Is It a Cheetah? By Stephanie S. Tolan © 1996 Stephanie S. Tolan It's a tough time to raise, teach or be a highly gifted child. As the term "gifted" and the unusual intellectual capacity to which that term refers become more and more politically incorrect, the educational establishment changes terminology and focus. Giftedness, a global, integrative mental capacity, may be dismissed, replaced by fragmented "talents" which seem less threatening and theoretically easier for schools to deal with. Instead of an internal developmental reality that affects every aspect of a child's life, "intellectual talent" is more and more perceived as synonymous with (and limited to) academic achievement. The child who does well in school, gets good grades, wins awards, and "performs" beyond the norms for his or her age, is considered talented. The child who does not, no matter what his innate intellectual capacities or developmental level, is less and less likely to be identified, less and less likely to be served. A cheetah metaphor can help us see the problem with achievement-oriented thinking. The cheetah is the fastest animal on earth. When we think of cheetahs we are likely to think first of their speed. It's flashy. It is impressive. It's unique. And it makes identification incredibly easy. Since cheetahs are the only animals that can run 70 mph, if you clock an animal running 70 mph, IT'S A CHEETAH! But cheetahs are not always running. In fact, they are able to maintain top speed only for a limited time, after which they need a considerable period of rest. It's not difficult to identify a cheetah when it isn't running, provided we know its other characteristics. It is gold with black spots, like a leopard, but it also has unique black "tear marks" beneath its eyes. Its head is small, its body lean, its legs unusually long -- all bodily characteristics critical to a runner. And the cheetah is the only member of the cat family that has non-retractable claws. Other cats retract their claws to keep them sharp, like carving knives kept in a sheath --the cheetah's claws are designed not for cutting but for traction. This is an animal biologically designed to run. Its chief food is the antelope, itself a prodigious runner. The antelope is not large or heavy, so the cheetah does not need strength and bulk to overpower it. Only speed. On the open plains of its natural habitat the cheetah is capable of catching an antelope simply by running it down. While body design in nature is utilitarian, it also creates a powerful internal drive. The cheetah needs to run! Despite design and need however, certain conditions are necessary if it is to attain its famous 70 mph top speed. It must be fully grown. It must be healthy, fit and rested. It must have plenty of room to run. Besides that, it is best motivated to run all out when it is hungry and there are antelope to chase. If a cheetah is confined to a 10 X 12 foot cage, though it may pace or fling itself against the bars in restless frustration, it won't run 70 mph. IS IT STILL A CHEETAH? If a cheetah has only 20 mph rabbits to chase for food, it won't run 70 mph while hunting. If it did, it would flash past its prey and go hungry! Though it might well run on its own for exercise, recreation, fulfillment of its internal drive, when given only rabbits to eat the hunting cheetah will run only fast enough to catch a rabbit. IS IT STILL A CHEETAH? If a cheetah is fed Zoo Chow it may not run at all. IS IT STILL A CHEETAH? If a cheetah is sick or if its legs have been broken, it won't even walk. IS IT STILL A CHEETAH? And finally, if the cheetah is only six weeks old, it can't yet run 70 mph. IS IT, THEN, ONLY A *POTENTIAL* CHEETAH? A school system that defines giftedness (or talent) as behavior, achievement and performance is as compromised in its ability to recognize its highly gifted students and to give them what they need as a zoo would be to recognize and provide for its cheetahs if it looked only for speed. When a cheetah does run 70 mph it isn't a particularly "achieving" cheetah. Though it is doing what no other cat can do, it is behaving normally for a cheetah. To lions, tigers, leopards -- to any of the other big cats -the cheetah's biological attributes would seem to be deformities. Far from the "best cat," the cheetah would seem to be barely a cat at all. It is not heavy enough to bring down a wildebeest; its non-retractable claws cannot be kept sharp enough to tear the wildebeest's thick hide. Given the cheetah's tendency to activity, cats who spend most of their time sleeping in the sun might well label the cheetah hyperactive. Like cheetahs, highly gifted children can be easy to identify. If a child teaches herself Greek at age five, reads at the eighth grade level at age six or does algebra in second grade we can safely assume that child is a highly gifted child. Though the world may see these activities as "achievements," she is not an "achieving" child so much as a child who is operating normally according