Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Guest Lecture - "How to Articulate Your Gifted Child's Needs and Find a Program to Match" - 4/9/15

Please join us for our quarterly guest lecture this Thursday, April 9th, from 7:00-8:15 p.m. at the Greenfield Elementary Library.

Stephanie Newitt will be our speaker and will address how to identify and define our gifted child's needs and will give advice about what questions we can ask to determine how those needs are being met in academic settings.

With changes in Gifted Education coming to Gilbert Public Schools for the 2015-2016 school year, it is important for parents to know how to seek out learning environments that are well matched to their gifted child.

Hope to see you there!


Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Guest Lecture - Change of Plans for April 9, 2015

We originally planned to hear from Nancy Eisenbise about non-verbal/visual spatial learners but we will have to reschedule it for next school year because the speaker isn't able to attend due to an unexpected conflict.  We look forward to hearing from Nancy at a later date.

We have this lecture offered instead on 4/9/15.






Sunday, November 9, 2014

"Executive Functioning Skills" Lecture - Thursday, 11/13/14


Guest Lecture Series
Executive Functioning Skills
Thursday, November 13, 2014 
from 6:45-8:00 p.m. 
at the Greenfield Elementary School Library

Join us to learn methods for helping our children learn organizational skills.  Discover strategies to help our children tackle projects without so much emotional drama that often comes with giftedness.

Deedee Aboroa is an exemplary ALP teacher at Quartz Hill Elementary, and she has mastered techniques for working with gifted students.  She will share with us her understanding of how effective organizational skills can empower our gifted kids as they develop awareness of their own thinking and their own behaviors.

Open to everyone.

Co-sponsored by Gilbert Supporters of the Gifted and the GPS Gifted Education Parent Council.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Arizona Future Problem Solvers (AZFPS) - Fall Workshop


Seeking a Program to supplement Arizona Career and College Ready Standards implementation? 

Take a look at Arizona Future Problem Solving (AZFPS)!!!

Arizona Future Problem Solving announces training workshops for Teachers, Parents, and AZFPS Coaches on August 16, 2014 from 8:30- 3:30 at the Herberger Young Scholars Academy at ASU West and in Tucson on August 23, 2014 PTBA. . Cost is $65 per person and $15 per person for additional people from one school/district.

The workshop will cover the Creative Problem Solving Process as used in the FPS Program, vocabulary, techniques, and tools for FPSP and how to incorporate the FPS model into an educational program K-12. Arizona College and Career Ready Standards are covered using the Future Problem Solving Program. Attendees will receive Gifted Endorsement and Recertification credit hours.

Contact Jennine Jackson, jenninebj@gmail.com, or 520 440.8865 to register.

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Self-Contained Gifted Classes for 2014-2015 School Year


Applications are now being accepted for the GPS self-contained gifted classes at Towne Meadows Elementary in Gilbert Public Schools. Click HERE to see information on the Gilbert Public Schools website.

Here are some important dates:

Tour:  April 25, 2014 at 1:00-1:45 
Program tours are designed to offer parents and students the opportunity to learn more about the program, visit the school and classrooms, and meet the teachers.  There have already been several tours and the April 25th tour will be the last one offered.         
          *All tours will be held at Towne Meadows Elementary School
          *For further information or to RSVP, please contact Amber MacRobbie at (480) 545-2173
              or amber.macrobbie@gilbertschools.net 
Open House: May 15, 2014 at 6:00-7:00 at Towne Meadows Elementary School

Application: May 8, 2014 is the deadline to apply for the 2014-2015 school year.  If you are interested, an on-line application must be completed in order to be considered for this program. Click here for application  

What is the Self-contained Gifted Program?
The Self-contained Gifted Program provides an all-day differentiated learning experience addressing the individual needs of the highly gifted students. Students will be with other highly gifted peers for all core content areas (math, reading, writing, social studies and science). They will participate in special area instruction and are included in all grade level activities, field trips and lunch. The Self-contained Gifted Program currently has a 4th and 5th grade classroom at Towne Meadows Elementary School.

