Rti Gifted Talented

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The key takeaways are that RtI is a framework that can meet the needs of all students, including gifted students, through multi-tiered systems of support and interventions tailored to individual needs. Gifted students also have learning and behavior needs that RtI aims to address.

RtI is a framework that provides high-quality instruction and interventions matched to student needs through frequent progress monitoring to make decisions about instructional changes or goals. For gifted students, RtI can be used to identify specific interventions to support students who need extra challenges or more specialized opportunities.

For Tier 1, differentiated instruction and flexible pacing are mentioned. For Tier 2, strategies include cluster grouping, curriculum compacting, independent study, subject or grade acceleration.

ResponsetoIntervention(RtI)

and
GiftedandTalentedEducation(GT)
All educators for all students

Fall2009
Contributors
Michael Hall Curriculum and Instruction Unit Manager Office of Public Instruction
Deb Poole Gifted and Talented Instructional Coordinator Office of Public Instruction
Mary Rearden, Great Falls Public Schools
Ruth Carlstrom Great Falls Public Schools, retired
Stephanie Smith, Answers Plus Consulting
Joette Speaks, Colstrip Public Schools

Fall2009
1

INTRODUCTION

What is RtI and how does it help students who are Gifted or Talented?
How do we make sure we mean all when we say all?

When the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act was reauthorized in 2004, a
powerful new element was added to the law stressing prevention-focused instructional practices to be
used in the regular classroom. Awareness of these new requirements is growing, but many
educators are still asking, What services should be made available? Which students should get
them? How do we organize this process and make informed decisions?
Some educators are also asking, How does this apply to students who may already know most of
what I am planning to teach them or whose ability to learn is so fast that they quickly learn the
material? What about students who may have disabilities which may interfere with learning but who
still display traits of giftedness?
The RtI model assumes that each student receives high-quality, research-based, and differentiated
instruction from a general educator in a general education setting. The National Association of State
Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) has described RtI as a practice of:
Providing high-quality instruction and interventions matched to student need;
Monitoring progress frequently to make decisions about changes in instruction
or goals; and
Applying child response data to important
educational decisions.

RTI and Gifted


The Montana Office of Public Instruction (OPI) is
committed to providing optimal learning conditions
that support academic achievement for all students.
When implemented with fidelity an RtI framework has
the potential for meeting this commitment through the
implementation of a multi-tiered system of support
based on scientific evidence. The process also
emphasizes the importance of local school principals
as instructional leaders, the use of data to guide
instruction, appropriate intervention and practice,
parent involvement, and other research-based
practices. In the world of gifted education, this
refers to implementing and sustaining efforts
which ensure our students have access to
differentiated curriculum, flexible pacing, cluster
grouping, acceleration and other universal
interventions available to all students in the
regular classroom.

Speaking in an edweek.org chat on


RtI and Gifted Education Judy
Elliott, Chief Academic Officer for
the Los Angeles Unified School
District, says this about RtI and
gifted education:
Indeed RtI is a framework that
works for all students, including
gifted. Gifted students, too, have
learning and behavior needs. Using
the pyramid or triangle of RtI,
specific
interventions
can
be
identified to support highly able
students that need an extra scoop
(Tier
2)
or
more
specially
challenging opportunities at Tier 3.

Fall2009

Table of Contents
Relating Gifted Education and Response to Intervention .................................. 4
Explanations and interventions for each Tier .................................................... 4
Tier 1... ........................................................................................................ 7
Differentiated Instruction ............................................................................ 10
Grouping Strategies ................................................................................... 13
Tier 2.......................................................................................................... 15
Strategies and Interventions for Tier 2 ....................................................... 17
Tier 3 ......................................................................................................... 22
Types of Acceleration ................................................................................ 25
Twice-Exceptional Learners............................................................................. 30
Characteristics of Advanced Learners ............................................................. 33
Glossary (both RtI and GT).............................................................................. 37
Resources ....................................................................................................... 43
Programs ....................................................................................................... 45
Appendix A ...................................................................................................... 47
Learning Contract - Colorado Department of Education
Appendix B ..................................................................................................... 49
THE DO'S AND DON'TS OF INSTRUCTION: What It Means To Teach
Gifted Learners Well, Carol Ann Tomlinson, Ed.D
Appendix C ..................................................................................................... 52
Research to Support Acceleration, The National Work Group on Acceleration
References ...................................................................................................... 53

All educators for all students

The fundamental question


that RTI addresses is:
Under what conditions
will a student
successfully demonstrate
a satisfactory response to
the curriculum?

Fall2009
3

Relating Gifted Education and Response to Intervention

There are eight non-negotiable essential components of RtI.


1. Evidence-based curriculum and instruction
2. Ongoing assessment
3. Collaborative teaming
4. Data-based decision-making
5. Fidelity of implementation
6. Ongoing training and professional development
7. Community and family involvement
8. Strong leadership
Each element is part of an interrelated process that should be applied to every student. RtI creates an
integrated and seamless continuum of service that encompasses all staff through a multi-tiered
service delivery model. It requires effective building leadership and ongoing collaboration among
educators with a motto of all educators for all students.

A multi-tiered system of support provides guidance for delivering comprehensive, quality


instruction for all students. An RtI framework is designed to provide evidence-based
instruction and targeted interventions that lead to student success.

EXPLANATIONS AND INTERVENTIONS FOR EACH TIER


Tier 1: ALL: Core Classroom Instruction
All students should receive core classroom instruction
utilizing scientifically based curriculum and methods to
teach critical elements of a subject (reading, math,
written expression ), e.g., 80-90 percent of students will
have a sufficient response to instruction by demonstrating
subject proficiency with
Effective Tier 1 instruction.
Students who score at the higher level of Tier 1 should be
receiving instruction that will continue to keep them
challenged.
Tier 2: SOME: Strategic Targeted Instruction
Some students will receive strategically targeted
instruction
in
addition
to
core
instruction.
Strategic
Instruction addresses the specific needs of students who
do not make sufficient progress in Tier 1. It is important
to be aware, especially when thinking of advanced
learners, that educators need to measure, not what they
know, understand and are able to do relative to their
age peers, but rather what they have learned during their

Fall2009

time in the classroom. Gifted students learn at a much faster pace than other students
and should not be expected to wait for their
age peers to catch up. They may spend from
A 1992 study conducted by Drs. Joseph Renzulli
three to six years of their school lives learning
and Sally Reis found that 40-50 percent of the
nothing new. (Rogers 2002).
regular curriculum could be eliminated with no
Instruction is generally provided in a small
detrimental effects for the top 10-15 percent of
group (3-5 students) format with similarly
students. Therefore, students of high-ability
skilled students.
The duration
of
this
require curriculum content and pace of
instruction
varies
based
on
student
curriculum above and beyond Tier 1 in order to
meet their unique needs. Students performing
assessment and progress monitoring data that
above Tier 1 should be moved into Tier 2 or 3
measures student response to intervention.
interventions.

