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Candler County Gifted Students

Candler County Gifted Students. August 30, 2007. Objective of the Day:. Parents and other stakeholders will understand the Candler County Gifted Program and the contents of its curriculum at each grade level.

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Candler County Gifted Students

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  1. Candler County Gifted Students August 30, 2007

  2. Objective of the Day: Parents and other stakeholders will understand the Candler County Gifted Program and the contents of its curriculum at each grade level.

  3. Mission StatementThe Mission of the Candler County Gifted Education Program is to provide a learning community that values and fosters the talent development process of individuals.

  4. Five Major Goals To provide an education program, resources, and opportunities for individuals to teach gifted students. To provide selected programs and services for gifted learners and their families. To develop, field-test, and disseminate curriculum in relevant content areas at appropriate developmental levels. To conduct research and evaluation for dissemination to relevant audiences and for data-based decision-making. To provide professional development to promote teacher leadership and exemplary practice.

  5. Essential Question • What curriculum and delivery models will be used in the revised gifted education program?

  6. AGENDA • Curriculum • Models being used • Qualifying students • Technology plan

  7. Curriculum- William and Mary • To what degree is it being implemented? • What are the pros and cons? • What are the challenges?

  8. MES/MIS Elementary Curriculum * College of William and Mary Award Winning Gifted Curriculum

  9. Middle School Curriculum * College of William and Mary Award Winning Gifted Curriculum

  10. MHS Gifted and Advanced Placement Curriculum

  11. Beyond Words This literature unit, organized around the study of figurative language, explores the idea that language can change the way we think about the world by creating new images and connections in our minds. The unit uses poetry and picture books as the basis for analyzing different types of figurative language, including simile, metaphor, and personification, and gives opportunities for students to create their own literary images. In addition, the unit introduces students to persuasive writing and to advanced word study, as well as providing an opportunity for students to explore how language changes over time in their families and their culture. 2001 Winner of a National Association for Gifted Children Curriculum Division Award for Outstanding Curriculum Grades 1 - 2

  12. Journeys and Destinations This unit uses an inquiry-based approach to investigate literature in an interdisciplinary, multicultural curriculum. The guiding theme of this unit is the recognition of change as a concept that affects people and their relationships to the world around them. An open-ended approach to the discussion process is emphasized in the search for meaning in literature selections such as Aesop’s fables, The Green Book, Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain, and The Ugly Duckling. Vocabulary development, writing activities, oral communication, research, and reasoning are integrated into the unit. 1998 Winner of a National Association for Gifted Children Curriculum Division Award for Outstanding Curriculum Grades 2 - 3

  13. Literary Reflections

  14. Patterns of Change The concept of cyclic patterns of change was chosen as the unifying theme for this unit. Selected literary works deal with cycles in nature, knowledge, history, and human life. Students are introduced to some of the important approaches and ideas of literary criticism. Students are encouraged to use journals, literature webs, essays, and visual projects to organize and express their ideas about various literary selections. Works studied in the unit include My Daniel by Conrad, “The Helpful Badger” by Lawrence Yep, and poetry by Dickinson, Sandburg, Angelou, and Shakespeare. Grades 4-6

  15. Autobiographies In this unit, students study the concept of change by reading autobiographies of writers and by looking at change in the lives of writers and other artists. As they examine life stories and self-portraits, they study literature and examine works of art from various cultures. In order to gain insight into the development of talent, students are encouraged to explore their own identities as talented learners through discussions, research, oral presentations, and reflective writing. Autobiographical writings from authors including Beverly Cleary, Eloise Greenfield, Isaac Singer, and Lawrence Yep are explored. 1997 Winner of a National Association for Gifted Children Curriculum Division Award for Outstanding Curriculum Grades 5-6

  16. Persuasion This unit highlights elements of persuasion, especially as it relates to oral communication. Students must cite passages from literature to defend their points of view in discussion as well as in written arguments. Literature selections such as "The Valiant," "The Pied Piper of Hamelin," and the Declaration of Independence frame the basis for exploring the reasoning process through analysis and interpretation. Opportunities are presented for impromptu, informative, and persuasive speeches; debate; small and large group discussion; and critical reasoning. Persuasive writing, reasoning, research, and language study are included throughout the unit. Grades 5-7

  17. The 1940s: A Decade of Change This unit looks at the historical events and social issues of the 1940s through the literature of the decade, including novels, short stories, poetry, essays, letters, and newspapers. Numerous opportunities for reading, writing, listening, linguistic competency, and speaking are incorporated into the unit. Each student is required to pose a hypothesis and conduct research concerning some issue of significance that arises from the literature that is studied. Students make both a written and an oral presentation of their research. The unit is rich in materials that highlight the concept of change, including works such as Hersey's Hiroshima, The Diary of Anne Frank, and Spiegelman's Maus II. Grades 6-10

  18. Utopia This unit provides an overview of Utopia as seen by various individuals, groups, and countries and gives students an opportunity to examine why ideas about Utopia undergo change. Through the study of literature, art, music, and other classroom activities, students learn about the search through the ages for Utopia and the struggles to grasp and maintain it on both personal and societal levels. Exploring Utopia through personal dreams and goals allows students to analyze the literature they read more thoroughly throughout this unit. Literature selections include Orwell’s Animal Farm, Lowry’s The Giver, “The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg,” by Twain, and poetry by Cavalli and Enzensberger. Grades 7-9

  19. Threads of Change in 19th Century American Literature This unit uses literature of the 19th century to explore five historical movements: romanticism, transcendentalism, abolitionism, industrialism, and feminism. Each of the five "isms" has its own "literature box" containing appropriate documents to serve as a resource for teams of students. The “isms” are investigated as change agents in American life through the study of key writings of the period. Literary works studied in the unit include Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Melville's Billy Budd, Sailor, Hawthorne's "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment," and selected Poe short stories. Grades 7-11

  20. Gifted MathK-5 • Math Trailblazers - a complete, research-based, K-5 mathematics program integrating math, science, and language arts. • Project M3: Mentoring Mathematical Minds - a new research-based mathematics program for gifted and talented students in grades 3, 4, & 5. Website • www.kendallhunt.com/index.cfm?PID=219&PGI=246

  21. Models Used • What are the models being used at this school?

  22. MES Model DOE Approval Sought for Innovative Model Proposal (see attached) Resource Room Special Class with Identified Gifted and HFL Subject Grouping Within Class

  23. Metter Intermediate DOE Approval Sought for Innovative Model (see attached) State Approved Resource Classroom Model

  24. Metter Middle School State Funded Resource Model in grades 6 & 7 Advanced Content Model Subject Grouping Across Teams/Classes

  25. Metter High School Honors/Advanced Courses Advanced Placement Courses Post Secondary Options

  26. Qualifying Student • We will have 3 rounds of testing this year. • We will use the ITBS Cognitive Ability Test. • Students will meet Georgia qualification criteria.

  27. We are committed to: parent and community involvement to enhance learning.

  28. QUESTIONS?

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