to her own biological design, her innate mental capacity. Such a child has clearly been given room to "run" and something to run for. She is healthy and fit and has not had her capacities crippled. It doesn't take great knowledge about the characteristics of highly gifted children to recognize this child. However, schools are to extraordinarily intelligent children what zoos are to cheetahs. Many schools provide a 10 x 12 foot cage, giving the unusual mind no room to get up to speed. Many highly gifted children sit in the classroom the way big cats sit in their cages, dull-eyed and silent. Some, unable to resist the urge from inside even though they can't exercise it, pace the bars, snarl and lash out at their keepers, or throw themselves against the bars until they do themselves damage. Even open and enlightened schools are likely to create an environment that, like the cheetah enclosures in enlightened zoos, allow some moderate running, but no room for the growing cheetah to develop the necessary muscles and stamina to become a 70 mph runner. Children in cages or enclosures, no matter how bright, are unlikely to appear highly gifted; kept from exercising their minds for too long, these children may never be able to reach the level of mental functioning they were designed for. A zoo, however much room it provides for its cheetahs, does not feed them antelope, challenging them either to run full out or go hungry. Schools similarly provide too little challenge for the development of extraordinary minds. Even a gifted program may provide only the intellectual equivalent of 20 mph rabbits (while sometimes labeling children suspected of extreme intelligence "underachievers" for NOT putting on top speed to catch those rabbits!) Without special programming, schools provide the academic equivalent of Zoo Chow, food that requires no effort whatsoever. Some children refuse to take in such uninteresting, dead nourishment at all. To develop not just the physical ability but also the strategy to catch antelope in the wild, a cheetah must have antelopes to chase, room to chase them and a cheetah role model to show them how to do it. Without instruction and practice they are unlikely to be able to learn essential survival skills. A recent nature documentary about cheetahs in lion country showed a curious fact of life in the wild. Lions kill cheetah cubs. They don't eat them, they just kill them. In fact, they appear to work rather hard to find them in order to kill them (though cheetahs can't possibly threaten the continued survival of lions). Is this maliciousness? Recreation? No one knows. We only know that lions do it. Cheetah mothers must hide their dens and go to great efforts to protect their cubs, coming and going from the den under deep cover or only in the dead of night or when lions are far away. Highly gifted children and their families often feel like cheetahs in lion country. In some schools brilliant children are asked to do what they were never designed to do (like cheetahs asked to tear open a wildebeest hide with their claws -- after all, the lions can do it!) while the attributes that are a natural aspect of unusual mental capacity -- intensity, passion, high energy, independence, moral reasoning, curiosity, humor, unusual interests and insistence on truth and accuracy -- are considered problems that need fixing. Brilliant children may feel surrounded by lions who make fun of or shun them for their differences, who may even break their legs or drug them to keep them moving more slowly, in time with the lions' pace. Is it any wonder they would try to escape; would put on a lion suit to keep from being noticed; would fight back? This metaphor, like any metaphor, eventually breaks down. Highly gifted children don't have body markings and non-retractable claws by which to be identified when not performing. Furthermore, the cheetah's ability to run 70 mph is a single trait readily measured. Highly gifted children are very different from each other so there is no single ability to look for even when they are performing; besides that, a child's greatest gifts could be outside the academic world's definition of achievement and so go unrecognized altogether. While this truth can save some children from being wantonly killed by marauding lions, it also keeps them from being recognized for what they are -- children with deep and powerful innate differences as all-encompassing as the differences between cheetahs and other big cats. That they may not be instantly recognizable does not mean that there is no means of identifying them. It means that more time and effort are required to do it. Educators can learn the attributes of unusual intelligence and observe closely enough to see those attributes in individual children. They can recognize not only that highly gifted children can do many things other children cannot, but that there are tasks other children can do that the highly gifted cannot. Every organism has an internal drive to fulfill its