Tier 3: FEW: Intensive Targeted Intervention


Intensive targeted instruction is provided to the
most at risk (or the students who demonstrate the greatest intellectual need) who have not sufficiently
responded to Tier 1 and 2 instructions. It may in some cases replace core instruction. The duration of
this intervention is extended over a longer period of time and varies based on student assessment
and progress monitoring data.
Student Movement through the Tiers
Student movement through the tiers is a fluid process based on student assessment data and
collaborative team decisions about students' response to instruction. It should be noted that students
who receive interventions based on their needs for academic challenge are not expected to return to
Tier 1 instruction. Our goal for these students is for them to learn and grow at an accelerated pace.
Similarities between RtI and practices in the field of Gifted Education make this the perfect
opportunity to allow all students to truly mean all.
Like RtI, Gifted Education provides a tiered model of programming. Levels of
intensity in programming allow for the diversity of individual needs of students
who are gifted and talented. Response to Intervention provides support systems
for students with exceptional ability or potential. Students who are gifted require
special provisions because of their strengths and above-grade instructional level
or potential.
The basis of education for gifted students, like all students, is in the regular
classroom. About 60 percent of gifted students will have their needs met within
that setting, as long as there is consistent differentiation. Approximately 30 to 35
percent of the gifted students will need some type of additional services, such as
pull-together (sometimes referred to as pull-out) activities or program offerings,
academic competitions, special projects, etc. Even with differentiation and
additional classroom services, approximately 5 to 10 percent will require some
form of opportunity outside the regular classroom, such as grade skipping,
subject acceleration, concurrent enrollment, etc.
With its strong expectation of differentiation in the regular classroom, RtI embeds
gifted education into the daily focus of quality instruction. Academic, affective and
behavioral outcomes become critical targets for students, not solely enrichment
targets as was a previous standard.

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5

In gifted education, rather than remediation-based interventions, strength-based


interventions and strength-based programming, are used to describe tiered
instruction. The problem-solving process which uses data, strengths and
interests of students to implement appropriate, rigorous and relevant curriculum
and instruction are strengths of RtI.
RtI supports setting targets or trend lines for students. Long-term planning and
monitoring of student progress will allow students to learn and grow toward
accelerated expectations. The pace of acceleration is based upon individual
experiences and needs and may include different forms of acceleration.
Progress monitoring continually contributes new data so that learning is dynamic
and adjustments are made for pace, depth and complexity of the evidence-based
practices utilized.

Fall2009

Tier 1: Core Classroom Instruction for all students

TIER 1 refers to classroom instruction for all


students
that
utilizes
evidenced-based
materials and practices to teach core subject
areas (e.g., reading, written expression, and
math).

Montana Board of Public


Education Accreditation
Standards guarantee that
identified gifted and talented
students are entitled to receive
high-quality, rigorous, and
appropriate academic
challenge as a part of their
regular classroom experience.

Assessment data is used to monitor and


maintain the ongoing cycle of skill success.
Screening or benchmark assessments are
administered within the first four weeks of the
school year to all students to identify students
at risk for skill difficulty or mastery and at
least two other times during the year (winter
and spring) to determine if students are
making progress or need extra support.
Instruction is planned accordingly. Grade level
assessments, Criterion-Reference Test (CRT)
as utilized in the Montana Comprehensive
Assessment System (MontCAS), and other
assessments identify the content that students
have mastered and thus indicate the need for
appropriate subsequent challenging content.

In addition, screening for giftedness looks


for exceptional abilities compared to agemates.
Differentiated instruction occurs in flexible
small groups within the instructional time.
Outcome assessments are also administered
to all students to determine student growth
over time (3rd grade and above, MontCAS).

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7

TIER 1
COMPONENT

INSTRUCTION

Evidence-based core curriculum and instructional materials in


core subjects areas

Large group instruction of skills

ongoing progress monitoring and attention to affective needs are


critical attributes for continuous learning. Knowledge of the
characteristics of gifted learners and use of proven strategies
(e.g., concept learning, acceleration, and grouping) supports
these attributes.

Small differentiated group instruction for the acquisition and


practice of skills (both higher level skills and remedial skills for
twice exceptional students) and challenge activities as
determined by benchmark and progress monitoring data.

Pre-assessment should be done at all levels to prevent


repetition and re-teaching of content students have already
mastered. Students mastering, or nearly mastering the content,
then move on to an advanced level of difficulty. According to
research done by Dr. Karen Rogers, this practice, known as
compacting, has a .83 effect size, paRtIcularly in math and
science.

The key in instructional delivery is to remember that high ability


students must move through the curriculum at a faster pace.
They can handle content that is deeper, more complex, and
more abstract than the regular grade level instruction provides.
This requires pre-assessment, curriculum differentiation, and
consistent on-going assessment. Higher-level thinking skills
should be embedded in all that high ability students do.

Teacher (or other specialist) trained to teach programs being


taught

Benchmark screenings, (at least 3 times per year), outcomebased assessments, ongoing program assessment, preassessment, and informal assessment for all students

Screening for giftedness looks for exceptional abilities compared


to age-mates. Screening requires assessment and observations
that seek strengths in problem solving, cognition,
communication, creative and critical thinking, social skills, and
academic and talent areas.

Screening tools may include but not be limited to a standardized


non-verbal or cognitive abilities test and observation scales, as
well as general district, classroom or state assessments. The

Curriculum
Instructional
Organization

Instructor
Assessment

Fall2009

goal is to collect a body of evidence or student profile of


strengths and learning needs for programming.

Time

Teacher knowledge of content benchmarks, student


demonstrations of learning, and use of data will ensure
continuous learning without ceilings for the gifted learner. The
Montana Content standards should be the basis for curricular
modifications made to meet individual student need. Essential
Learning Expectations are also a great tool to use in making
curricular modifications for students.

