "A." By
early adolescence they may be unwilling to try anything where they are
not certain of guaranteed success.
Adapted from College Planning for Gifted Students, 2nd edition,
by Sandra Berger.
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