biological design. The same is true for unusually bright children. From time to time the bars need be removed, the enclosures broadened. Zoo Chow, easy and cheap as it is, must give way, at least some of the time, to lively, challenging mental prey. More than this, schools need to believe that it is important to make the effort, that these children not only have the needs of all other children to be protected and properly cared for, but that they have as much RIGHT as others to have their needs met. Biodiversity is a fundamental principle of life on our planet. It allows life to adapt to change. In our culture highly gifted children, like cheetahs, are endangered. Like cheetahs, they are here for a reason; they fill a particular niche in the design of life. Zoos, whatever their limitations, may be critical to the continued survival of cheetahs; many are doing their best to offer their captives what they will need eventually to survive in the wild. Schools can do the same for their highly gifted children. Unless we make a commitment to saving these children, we will continue to lose them and whatever unique benefit their existence might provide for the human species of which they are an essential part. Note: please disseminate this article widely if you find it useful. Proper attribution would be appreciated, however -- Stephanie S. Tolan Cheetah graphics ©1997 Diane Scanlon ldent ification Procedures for Giftenalented Education Review of Local Dlefinition and GT Characteristics I NOMINATION Test S c o r e N o m i n a t i o n ... /or Classroom Teachers, Special Populations Teachers I Parent Permission t o screen SCREENING I Multiple criteria (at lead 3) gathered from quantitative, and qualitative sources. SELECTION Identification C o m m i t t e e / II I placement Not Accepted a t this t i m e I Parent permission t o pa~ticipate Reassessment Parents m a y say n o I PATION \ [Com-rittee decision; parents informed priorto final decision) I PROGRAM SERVICE Adam dfnxm J. Martin, 1989 Procedimientos De la Identificación Para la educación talentosa/dotada Desarrollo de personal para el personal de la escuela en la definición y características NOMBRAMIENTO Nombramiento De Parent/Community y/o Nombramiento Del Personal De la Escuela y/o Pruebe El Nombramiento De la Cuenta Permiso del padre de defender INVESTIGACIÓN Por lo menos cinco criterios recolectaron por el comité. Un cierto objetivo, algo subjetivo. Si sea de varias fuentes. SELECCIÓN El comité de la identificación hace Deicisions para la colocación (matriz, perfil, cuentas minimas, los etc.) No aceptado en este tiempo Aceptado al programa Permiso del padre de participar Los padres pueden decir no PARTICIPACIÓN Salida (decisión del comité; los padres informaron antes de la decisión final) Furlough Continúe NOMINATION Students may be nominated at any time during the school year or through the nomination process as defined by the district in the local policy (EHBBLOCAL). Students may be nominated by a classroom teacher, a teacher from a special population (Special Education, Bilingual/ESL, Migrant, Title I, etc.), an administrator, a student, a parent, or any community member. See Texas State Plan for the Education of Gifted/Talented Students, Section 1.3A and 1.6A. SCREENING Students are screened once during the school year or as defined by the district in the local policy (EHBB-LOCAL). See Texas State Plan for the Education of Gifted/Talented Students, 1.3A, 1.5.1A, 1.5.2A, 1.5.3A, 1.5.4A, 1.5.5A, and 1.6A. SAMPLE NEWSPAPER AD ______________________ Independent School District Offers Gifted Education _______________________ISD conducts a program for students with above average potential in academic and creative-productive thinking skills areas in grades K-12. This gifted education program is designed to challenge students to accelerate above and beyond the regular school curriculum. (Insert specific information concerning the program here) Anyone wishing to nominate a student believed to be an intellectually or creatively gifted learner is encouraged to come by the appropriate campus office and complete the necessary forms. Those students nominated will go through a screening procedure that requires special testing. At the time of nomination, parents will be requested to grant permission for this testing. SAMPLE NEWSPAPER AD IN SPANISH ISD Ofrece Educación para Los Estudiantes Excepcionales ISD va a llevar acabo un programa para los estudiantes con potencial mas allá de lo normal en lo académico y dotados, es disenado para que los estudiantes puedan acelerar su aprendizaje y lograr mas de o requerido por el programa regular de la escuela. Cualquier persona que quiere nombrar a un estudiante que ellos crean ser excepcional intelectualmente o creativamente pueden llegar a la oficina de la escuela para complete los formularios necesarios. Los estudiantes nombrados van a pasar por un procedimiento que incluye exámenes especiales. Al ser nombrado el permiso do los padres es requerido para que el