Parents informed of student progress on a regular basis

Core instruction provided daily


Recommend K-3: 90 minutes reading instruction (matched to
student readiness level) Grades 4-6: 60-90 minutes reading
instruction (matched to student readiness levels)

Gifted students are significantly more likely to retain science and


mathematics content accurately when taught 2-3 times faster
than normal class pacing. They are also significantly more
likely to forget or mislearn science and mathematics content
when they must drill and review it more than 2-3 times.

Applications of skills throughout the day across all content areas

General education classroom* (with appropriate grouping for


differentiation)

Home practice and support

Attention to affective needs

Use of trained paraprofessionals to challenge opportunities

Use of trained paraprofessionals for skills practice for Twiceexceptional* students

Encouragement of parent-school partnerships

Parent training as needed

Professional development for school personnel, especially


regarding differentiation, Twice-exceptional, knowledge of the
characteristics of gifted learners and understanding of proven
strategies for gifted/advanced learners (e.g., concept learning,
acceleration, grouping)

Ongoing verification for fidelity of implementation

Setting

Support

* A consideration in learning-strategies instruction for gifted/learning-disabled students (Twice-exceptional) is where the


instruction will take place. Although it may seem natural for the special education teacher to deliver any and all
compensatory instruction, a twice-exceptional student typically encounters at least three teachers in any given week
(Robinson, 1999). It is important that the regular education and gifted education teacher be aware of any learningstrategies instruction in an effort to incorporate the skills throughout the students learning.

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DifferentiatedInstruction

Differentiated instruction should be provided to accelerate learning for high-ability students and
maximize student achievement for all students as part of Tier 1 instruction. The classroom teacher
should provide flexible instructional grouping of students based on their ongoing identified needs.
Classroom teachers should be clear about what they are trying to teach and why it is important.
Research has shown that teachers are often too random in their delivery of instruction, unclear as to
what they are teaching, and unable to define the succinct reason for instruction.

The most important Tier 1 strategy for Gifted or Advanced Learners is


Differentiated Instruction. The key principles of Differentiated Instruction
are:

Student-centered instructional practices and materials are


standards-based and grounded in research;
Instruction has clear objectives with focused activities to reach the
objectives;
Assessment results are used to shape future instructional
decisions;
Students have multiple avenues to show mastery of essential
content and skills, and to demonstrate their learning; and
Instructional pacing, depth and complexity are varied.

Strategies for Differentiating Instruction


Abstraction

Content that goes beyond surface detail and facts to underlying


concepts, generalizations, and symbolism.

Active Engagement

Instructional strategies that result in relevance and engagement for


students.

Agendas

A personalized list of tasks that a paRTIcular student must complete


in a specified time

Choice

Provide opportunities for choices and flexibility. Many GT students


love the opportunity for choice and given an opportunity will
construct their own differentiated choices.

Choice boards, Tic-tac- Students make a work selection from a certain row or column.
Teachers can provide for student learning needs while giving
toe
students choice.

10

Fall2009

Compacting

This strategy should be done at all levels to prevent repetition and


re-teaching of content students have already mastered. To compact
the teacher must pre-test students in the content to be presented.
Students mastering, or nearly mastering the content, then move on
to an advanced level of difficulty. According to research done by Dr.
Karen Rogers, compacting has a .83 effect size, particularly when
math and science content is compacted.

Conceptual Discussions

High level discussions of themes, concepts, generalizations, issues,


and problems, rather than a review of facts, terms and details.

Extensions

Offer relevant extension options for learners who need additional


challenges.

Flexible Assessments

Offer different assessment options that allow students


demonstrate their mastery of new concepts, content, and skills.

Flexible tasks

Allowing students to structure their own projects and investigations


according to their strengths and interests.

Flexible project
deadlines

Students negotiate for more or less time to complete a learning


experience and its matching product or assessment.

Grouping

Regular opportunities to work in whole groups, small groups, with a


partner, or in an independent setting.

Higher-order thinking
skills

Questioning in discussion or providing activities based on


processing that requires analysis, synthesis, evaluation, or other
critical thinking skills.

Independent study

Students research a teacher or self chosen topic, developing either


traditional or non-traditional products to demonstrate learning.

Jigsaw/Cooperative
learning

Just as in a jigsaw puzzle, each piece-each students part is


essential for the full completion and full understanding of the final
product.

Learning centers or
stations

Activity stations that demonstrate awareness of different academic


needs and learning style preferences.

Learning contracts

Students negotiate individually with teacher about what and how


much will be learned and when product will be due; often connected
with an individual or independent project-see Appendix A.

Learning programs

Computer programs or websites to meet learners needs.

Mini-lessons

Mini-lessons provide levels of scaffolding, support and challenge as


needed for students of like ability/need.

to

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11

Most difficult first

Students can demonstrate a mastery of a concept by completing


the five most difficult problems with 85 percent accuracy. Students
who demonstrate mastery do not need to practice any more.

Open-ended
assignments

Providing students with tasks and work that do not have single right
answers or outcomes. The tasks may have timelines and a
sequence of activities to be accomplished, but outcomes will vary
for each student.

Orbital study

Independent investigations, generally of three to six weeks. They


orbit or revolve around some facet of the curriculum. Students
select their own topics for the orbital, and they work with guidance
and coaching from the teacher to develop more expertise on the
topic as well as learning the skills of an investigator.

Pre-assessment

An array of pre-assessment options can guide instruction. By


regularly pre-assessing students, teachers can flexibly group
students by ability and readiness levels. Pre-assessment is also
essential for compacting.

Problem-based learning

A student-centered instructional strategy in which students


collaboratively solve problems and reflect on their experiences.
Learning is driven by challenging, open-ended problems. Students
work in small collaborative groups. Teachers take on the role as
"facilitators" of learning.

RAFT

Provides students choice in a writing assignment varying Role,


Audience, Format, and Topic.

Subject integration
Theme-based units

Uniting two or more disciplines and their content through a


conceptual theme, such as "origins," "change" or "friendship."

Tiered assignments

Varied levels of tasks to ensure that students explore ideas and use
skills at a level that builds on what they already know and
encourages growth. All students explore the same essential ideas
but work at different levels of depth and complexity.

Vary levels of
complexity

Books and instructional materials at different levels of complexity


allow students to study the same concepts but at levels of depth
and complexity to fit their learning needs.

