BOE elementary gifted program increasing to five days per week
The Houston County Board
of Education announced that beginning with the 2013-2014 school year, gifted
education for elementary children will increase from one day to five days a
week. This is a curriculum change from the Resource Pull-out Model to an Advanced
Content Model.
Houston County is adopting the Advanced Content Model for gifted instruction
for students in first through fifth grades. The system already uses this model
for gifted and talented students in grades 6 through 12.
With the Advanced Content Model, all
gifted and talented students will:
· receive
gifted education five days a week,
· remain
at their home school,
· participate
in “specials” (physical education, art and music) every day of the week,
· participate
in culminating activities or special events.
An additional benefit is that more
children will be able to participate in gifted and talented education. Using
this model in elementary school will also create a smoother transition from
fifth to sixth grade.
Houston County is preparing for this
change by providing teacher training and preparing curriculum resources. To be
highly qualified by state standards, teachers of gifted and talented students
are required to earn an additional three classes through a gifted endorsement
course which equates to 170 classroom hours. Approximately 110 Houston County
teachers are currently earning their gifted endorsement.
Director of gifted Jan Jacobsen commented, “We are excited to offer a more
rigorous and engaging curriculum to our gifted and talented children. Next
year, students will spend more time with highly-qualified teachers who will
enrich, enhance and extend the curriculum. Our teachers are currently learning
gifted education best practices in order to meet the needs of our high-end
students.”
Executive director of school operations Cindy Flesher stated, “Our system’s
mission is to produce high-achieving students. We can better achieve this
mission by providing challenging, rigorous instruction through daily gifted
services in content area courses. We look forward to seeing many positive
results from this change in gifted and talented education.”
The Advanced Content Model will replace a resource pull-out model called FOCUS
(Fostering Originality, Creativity, Unique Ideas, and Self-direction). FOCUS
classes meet one day per week for a full day of gifted instruction centered on
interdisciplinary enrichment activities. The primary drawback of this model is
that students receive gifted instruction only one day per week. They also miss
“specials” – physical education, art and music – on the day they attend gifted
education classes. In addition, some students are bused to other schools to
participate in FOCUS, so they sometimes miss special events or culminating activities
at their “home” school.
For more information, visit the Gifted and Talented Education (GTE) page at:
www.hcbe.net/teaching-and-learning/gifted–talented.aspx. Frequently asked
questions and a video about elementary GTE are posted to this webpage along
with other resources. Jacobsen may be reached at 478-988-6200, ext. 10393, or Jan.Jacobsen@hcbe.net.
HHJ News
Before you go...
Thanks for reading The Houston Home Journal — we hope this article added to your day.
For over 150 years, Houston Home Journal has been the newspaper of record for Perry, Warner Robins and Centerville. We're excited to expand our online news coverage, while maintaining our twice-weekly print newspaper.
If you like what you see, please consider becoming a member of The Houston Home Journal. We're all in this together, working for a better Warner Robins, Perry and Centerville, and we appreciate and need your support.
Please join the readers like you who help make community journalism possible by joining The Houston Home Journal. Thank you.
- Brieanna Smith, Houston Home Journal managing editor