estudiante pueda tomar estos exámenes. REQUEST FOR NOMINATIONS Dear Parent: Our school district will be conducting a program for students with potential in academic and creative-productive thinking skills areas in grades _________ during the ___________ school year. Any ________ grader whom you believe is an intellectually gifted learner is eligible to be nominated. Those nominated will go through a screening procedure. Because of state guidelines, not all nominated students will meet admission requirements. If you wish to nominate your child or another _______ grader, please do so by going to the principal’s office and completing the proper form. If there is a transportation problem, please call the school office. Any nominations should be made before __________________________. Finally, please be aware that if you or a teacher nominates your child, special testing will be needed in order to complete the identification process. Sincerely, Principal REQUEST FOR NOMINATIONS IN SPANISH El Distrito Escolar Independiente de ________________ Estimados Padres: El Distrito Escolar Independiente de __________ reconoce a los estudiantes excepcionales con múltiple potencial intelectual. Estos estudiantes pueden exhibir habilidades en las áreas de percepción, tal como la aptitud académica, la creatividad y la productividad mental. Estos estudiantes han sido definidos como aquellos que requieren servicios y actividades fuera de las que son comúnmente proveídas en la clase para que puedan desarrollar sus habilidades y su potencial múltiple. El programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos del Distrito Escolar Independiente de __________ es un programa educacional diseñado para satisfacer las necesidades educacionales de estos estudiantes. Si usted cree que su hijo puede calificar o si usted desea una copia de las reglas o normas aprobadas por el consejo del Distrito Escolar Independiente de ___________ sobre la educación de los estudiantes excepcionales y talentosos, por favor complete el siguiente formulario y devuélvalo a ________________, Coordinador del Programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos del Distrito Escolar Independiente de ____________ dentro las siguientes dos semanas. Nombre del alumno/a:____________________________________________________________________ Nombre del padre o madre:________________________________________________________________ Domicilio:_____________________________________________________________________ ________ Teléfono:______________________________________________________________________ ________ Nombre del maestro/a:____________________________________________________________________ Seeking Community Nominations Samples Radio Spot or PSA for Community /Service Channel Do you know a child in our community who does things faster, sooner, and with quick understanding? ______ Independent School District is looking for students who learn rapidly, get along well with older children or adults, are highly creative, and can work independently on in-dept projects. If you would like to nominate a child for the Gifted/Talented Program, please call the child’s school for a nomination form or pick one up at the school. The deadline is ___________________. Testing of those nominated will continue through May. Newspaper Article ______ Independent School District Seeks Nominations ______ ISD is seeking students in our district who do things faster, sooner, and with better understanding than other students their age. Nominations for the Gifted/Talented Program are being accepted through __________________________. Forms must be completed on each student nominated and may be obtained from the school office. The Gifted/Talented Program selects approximately the top 5% of the students who require more challenging learning experiences and can tackle more difficult tasks. The Gifted/Talented Program teachers are specially trained to meet the needs of these students. Flyer Distributed to Youth Leaders and Community Leaders Looking for students who: • do things faster, sooner and with quick understanding • learn rapidly • get along well with older children and adults • are highly creative • can work independently I ____________________________ of _____________________________ would like to (Name) (Organization) nominate __________________________ for the Gifted/Talented (Student’s name) Program because he/she has the above traits. If you have any questions, please call me at ____________________________. Flyer in Spanish Buscar a estudiantes que: • hace las cosas más rápidas, más pronto y con lear comprensivo rápidas, más pronto y con lear • comprensivo rápido • se llevars rápidamente bien con niños y adultos • más viejos son sumamente creador puede • trabajar independientemente. Yo _____________________________ de ________________________ apreciaria (Donomine) (Organización el Nombre) nombrar _______________________________ parea el Programa Académico Avanzado (Nombre de Estudiante) de Servicios proque él/ella tiene el encima de rasgos. Si usted tiene cualquiera pregunta, por favor me llama en _____________________________. Nominations Open for Gifted/Talented Program ___________________ Independent School District offers a special program for students with above average potential in academic and creative-productive thinking skills areas in grades K-12. This gifted education program is designed to challenge students to accelerate above and beyond the regular school curriculum. The following characteristics are often found in students who benefit from gifted program services. 