Vary pacing

plan to accommodate varied pacing allowing students to move


through content at a pace appropriate for their learning needs.

Vary tasks

provide different homework options, journal prompts, and questions

Adapted from: The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners, Carol Ann Tomlinson

12

Fall2009

GroupingStrategies
The identified strengths of a gifted student will cause all gifted students to experience at least Tier 2
interventions so that ceilings are not placed on learning. These interventions might be classroom
based, a small group with a specialist, a specialized program delivered by the classroom teacher or
specialist or classes to meet the individualized needs of gifted students. Nevertheless, Tier 1
Differentiation will involve grouping students. The following table, based on Re-forming Gifted
Education, Karen B. Rogers,
will explain grouping strategies for Tier 1 and Tier 2
interventions/differentiation.

GroupingStrategies
Identify and place four to eight high ability students in the same
grade level in one class with a teacher who likes them, is trained
to work with them and will devote proportional class time to
differentiating for them.

Cluster grouping

Cooperative
groups

learning Providing grouped activities for the purpose of developing peer


interaction skills and cooperation. May be like or mixed ability
groups.

Cross-graded classes,
cross-age grouping

Grouping children by their achievement level in a subject area


rather than by grade or age level. Also known as multi-age
classrooms.

Flexible skills grouping

Students are matched to skills by virtue of readiness, not with the


assumption that all need the same spelling tasks, computation
drill, writing assignment, etc. Movement among groups is
common and based on readiness on a given skill and growth in
that skill.

Full-time ability grouping

Children of high ability or with high achievement levels are put


into a separate group for differentiating their instruction. Ability
grouping can be full or part-time, permanent or flexible sorting.

Like-ability cooperative
learning

Organizing groups of learners in three to four member teams of


like ability and adjusting the group task accordingly.

Regrouping by
achievement for subject
instruction

A form of grouping, usually (but not always) sorted for once a


year, that delivers appropriately differentiated curriculum to
students at a specific ability or achievement level.

Within class performance


grouping

Sorting of students, topic by topic or subject by subject, within


one classroom for the provision of differentiated learning for each
group.

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13

NotesonGroupingStrategiesforGiftedStudents
Giftedstudentstendtomistrustthebenefitsofsmallgrouplearning;
caremustbetakenthatthetasksdemonstratethatthegroupcan"do
better"thantheindividual.

Giftedstudentsperformsignificantlymorehighlywhenthemajority
oftheirtimeinacademiccoreareasisspentintruepeerinteractions.
Giftedstudentsshowapreferenceforselfstructuredtasksandself
imposeddeadlines.

Giftedstudentsshowapreferenceforworkingonprojectsaloneor
withonelikeabilitypeer.

Somegiftedstudentsdonotappreciate,andactuallyresent,being
peertutors.Thisisespeciallytrueiftheyarecalledupontoteach
othersonaregularbasis.

14

Fall2009

Tier 2: Strategic Targeted Intervention

Tier 2 refers to evidence-based targeted


supplemental skill-building intervention. In the
case of gifted or advanced learners, Tier 2 refers
to students who require specific supports to
make adequate progress. This is part of an ongoing decision making process to determine the
effectiveness of interventions and programming
options and assessment of learning to meet the
needs of students for whom general education
Tier 1 strategies, (i.e., Differentiated Instruction)
do not support adequate progress.
This instruction may be matched with the
specific skill deficits of Twice Exceptional
students who fail to meet Tier 1 benchmarks in
core subjects. Tier 2 instruction is systematic,
explicit, and aligned with Tier 1 instruction.
Instructional interventions are typically delivered
in small groups of students with similar strengths
and interest needs. Instruction is based on the
needs of individual students as determined by
assessment data.

Tier2:EssentialElementsofInstructionalInterventions
COMPONENTS
Curriculum and
Materials

Instructional
Organization

INSTRUCTION

Evidence-based core curriculum and instructional materials in core


subject areas
Evidence-based intervention materials and strategies that
supplement Tier 1 instruction
Homogeneous groups, see Tier 1 grouping strategies and the
following list of appropriate strategic instructional organizations
Explicit instruction targeting special skill deficits (Twice-exceptional)
Compacting

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15

Opportunities for acceleration

Instructor

Teacher or other specialists trained to teach programs being taught


Gifted Education Specialist
Twice Exceptional reading specialist, special education teacher,
speech/language pathologists

Assessment

Tier 1 benchmark screening plus


Diagnostic and ongoing progress monitoring monthly, bi-weekly, or
weekly looking for trends which will inform instructional practice
Pre-assessments
Learning plan, learning goal assessments
Teacher knowledge of content benchmarks, student demonstrations
of learning, and use of data will ensure continuous learning without
ceilings for the gifted learner.
Parents informed of student progress on a regular basis

Time

Setting
Support

20 to 60 minutes daily in addition to general classroom Tier 1


instruction
When students are compacted into different work they are pursuing
an alternate assignment, activity, or product while the rest of the
class works on the regular curriculum work. They may be doing
assignments that are more complex, and involve greater depth
and/or breadth than the regular work. They may also be involved in a
project that requires original research. These assignments, most
likely, will require more time than the regular assignments.

General education classroom or other appropriate setting


* A note regarding Twice-Exceptional students

Home practice and support


Before and after school programs
Parent training
Use of trained paraprofessionals to provide support to the classroom
teacher as he/she provides Tier 2 instruction (emphasize trained in
the needs and traits of gifted and advanced learners)
Instructional teams such as: literacy team, math team, grade-level
team, or student support team
Professional development for all school personnel
Ongoing verification for fidelity of implementation

*Kennedy (2002) noted that regular education teachers rarely have training to teach students with multiple exceptionalities
in their classroom. Similarly, special education teachers rarely receive any training in the unique needs of the gifted.
Therefore, collaboration is an important aspect of teaching students who are both gifted and learning disabled..

16

Fall2009

Strategies and Interventions for Tier 2


STRATEGY

DESCRIPTION

RESEARCH GAINS

Ability grouping

Children of high-ability or with highachievement levels are put into a


separate group for differentiating
instruction. Can be full or part-time or
flexible sorting

Studies of performance of gifted


students
in
ability-grouped
classes in which the curriculum
was accelerated, the effect size
was found to be 10 months
(Kulik, 1992)

Abstraction

Going beyond surface information; use


of symbolism, underlying meaning of
content

Cluster grouping

Cluster grouping is the practice of


placing the top group of students from a
grade into the same classroom. This
assures the teacher of having a group,
rather than just one student who is
above and beyond his/her peers. The
teacher of this group should enjoy
working with high performing students
and have a background in differentiated
instructions for high ability students.
With this strategy high-ability students
are working on advanced curriculum
and assignments as a group within a
regular classroom. It avoids the
situation where a single child is always
working by him/herself thus allowing
interaction and discussion within their
own group.