Qualifications for the Self-contained Gifted Program

Scores (on a state-approved gifted test) of 97+ in two of the three areas: verbal, quantitative, and/or nonverbal area(s), with the third score being 85 or higher or an IQ score of 130+
Highlights of Self-Contained Gifted Program
  • Project-based
  • Problem-based
  • STEM
  • Lego Robotics 
  • Socratic Questioning
  • Social Emotional
  • Cross-curricular
  • Technology based
  • Enrichment and Acceleration
  • Language Arts (instruction is offered using College of William & Mary curriculum from the Center For Gifted Education and Michael Clay Thompson)

Site: Towne Meadows Elementary
          1101 North Recker Road
          Gilbert AZ 85234

          School Website: http://www.gilbertschools.net/Domain/49
          
Teacher Pages:
          5th Grade Self-contained Gifted Teacher, Mr. Brian Cates, Class Webpage:
                  http://www.gilbertschools.net/Domain/4610
          4th Grade Self-contained Gifted Teacher, Mrs. Jennifer Dow, Class Webpage: 
                   http://www.gilbertschools.net/Domain/4608

Grade Levels: Currently, one classroom for 4th grade, one classroom for 5th grade and adding one classroom for 6th grade in 2014-15 school year

Class Size: 28

Transportation: Provided by GPS (may be regional bus stops)


Applications will be considered in the following order:
First consideration will be given to students residing in the Gilbert Public Schools boundaries or who are currently attending a Gilbert Public School.
Following consideration will be given to students who reside outside of the Gilbert Public Schools boundaries or who do not currently attend a Gilbert Public School.
 Applications are available for the 2014-15 school year for grades 4, 5, and 6.
 *Due to the uncertainty of funding, the 4th grade classroom may not be offered for the 2014-15 school year. Services for current 4th and 5th grade students will continue next year.
*Parents of upcoming 4th grade students are urged to complete and submit an application if they would like to be considered should the classroom be funded. Information will be posted on this site as soon as the budget decisions are final. Please continue to check on a regular basis.
If more applications are accepted than seats available, a lottery will occur. The lottery is tentatively scheduled for May 12, 2014. Please view the Self-contained Gifted website for updates.

Out of District Students Only:
Out of district students are welcome to apply for Self-contained Gifted Program if they meet District qualifications, as noted above. In addition to the application, please submit the following information to the Curriculum Department at amber.macrobbie@gilbertschools.net.
Applications will not be accepted until all forms have been submitted.
1. A copy of your child’s most recent intellectual assessment results
      •    Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT) or other state of Arizona approved assessment


             or

      •    IQ tests administered by a licensed Psychologist/Psychiatrist
2. A copy of your child’s most recent standardized test scores (i.e. AIMS, SAT 10, DIBELS)
3. A copy of your child’s most recent report card
4. Twice-exceptional students receiving special education or 504 services must attach
     •    Copy of current IEP and most current special education evaluation report
     •    Copy of 504 plan
 
If you have further questions, please email Amber MacRobbie or call 480-545-2173.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Focus on the Good Stuff

By Stephanie Newitt

This year I went to the Parent Day of the Arizona Association of Gifted & Talented’s (AAGT) educator conference, held in Phoenix.  The concluding keynote speaker was Dr. Dan Peters.  Dr. Peters is a licensed psychologist , co-founder and Executive Director of the Summit Center in Walnut Creek, California.  His topic:  Parenting Your Gifted Child for a Successful Life:  Focus on the Good Stuff.

Dr. Peters first asked us to define our goal as parents.  What is important?  Good grades?  Advanced performance?  The courage to take risks?  Perseverance?  Independence?  The ability to cope with adversity?  Our goal, as parents, will determine how we interact with our children, moment by moment in each day.  What if our parenting goal was that our children would become independent and successful in life?  Would we focus on outcomes or effort?


Dr. Peters suggests that a good parenting goal would be to grow healthy kids who are motivated and engaged in learning and life.  Paths to success will take a different shape for each individual.  How often is this path a straight line from beginning to end?  How often is the path to success full of curves, turns and even “U” turns?  It would behoove us as parents to keep our focus on the forest, not the trees. 



This requires a nurturing parent approach.  Dr. Peters suggests to parents that this includes:
·         Trusting their child’s judgment, based on the child’s developmental age and maturity
·         Respecting their child’s thoughts and feelings
·         Supporting their child’s interests and goals
·         Keeping their children safe and providing boundaries
·         Modeling self-control, sensitivity and values that parents believe to be important
·         Modeling and teaching self-regulation
(More information is in Dr. Peters’ book Raising Creative Kids)

An example of this is to discuss the pros and cons and how each situation would play out.  I thought of a time when I had the opportunity to discuss the pros and cons with my youngest child.  I wish I had done more of this with his older siblings, but I am glad I am not too old to learn.  Our youngest is ten years old.  He qualified for the 2013-2014 GPS gifted self-contained class and we attended the spring open house last May.  However, he was not among the first group pulled from the lottery.  I asked him if a spot opened up before school started, would he want to go.  He told me, “Yes, if it’s before the first day of school.  If it is after the first day of school, no.”  The first day of school came and went without a phone call.  We were disappointed, but not heart-broken nor bitter, as we know that it is our own attitude that helps us make the most of any given situation. 