1. Advanced, adult-like humor 2. Independence, self-confidence, internal control 3. Logical thinking 4. Tolerance for ambiguity 5. Perceptiveness and intuitiveness 6. Precocious language and thought 7. High moral thinking and empathy 8. confident, risk-takers 9. Alone time 10. Learning styles match the affective characteristics 11. Reflectiveness versus impulsiveness 12. Creativity consciousness 13. Early writing, math, music and/or art 14. Idealism and reflectiveness 15. Humor, playfulness 16. Attraction to the novel, complex, and mysterious 17. Motivation, persistence, and advanced interests 18. Artistic and aesthetic interests 19. Curiosity 20. Early reading and advanced comprehension 21. High energy, adventurousness Anyone wishing to nominate a student believed to be an intellectually or creatively gifted learner is encouraged to come by the appropriate campus office and complete the necessary forms. Those students nominated will go through a screening procedure, which requires special testing. Nominations for the G/T program are open until ___________________. NOMINATION NOMINATION Student’s Name: _____________________________________ Student’s Name: _____________________________________ Grade: ____________ Grade: ____________ Address: ________________________________________ Address: ________________________________________ ________________________________________ ________________________________________ ________________________________________ ________________________________________ School: ____________________________________________ School: ____________________________________________ Homeroom Teacher: __________________________________ Homeroom Teacher: __________________________________ Signature of Person submitting the nomination Signature of Person submitting the nomination Nombramiento para El Programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales Nombramiento para El Programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales El nombre del nino: _________________________________ El nombre del nino: _________________________________ Sexo : ______________ Sexo : ______________ El Grado: ___________ El Grado: ___________ Fecha de nacimiento: _______________________________ Fecha de nacimiento: _______________________________ Los Nombres de los Padres: Los Nombres de los Padres: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Su dirección: Su dirección: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Numero de teléfono de la casa: ________________________ Numero de teléfono de la casa: ________________________ Numero de teléfono del trabajo: ________________________ Numero de teléfono del trabajo: ________________________ La maestra de la aula de clase: La maestra de la aula de clase: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ La firma de la persona nombrando el estudiante: La firma de la persona nombrando el estudiante: _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Fecha del nombramiento: ____________________________ Fecha del nombramiento: ____________________________ Peer Perception Inventory Teacher’s Name ______________________________________________ Think about the other students in your class. Who would you go ask if. . . 1. You needed someone who has a good imagination and thinks of the most unusual, different, or interesting idea? 2. You needed help with a computer? 3. You needed the words to a popular song? 4. You needed someone who is really good at making things up, like dances, games, music, and pictures? 5. You needed to know what happened on the last three episodes of a TV show? 6. You needed help with your math? 7. You needed help with your reading? 8. You needed help with your science? 9. You needed someone who could help you win an argument with someone else? 10. You needed the secrets to winning a video game? 11. You needed something fixed? 12. You needed a personal problem explained to the teacher? 13. You wanted to hear a good story? 14. You wanted someone to make you laugh? 15. You needed someone who asks lots of interesting questions when the class is talking about something? 16. You needed someone who treats his or her family AND school friends with respect? 