Competitions or
advanced clubs

(See resources for additional list of Pre and post test data of highly
competitions.)
talented mathematical 3-6th
Math Olympiad
grade students who paRtIcipated
Future Problem-Solving
in a program offered by Johns
Destination Imagination
Hopkins University gained an
Junior Great Books
average of 46 percentage points.
JASON Project
(Mills, Ablard and Gustin, 1994)

Complexity

Providing more difficult and intricately


detailed content

Current research suggests that


there are several benefits of CG:
Gifted students regularly interact
with their intellectual peers and
age peers (Delcourt & Evans,
1994.) CG provides fulltime
services for gifted students
Without
additional
cost.
Curricular
differentiation is more likely to
occur when a group of highachieving students is placed with
a teacher who has expertise,
training and a desire to
differentiate than when these
students are distributed among
many teachers. (Bryant, 1987:
Kennedy 1995; Kulik 1992;
Rogers 1991)

Fall2009
17

Concept-based
programs

Programs
such
as
Mentoring
Mathematical Minds and Accelerated
Math focus on mathematical reasoning,
creativity and conceptual understanding

Students using such programs


as M3 and Accelerated Math
have
shown
statistically
significant gains in mathematical
understanding
and
have
outperformed
students
in
comparison groups.

Cooperative
grouping with likeability learners

Organizing groups of learners in three Grouping academically talented


to four member teams of like ability and students together for instruction
adjusting the group task accordingly.
has been found to produce
positive achievement outcomes
when the content and instruction
provided
are
appropriately
differentiated to be challenging.
(Gentry, 1999; Kulik and Kulik,
1992; Rogers, 1991)

Cross-graded
classes

This is a variation of Regrouping for


Specific Instruction. In this situation the
entire school must teach the same
subjects at the same time so that
students go to classes that are taught at
their level regardless of grade level
placement. At a paRtIcular time each
day students would travel to the
appropriate grade (or room) for their
instruction. The instruction would be
delivered for their level. For gifted
students, again, the focus would be on
pace, depth, breadth, and complexity.

Curriculum
compacting

Compacting is the practice of pretesting


student knowledge of material before it
is taught. This can be done by using
end of level tests, a written narrative of
what the students already know, etc. If
the student has mastered, or nearly
mastered the material he/she should be
delivered a curriculum that is new and
that offers a challenge.

Several studies show that


students who were placed in
grade levels that matched their
mathematical readiness had
effect gains of over 1. (Kulik,
1992; Mills et. al., 1994)

Effect size of .83 (one year and


eight additional months of growth
per year. A study of 436 2-6th
grade high ability students
revealed that even though 40-50
percent of the curriculum was
eliminated, performances on
standardized
tests
were
equivalent to that of students
who received regular curriculum
With skill based subjects, such as math instruction. (Reis, et. al., 1993)
and early reading, the end of unit tests
work well. With more content-based
areas, such as literature, social studies,
and some science, students could have
the option to take the book, study the

18

Fall2009

chapter, take the test, then go on to


replacement, or extension, material.
Diagnostic
testing/prescriptive
instruction model

Above level diagnostic testing is used to


determine
the
strengths
and
weaknesses of gifted students and
determine areas of study. Especially
useful
for
mathematically
gifted
students.

Early instruction in
presentation,
research, study
and organizational
skills

Direct instruction in research which will


allow students to pursue areas of
strength and interest.

Extra-curricular
learning

Accelerated programs outside of regular


school curriculum may be offered after
school, on Saturday or during the
summer.

Pre and post test data of highly


talented mathematical 3-6th
grade students who participated
in a program offered by Johns
Hopkins University gained an
average of 46 percentage points.
(Mills, et. al., 1994)

Goal setting for Early planning and goal setting for post
secondary education
college planning
Honors, Advanced
Placement courses

Students take courses with advanced or


accelerated content (usually at the
secondary level) in order to test out or
receive credit for completion of college
level course work. (Although one such
program
is
actually
designated
"Advanced Placement," several such
programs
existfor
example,
International Baccalaureate.)

Method of inquiry

Relating content to how things work,


methods that are used in the field.

Mentorship

Student(s) are placed with a subject


matter expert or professional to further
a specific interest or proficiency, which
cannot be provided within the regular
educational setting.

Organization

changing the sequence for how content


is taught

Fall2009
19

Partial day or sendout (pullout)


grouping

removal of gifted/advanced learners


from the regular classroom for a specific
period of time each day or week to work
with a trained specialist on differentiated
curriculum

When the content is sufficiently


deepened, advanced and
differentiated pullout programs
were shown to be effective.
(Delcourt, Loyd, Cornell and
Goldberg; 1994)

Pull-in programs

See partial day/pullout programs

Above

Real audiences

presenting work to a live audience or


providing an expert in the field to
evaluate the childs work

Real
problems

world Providing learners with a problem or


situation to solve that is relevant to their
own lives

Regrouping by
achievement for
subject instruction

Students who are gifted in math or


reading are grouped for instruction with
similarly gifted students. This usually
happens within the whole school or
grade level (Walk to Read model). The
students may change groups as
needed, or indicated, by assessment.
Schools using this strategy will have
reading, math, etc. within each grade
level at the same time each day. High
ability students then go to the teacher
teaching the curriculum at a faster pace,
with more breadth, depth and
complexity.

In 25 studies where curriculum


remained the same for all
groups, there was only a slight
gain in academic growth. There
are substantial gains however
when an alternative curriculum is
chosen to meet the needs of
mathematically gifted students.
(Kulik, 1992) 11 out of 14 studies
indicated that students in crossgrade programs achieved an
effect gain greater than 1.

Skill-based
programs

Computer
programs
such
as
Renaissance Learning and Success
Maker that allows the student to work at
their own pace and gives direct,
immediate feedback to student and
teacher.