The third week of school we received the phone call.  A space had opened up in the gifted self-contained class.  Would we be interested?  We were invited to take the time we needed to make this decision.

I sat down with my son and told him the news.  He felt a big weight on his shoulders and felt almost frozen and debilitated.  When I told him we would make the decision together, the posture in his shoulders literally changed and he stood a little straighter.  I arranged for us to visit the self-contained class at the end of the school day so that he could see the class and also where he would line up for the bus and meet the children on his bus route.  Back at home after the tour, I took out a piece of paper and together we brain-stormed the pros and cons of each school setting.   For the self-contained class, we used information from our visit to the classroom and what we had learned at the spring open house.  He asked his older siblings for advice on how they made decisions and how they transitioned to new schools.  We added his siblings’ comments to our lists on the grid.



Once the grid of pros and cons was complete, we transferred everything about the new school and gifted self-contained class to a bubble map.  We had addressed the logical side of things, and now I wanted to address the emotional side of the decision.  I told my son that we can live a balanced life when we make decisions equally with both our heads and our hearts.  On each bubble of the bubble map, I asked my son to attach the emotion that he felt when he read the statement in the bubble.  When he was done, I took a hi-lighter and, as I read the emotional label he had given, I asked him if it was positive, negative or neutral.   Though he ended with 16 positives, four negatives and one neutral, I could tell that my son felt the weight of the four sad emotions very heavily.  He told me he didn’t want to talk about it anymore.  He was emotionally tired. 

I waited a few hours and then encouraged him to come back to the kitchen table.  He was now ready to continue our discussion.  I asked him if the four statements that he had labeled “sad” or “very sad” were permanent situations.  He said three of them weren’t and I asked him why not, how could they change over time?  He shared with me how he thought those situations – and feelings – could be changed as he got to know his new school and new classmates.  We were smiling through this discussion and we re-labeled these three with the pink hi-lighter. 

The fourth and last “very sad” reason was that he would miss his old friends.   It was a very tender moment for both of us as we honestly talked about the sadness felt of leaving his old friends.   I shared with him a story of how I have been able to keep in touch with friends during some of my moves.  From my story, he gleaned an idea.  On his own, he decided that he would write a letter on the computer to each of his friends, telling why he would miss them and expressing the hope that they could still get together.  He would include our home phone number and address and my email address so the friends could contact us.  He felt these letters would help him stay connected.  Once he had this feeling of hope he had a smile on his face and quickly went to the computer to compose his letters.  He printed them and put them in envelopes, ready for the next day of school.

My son wanted to go to his old school one last time so he could give his friends their letters.  He asked his friends not to open the letters until they got home.  This allowed them to have normal play at lunch time.  I had told my son that I would pull him out of school early and we would go out to ice cream.  I wanted him to have something positive to look forward to at the end of his school day.  We went out to ice cream and laughed and talked.  It was a good way to have closure to the decision making process.

The next day I took him to the regional bus stop, a neighborhood park, and he was excited to play with his new friends of the gifted self-contained class.  He has adjusted well to his new class, and three months into his new experience I asked him if he regretted his choice and wanted to move back to his old school.  With a smile on his face he responded with a firm and resolute, “No!”

Since his transfer to his new school, he has been able to see occasionally friends from his old school.  He knows he is still connected, that they are only a phone call away.

We are a prayerful family and during this whole process I invited my son to pray about his decision and I did also.  We sought for feelings of peace.  Together we felt peaceful that transferring to the gifted self-contained class would better meet his needs and, through our discussions and idea sharing, we learned to navigate this journey.  We acknowledged both our head and our heart, and treated our thoughts and feelings honestly.  We strove for balance and peace.

Whatever journey you and your child have ahead of you, this choice, of focusing on the forest, the big picture, helped guide us on our journey.  I want my son to feel engaged in learning and in life, and to learn to be self-motivated, to work hard and be resilient.  Having these open and honest conversations, giving him a safe place to express both his fears and hopes, will set the pattern helping him to know  how to have a life of balance and peace.