17. You needed someone who gets along well with all different kinds of kids? Peer Perception Inventory Elementary 1. Pretend you and your friends found a puppy on the playground. a. Who would be the most likely to think up lots of names for the puppy? ____________________________________________________________________________ b. Who would be the one who would think of names no one else would think of? ____________________________________________________________________________ c. Who would choose the name you and your friends would probably decide to use? ____________________________________________________________________________ d. Who would be most likely to write a fascinating story about the puppy? ____________________________________________________________________________ e. If you friends wanted to teacher the puppy a trick, who would think up different ways to teach the trick? __________________________________________________________________________ f. If you wanted to design a collar for the puppy, who would come up with the most designs? ____________________________________________________________________________ g. If you wanted to bring the puppy to school, who would be the one who would be able to give the teacher the most reasons? ___________________________________________________________________________ 2. Who seems to know most of the right answers to questions which are asked by your teacher? ____________________________________________________________________________ 3. Who knows a lot about many things (not just school things)? ____________________________________________________________________________ 4. Who likes to study the “hard” or difficult things just because they like to learn? ____________________________________________________________________________ 5. Who often knows about things that are happening in the news? ____________________________________________________________________________ 6. Who asks a lot of questions in class and wants to know what causes things and the reasons for things? ____________________________________________________________________________ INSTRUMENTS USED IN IDENTIFYING GIFTED LEARNERS TESTS OF ABILITY • • • Naglieri Nonverbal Abilities Test – Grades K-12 Screening Assessment for Gifted Elementary and Middle School Students (SAGES-2) – Grades K-8 CogAT – Grades 9-12 TESTS OF CREATIVITY • Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (Verbal & Figural) – Grades K-12 CHECKLISTS • • Scales for the Identification of Gifted Students School Version Scales for the Identification of Gifted Students Home Version STUDENT PRODUCTION • Planned experiences SCREENING VISUALLY IMPAIRED STUDENTS Ability Index Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children 4th Edition – 3 Verbal Comprehension sections only. Slosson Oral Intelligence Test Achievement Diagnostic Achievement Battery Listening Comprehension subtests Creativity Slocumb-Payne Student Interview Rating Scales Scales for Identification of Gifted Students – Home Version Slocumb-Payne Teacher Perception Inventory – completed by classroom and VI teachers __________________ ISD GIFTED/TALENTED SELECTION PROFILE STUDENT NAME______________________________STUDENT ID_________________ GRADE____BIRTHDAY_______________AGE_____ETHNICITY: 1 2 3 4 5 (circle one) Economically Disadvantaged: Yes No (circle one) The definition of gifted and talented students means “a child or youth who performs at or shows the potential for performing at a remarkably high level of accomplishment when compared to others of the same age, experience, or environment and who: (1) exhibits high performance capability in an intellectual, creative, or artistic area; (2) possesses an unusual capacity for leadership; or (3) excels in a specific academic field.” Directions: Plot an individual’s scores in the appropriate column. Student Production SIGS Home Version/SIGS School Version/SAGES-2 Torrance/CogAT NNAT 1. Student Production (K-8) must score 3 1 55 70 55 70 1 10 20 30 85 85 40 2 100 100 50 60 115 115 70 80 3 120 120 90 130 140+ 130 140+ 95 99+ 2. SIGS School Version – 120 in any area 3. SIGS Home Version – 120 in any area 4. Torrance– 127 ± 8 (119 or above) 5. NNAT: Level ____ - 90% or above (Grades K-8) 6. SAGES-2 (Grades K-8) M/S R/SS Reas. 120 or above on any test 7. CogAT (Grades 9-12) – Verbal Score or Average of Quantitative and Non Verbal Score (120 or above) District Criteria: Grades K-8 – 4 of 6 at or above district line. Grades 9-12 – 3 of 5 at or above district line. The decision to place or defer placement is based on perceived educational needs. The committee has reached a placement decision based on the following: COMMITTEE DECISION □ Accepted □ Did not qualify □ Accepted on probation COMMITTEE MEMBERS: __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________ Date of Meeting Students Identified for G/T Services Ethnicity Name Anglo Af. Amer. Hisp. SES Other Low SES Gender M F Special Pop. SPED Other SUMMARY INFORMATION REPORT Campus: ____________________________________ Grade: ______________ # Tested: __________ % Identified __________ # Identified: ____________ % By Ethnicity: AA _______ H _______ W ________ Other _________ % of Low SES _____________ Date: ____________________ Name Counselor/Coordinator: _______________________ Grade Ethnicity Low SES Identified Not Identified Parent Permission Form Student’s Name: _________________________________________________________ Address: ________________________________________________________________ Home phone: ______________________ Work phone: __________________________ Grade: __________ Teacher: ________________________________________ Your child has met the qualifications for placement in the Gifted/Talented program. Before we can officially offer your child these services, we must have your written approval for your child to participate. Please complete this form and return it to school as soon as possible. Please check the appropriate space: _____ YES, we give permission for our son/daughter to be placed in the Gifted/Talented Program. _____ NO, we do not want our son/daughter to participate in the Gifted/Talented Program. Parent/Guardian Signature:_________________________________________________ Date: ________________________ PARENT PERMISSION FORM – SPANISH Estimado(a) Sr(a). ____________________________ Después de haber revisado cuidadosamente cada criterio para identificar a los estudiantes para el programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos, es la decisión de este comité del Distrito Escolar Independiente de ___________________ que es en el mejor interés de ___________________________ de recibir los servicios de este programa. Por favor, completa la pagina siguiente para dar permiso para que___________________ reciba los servicios del programa de Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos y devuélvala a la escuela antes del ______________________________________. Miembros del comité Director ____________________________________ Consejero ____________________________________ Coordinador del programa ____________________________________ Maestro(a) ____________________________________ Maestro(a) ____________________________________ Maestro(a) ____________________________________ Yo doy permiso para que mi hijo(a) reciba los servicios del programa de los Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos. _____________________________________ _______________________ el nombre del estudiante el grado _____________________________________ ________________________ la firma del padre la fecha Deferment Notification To Parent To: Parents/Guardian of _________________________________________________ Date: ________________________________ ________________________________ has been highly complimented by being nominated for the Gifted/Talented Program. However, he/she has not met the criteria for admittance to the program at this time. The state guidelines do not allow all students to participate. This program is but one of many enriching experiences provided by our district. Your child will be challenged to the maximum of his/her potential in other programs and activities. If you have any questions or concerns related to the assessment, please contact me. Sincerely, Principal’s Signature ________________________ Date DEFERMENT NOTIFICATION - SPANISH Estimado(a) Sr.(a)_______________ Después de haber revisado cuidadosamente cada criterio usado para identificar a __________________ y los subsiguientes resultados, es la decisión de este comité del programa de los Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos del Distrito Escolar Independiente de _____________ que no es en el mejor interés de _____________________ a este momento recibir los servicios de este programa. Es la decisión final de este comité que ___________________________ no recibirá los servicios del programa de los Estudiantes Excepcionales y Talentosos del Distrito Escolar Independiente de ____________ para el año ____________________. Miembros del comité Director ____________________________________ Consejero ___________________________________ Coordinador del Programa __________________________________ Maestro(a) ________________________________________ Maestro(a) ________________________________________ Maestro(a) ________________________________________ Furlough Policy A student, parent, teacher, counselor, or administrator may request a furlough from the program for a stated length of time. Reasons for furlough could include, but not be limited to the following.