ITBS scores of students using a


skill based mathematics program
were significantly higher in skills
than students who did not use
the
program.
(Ysseldyke,
Tardrew,
Betts,
Thill,
and
Hannigan, 2004)

Specialized
curriculum
programs,
Intentional
academic
programs, groups

William and Mary Curriculum, National


History Day, Mentoring Mathematical
Minds, Accelerated Math, Project
Spring, Project Spring II (see appendix)

2006 research on Mentoring


Mathematical Minds, to cite just
one example, showed gains over
a similar comparison group on
TIMSS , NAEP and ITBS scores
for third, fourth and fifth graders.
National Center for Gifted and
Talented Research.

20

Fall2009

Study of people

Relating content to the people in the


field, famous people, human situations
and problems

Talent
opportunities

Provision of experiences for an


individual student with a demonstrated
high performance or high potential in a
specific area either through individual
work or with a group of students with
like talents.

Talent searches,
university program

Provision
of
highly
challenging,
accelerated
learning
experiences,
usually on a college campus in a
specific talent area for highly talented
students.

Theme-based units

Students are involved in a study of


concepts through theme based units
that stress the application of reasoning
to reading, writing, the creation of highquality projects, and the organization of
learning.

A study of advanced literature


groups found a significant
learning advantage for groups
who
received
theme-based
instruction that emphasized the
use of reasoning to reading and
writing and required high quality
products compared to groups
who did not receive themebased,
high-expectation
instruction. Van Tassel-Baska,
et. al., (2002)

Fall2009
21

Tier 3: Intensive Targeted Interventions

Tier 3 refers to evidence-based intensive targeted


interventions for students whose academic and
intellectual needs are not being met by Tier 1 or
Tier 2 supplemental, targeted instruction.
Children and adolescents who will need this
intervention are highly gifted (IQ of 145 or greater)
or exceptionally gifted (IQ 180+). This small
percentage
of
students
requires
radical
acceleration, dual enrollment, early entrance,
specialized counseling, long-term mentorships or
participation in a specialized classroom or school
for gifted students.
They require a curriculum that differs significantly in
pace, level, and complexity from age-level peers.
Tier 3 instruction may take place in addition to
Tier 1 instruction or it may replace it entirely. If
progress monitoring and diagnostic assessments
indicate that a student is not making adequate
progress, a student may need a replacement of
the core program (Tier 1 instruction) or be
referred for further evaluation.
The highly gifted child needs an IEP that will make
provisions for alternative learning opportunities
which may include acceleration or cluster
grouping. In addition, early identification of these
individuals will help to ensure that programming
may be planned for them to allow for continued
growth at the students level of potential. Early
speech, reading and other developmental skills
are indicators of a highly gifted child. For some
students regular differentiation and instructional
management/delivery are not enough.

Individuals with an IQ of 145+


appear in the population at a ratio of
1 in 1,000
Individuals with an IQ of 160+ appear
in the population at a ratio of fewer
than 1 in 10,000
Individuals with an IQ of 180+ appear
in the population at a ratio of fewer
than 1 in a million

The higher the IQ of the student, the more


acceleration must happen in order to maintain
balance with the student and his/her curriculum.

22

Fall2009

NOTES ON EXCEPTIONALLY GIFTED STUDENTS


From The use of radical acceleration in cases of extreme intellectual precocity
Miraca U.M. Gross
National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC), Gifted Child Quarterly 1992 Vol.
36 http://www.geniusdenied.com/ARtIcles/Record.aspx?NavID=13_16,13_16&rid=11241
Exceptionally gifted children appear in the population at a ratio of less than 1 in 10,000.
Research has repeatedly found that these children differ quite significantly from
moderately gifted age-peers on many cognitive and affective variables. Because of this, it
is not enough to place them in part-time programs, such as a resource room or pull-out,
which are designed for moderately gifted students; they require full-time grouping with
children closer to their own mental age and levels of socio-affective development.
Research suggests that exceptionally and profoundly gifted students are best served by a
program of radical acceleration incorporating a number of grade-skips appropriately
spaced through the student's school career, supplemented with subject acceleration
where it is required. It is important that the student is also provided with lateral
enrichment at each stage. Radical acceleration provides the extremely gifted child with
the intellectual and social companionship of children at similar stages of cognitive and
affective development. Exceptionally gifted children retained with age-peers, or
accelerated by only one year, are at serious risk of peer rejection and social isolation.
It is now generally understood and accepted that a child's level of social and emotional
development is more highly correlated with his mental age than with his chronological
age (Callahan & Kauffman, 1982; Tannenbaum, 1983; Janos & Robinson, 1985). The
significance of this is immense when dealing with the extremely gifted since the higher
the IQ, the greater the discrepancy between chronological and mental age, and thus the
wider the gap between the psychosocial development of the gifted child and that of his
age-peers.
The common perception of the extremely gifted as eager, academically successful young
people who display high levels of task commitment has been refuted by research which
demonstrates that many highly gifted children underachieve seriously in the regular
classroom, and that, by the end of elementary school, many have almost completely lost
the motivation to excel (Pringle, 1970; Painter, 1976; Whitmore, 1980; Gross &
Feldhusen, 1990).

Fall2009
23

Tier3EssentialElementsofInstruction
COMPONENTS

INSTRUCTION

Curriculum and
Materials

Instructional
Organization

Explicit instruction targeting specific skill deficits (Twice Exceptional)


Usually individual interventions, most often some form of acceleration
Students should have an IEP or ILP (Individual Learning Plan)
The curriculum should differ significantly in pace, level, and complexity
from age-level peers.

Teacher, reading specialist, special education teacher, ELL teacher,


speech/language pathologists, or other specialists trained to teach
programs being taught. Some students may have more than one teacher

Tier 1 benchmark screening plus


Screenings for giftedness, may include IQ testing, behavior scales, out of
grade level testing, ceilingless testing.
Diagnostic assessments and ongoing progress-monitoring
Weekly or bi-weekly
Parents informed of student progress on a regular basis

Part or all of the core curriculum for age peers may be replaced

Appropriate setting within school, more than one school or outside of the
school depending upon the acceleration or intervention

Instructional teams such as: literacy team, math team, grade-level team, or
student support team (for Twice-exceptional)
Provision of parent training as needed for home practice and support
Additional tutoring programs
Home practice and support
Staff development especially regarding options for acceleration and
research regarding positive effects of such
Before and after-school programs (not a substitute)
Ongoing verification for fidelity of implementation

Instructor

Assessment

Evidence-based intervention materials and strategies that supplement or


replace Tier 1 instruction
Programs and strategies emphasize skill building in areas of need as
identified through diagnostic assessments when dealing with twice
exceptional students
Possible replacement of the core program. Continue Tier 1 and possibly
Tier 2 instruction when it matches the learning needs of the student (for
example a student may need Tier 3 interventions/acceleration in
mathematics, but find the core curriculum in reading a good match)

Time
Setting
Support

Effect size and comments (Third column) from research by Karen B. Rogers and Richard Kimpston.

24

Fall2009

TypesofAcceleration
These interventions move a student through and educational program faster than
the usual rate or at an age younger than the typical age
Single
subject
acceleration

A student bypasses the usual


progression of skills and content
mastery in one subject where great
advancement or proficiency has been
observed. The learner will progress at
the regular instructional pace through
the remaining subject areas.

Wholegrade
skipping

A learner is double promoted to bypass Research based gains: .49 academic,


one or more grade levels.
.31 social
Grade skipping for bright children also
appears to be very beneficial. Its
greatest research-supported academic
and social effects appear to be in
grades 3-6.

Early
entrance to
school

A gifted child who shows readiness to


perform schoolwork enters kindergarten
or first grade one to two years earlier
than the usual beginning age.

Research based gains: .57


Subject acceleration in mathematics
resulted
in
significant
positive
academic
increases
for
both
elementary and secondary students.
Socialization was neither harmed nor
enhanced; the psychological effects
were unclear. It seems logical that
since this form of acceleration
accounts for only a small time change
in the regular routine, no significant
differences in emotional and social
well-being would be noted.

Research based gains .49 academic


Early entrance to school appears to be
a relatively safe accelerative option for
bright
children.
Social
and
psychological adjustment were neither
enhanced nor threatened by this
practice. If this were the only option
offered a gifted child, it would capitalize
on a child's natural intelligence as early
as possible and would allow the child to
establish a peer group early. As a
result, the challenge of making new
friends would be encountered only
once, instead of with each decision to
accelerate.

Fall2009
25

Non-graded
Classroom

A learner is placed in a classroom


undifferentiated by grade levels where
he/she works through the curricular
materials at a pace appropriate to
individual ability and motivational level.

Bright students in a non-graded or


multi-grade classroom environment
showed substantial, positive academic
gains at the elementary grade levels.
Although no research on social
outcomes could be located, it seems
likely that bright children who can move
through the curriculum at a comfortable,
but accelerated, pace would not find
social rejection so readily as when they
stand out as significantly different at
one grade level.

Curriculum
Compacting

The regular curriculum of any or all


subjects is tailored to the specific gaps,
deficiencies, and strengths of an
individual student. The learner tests out
or bypasses previously mastered skills
and content, focusing only on mastery
of deficient areas, thus moving more
rapidly through the curriculum.

Research based gains: .83 (one year


and eight additional months)of
growth per year.
Curriculum compacting-whereby the
student begins each school year at
his/her actual level of performance in
each subject-results in significantly
positive academic effects, especially in
mathematics. The single study of social
outcomes suggested no differences in
socialization, and the psychological
impact of this option was unclear.

Grade
telescoping

A student's progress is reorganized


through junior high or high school to
shorten the time by one year. Hence,
junior high may require two years
instead of three, or high school may
require three years instead of four.

Research based gains: .40


Another implication from our analysis is
that allowing children to progress
through three years' curriculum in two
years' time-grade telescoping-showed
very positive academic outcomes for
both junior and senior high students.
The option neither enhanced nor
harmed socialization or psychological
adjustment.

Concurrent
enrollment

A student attends classes in more than Research based gains: .22


one building level during the school
yearfor example, high school for part
of the day and junior high for the
remainder.

AP courses

A student takes courses with advanced Research based gains: .27


or accelerated content (usually at the The research on Advanced Placement
secondary level) in order to test out or did not support significant outcome

26

Fall2009

receive credit for completion of college


level course work. (Although one such
program--the College Boards AP and
Pre-AP classes--is actually designated
"Advanced Placement," several such
programs
exist
for
example,
International Baccalaureate.)

changes for students once they entered


college full time.
Social and
psychological outcomes were unclear.
This does not mean, however, that
Advanced Placement is not a viable
accelerative option for bright high
school students. If nothing else, the
research clarifies that participants are
not harmed at the college level by
having been credited for some courses.
Also worth mentioning are the potential,
positive effects of students having been
adequately challenged and having been
given more time to enroll in courses
better suited to their interests and ability
levels.

Mentorship

A student is placed with a subject Research based gains: .57 academic,


matter expert or professional to further .47 socialization, .42 self-esteem
a specific interest or proficiency, which
cannot be provided within the regular
educational setting.

Early
admission
to college

Student skips some of high school and Research based gains: .30
attends college
Allowing bright students to bypass at
least one year of high school to enter
college full-time resulted in significantly
positive
academic
outcomes.
Socialization
and
psychological
adjustment showed no change. There
has to be some concern, however, for
the high school student who opts for
early admission, not completing a high
school diploma. Financial constraints,
poor health, family crises, or any
combination of circumstances could
keep the student from completing
college, in which case he or she has no
educational certification.

Credit
by Through successful completion of tests,
examination a student is allowed to receive a
specified number of college credits
upon entrance to college. (Advanced
Placement and the College Level
Examination
Program
are
two
examples.)

Research based gains: .59


There appeared to be a strong
relationship between testing, out of
college courses (credit by examination)
and subsequent college performance in
those subject areas.

Fall2009
27

Distance
learning

Enrollment in college or other Similar to subject acceleration


challenging courses while still enrolled
with age peers (Stanford Universitys
EPGY for example)

Extracurricular
programs

Johns Hopkins Center for Talented See References page 44


Youth,
Duke
University
Talent
Identification Program
Center for Talent Development (CTD)
Northwestern University
For
additional
resources:
http://hoagiesgifted.com/academics.htm

For example, Davidson Academy


Special
schools for
the gifted

http://www.davidsonacademy.unr.edu/

Acceleration: What we do vs. what we know Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development (ASCD) October 1992

28

Fall2009

An Important Note on Acceleration from


Acceleration: What we do versus what we know
by Karen B. Rogers
Teachers and administrators have a research-supported menu of accelerative practices to
select from that result in substantial academic achievement gains for students. Very few
options, however, appear to directly affect students' social skills and self-concept. If teachers
have avoided offering these practices to bright students out of a concern for the social and
emotional effects, such misgivings should be laid to rest. Those who wish to enhance
outcomes in affective areas for accelerated students, however, might consider the assistance
of a school counselor or a support group.
With careful attention to the cognitive, social, and emotional needs of prospective
accelerated students, teachers and administrators can recommend from an array of practices
with the confidence that the child will not only survive but will thrive in a more challenging
learning environment.