** • Increased demand upon time caused by scheduling or extra-curricular activities • Emotional problems stemming from self, school, or home • Request by parents, teacher, counselor, or administrator for exit • Inability to participate because of scheduling conflicts **NOTE: Furlough should NOT be used as a disciplinary tool and should be granted without adding undue pressure or prejudice to the student. The decision for furlough shall be made by a committee comprised of the student, when appropriate*, parent(s)/guardian(s), student’s teacher(s), and the principal and/or counselor. *Age and maturity of student shall determine participation. Re-Entry Policy If the student is granted a furlough, the date of re-entry to the program must be stated. If the student elects to exit the program at the end of the furlough, Exit Policy procedures should be followed. Re-entry will then be accomplished through the Identification Process. ******************** The Furlough and Re-Entry Form shall be completed at the committee meeting and filed with the student’s gifted and talented records. Furlough and Re-entry Form Date:___________________ Requested by: ____________________________________________________________ Requested for (student’s name): _____________________________________________ Date: _______________________ Length of time requested: ______________________ Reason(s) for request: _____________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Committee Decision _____ Furlough granted _____ Furlough denied Date: ________________________ Length of time granted: _______________________ Comments: ______________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Committee Members __________________________________________ Student __________________________________________ Parent(s) ___________________________________________ Teacher __________________________________________ Principal/Counselor __________________________________________ Other (specify) TRANSFER POLICY Inter-District Transfers When a student identified as gifted by a previous school district transfers into the district, the student’s records shall be reviewed by the screening or selection committee to determine if placement in the district’s program services for gifted and talented students is appropriate. The committee shall make its determination within 30 days of the student’s enrollment in the district and shall base its decision on the transferred records, observation reports of district teachers who instruct the student, and/or student and parent/guardian conferences. Intra-District Transfers Students who transfer to another school in the district are to be enrolled in the receiving school’s gifted services after confirming identification with the District’s G/T Program Coordinator. Students Reentering the District Students who move from the district, do not participate in gifted services in the new school, then return to the district and wish to reenter gifted services may do so if the student has been out of the district no more than 12 calendar months. A move of a longer period of time will necessitate the student’s being screened as is (s)he were a new student. Exit Request Date: _______________ Student name: ____________________________________________________________ School: __________________________________Grade level:_____________________ Person initiating request: ___________________________________________________ Signature: _______________________________________________________________ Purpose for exit request: ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Exit provisions: Student performance shall be monitored and evaluated. A student may be considered for EXIT if it is in his/her best interest and/or if program services do not seem to be the most appropriate educational placement for the student. The petition for exit may be initiated by: Request from the parent to exit the student, Request from a teacher, counselor, or administrator to exit the student, or Request of the student to exit program services. Exit from services will be accomplished by petitioning the selection committee for removal. A conference shall be held within ten (10) working days of the request to exit. This conference should include the student, parent(s)/guardian(s), building administrator, G/T teacher(s), classroom teacher(s), and/or counselor. • • If a teacher initiates the petition, that teacher shall provide documentation to support his/her contention for removal from services. If a student or parent(s) requests removal, the district will honor that request after a conference with the selection committee or its representative. NOTE: Should a student exit from program services, the process shall be accomplished in such a manner to avoid adding undue pressure to the student or parent(s)/guardian(s) and without prejudice. It shall be recognized that the purpose of the G/T services is to best serve the academic and affective needs of the child. Exit Committee Report Date: _______________ Student name: __________________________ Campus: _________________________ Grade level: ____ Person initiating request: ____________________________________ Signature: ___________________________ ___________________________________ Committee Decision _____ Exit granted _____ Exit denied Rationale for exit or denial: _________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Committee Members __________________________________ Student _________________________________ Parent(s) __________________________________ Teacher(s) ________________________________ Principal/Counselor __________________________________ Other (specify) ________________________________ Other (specify)