Fall2009
29

TwiceExceptionalLearners
Gifted students with disabilities are at risk because their educational and social/emotional needs often
go undetected. The resulting inconsistent academic performance can lead educators to believe twiceexceptional students are not putting forth adequate effort. Hidden disabilities may prevent students
with advanced cognitive abilities from achieving their potential. The frustrations related to unidentified
strengths and disabilities can result in behavioral and social/emotional issues. For some twiceexceptional students, behavior plans become the focus of their interventions. The behaviors are
managed, but the underlying disabilities are never addressed. School can become a very frustrating
experience for struggling twice-exceptional students, their teachers, and parents.
The defining characteristics of the twice-exceptional learner is evidence of high performance or
potential in a gift, talent or ability combined with a disability that suppresses the students ability to
achieve according to his/her potential (Brody & Mills, 1997). Disabilities may include dyslexia,
auditory processing problems, visual processing deficits, emotional behavioral disabilities, ADD or
ADHD, and autism. Twice-exceptional students will be found in all three Tiers and will need
interventions that will differ from interventions for students who have disabilities but who are not gifted
or of high ability. Individual student data may show exceptional ability in one area and a weakness
that is an extreme disparity for the individual, even if the weakness is demonstrated at age-grade
level.
Researchers have offered suggestions of how many gifted and learning-disabled students are
present in the United States. Winner (1996) estimated that between 120,000 and 180,000 students
with learning disabilities also have above-average intelligence quotients (IQ). Winner also noted that
approximately 10 percent of high-IQ students read two or more years below grade level. Some
researchers estimate that 210 percent of all students enrolled in gifted programs also have a
learning disability (McEachern & Bornot, 2001), while others predict that the actual number is closer
to two to five percent of the nations gifted population (Delisle & Galbraith, 2002).
http://www.prufrock.com/client/client_pages/GCT_Readers/Disabilities/Ch._11/Gifted_Students_Who
_Are_Learning_Disabled.cfm Other research indicates that two to five percent of the gifted population
will have disabilities and two to five percent of students with disabilities will be gifted (Dix & Schafer,
1996; Whitmore, 1980; & Maker, 1977).
Ongoing collaboration among special, general and gifted education, and parents is critical for
identification and long-term planning for these students. It is essential that the disabilities are
identified early so appropriate interventions can be provided at optimum times. Unfortunately, the
struggles of many twice-exceptional students go unnoticed for many years, resulting in learning gaps
and undeveloped potentials.

30

Fall2009

ExplanationofStrategiesfor
TwiceExceptionalStudents

Appropriate Identification
Teachers need to be sensitive to clues that seem to indicate contradictions in abilities rather than
rely on standardized or intelligence test scores. Possible examples are:

above grade extensive vocabulary/struggle with spelling basic words;


strong verbal expression/poor illegible handwriting;
good listening comprehension skills/ low self-concept;
sophisticated sense of humor/difficulty engaging in social aspects of the classroom;
difficulty sitting still;
can become deeply immersed in special interests or creative activities and or
reason abstractly and solve complex problems/dislike rote memorization.

The following list should be viewed as characteristics which are typical of many children who are
gifted and who also have a disability, rather than characteristics which all such children possess.
These twice-exceptional children do not form a simple, homogeneous group; they are a highly diverse
group of learners.
Indicators of Cognitive/Affective Strengths

Have a wide range of interests that are not related to school topics or learning.
Have a specific talent or consuming interest area for which they have an exceptional memory
and knowledge.
Are interested in the big picture rather than small details.
Are extremely curious and questioning.
Possess high levels of problem-solving and reasoning skills.
Have penetrating insights.
Are capable of setting up situations to their own advantage often as a coping method.
Are extremely creative in their approach to tasks and as a technique to compensate for their
disability.
Have an unusual imagination.
Are humorous often in bizarre ways.
Have advanced ideas and opinions which they are uninhibited in expressing.
Have a superior vocabulary.
Have very high energy levels.

Fall2009
31

Indicators of Cognitive/Affective Problems

Have discrepant verbal and performance abilities.


Have deficient or extremely uneven academic skills which cause them to lack academic
initiative, appear academically unmotivated, avoid school tasks, and frequently fail to complete
assignments.
Are extremely frustrated by school.
Have auditory and/or visual processing problems which may cause them to respond slowly, to
work slowly, and to appear to think slowly.
Have problems with long-term and/or short-term memory.
Have motoric difficulties exhibited by clumsiness, poor handwriting, or problems completing
paper-and-pencil tasks.
Lack organizational skills and study skills; often appearing to be extremely messy.
Are unable to think in a linear fashion; have difficulty following directions.
Are easily frustrated; give up quickly on tasks; are afraid to risk being wrong or making
mistakes.
Have difficulty explaining or expressing ideas, getting-to-the-point, and/or expressing
feelings.
Blame others for their problems while believing that their successes are only due to luck.
Are distractible; unable to maintain attention for long periods of time.
Are unable to control impulses.
Have poor social skills; demonstrate antisocial behaviors.
Are highly sensitive to criticism.

Indicators of Low Self-Esteem


One of the most common characteristics of these children is low self-esteem. They frequently
disguise this low self-esteem through the use of any or all of the following behaviors:

Anger
Self-criticism
Crying
Withdrawal
Daydreaming and fantasy
Apathetic behaviors
Disruptive behaviors
Clowning behaviors
Denial of problems

Compensation and Remediation

Create a transition plan to emphasize areas of giftedness as well as needs for remediation
when students are moving from one school level to another.
Develop strategies which nurture the students potential.
Identify learning gaps and provide explicit instruction.
A case manager who is responsible for facilitating communication between counselors,
special educators, gifted educators, and general educators; facilitates collaboration to plan

32

Fall2009

curriculum modifications and connect students with resources and technology tools to
compensate for weaknesses.
Provide course options that ease course load and accelerate strength areas such as summer
school and Internet courses.
Teach and encourage students to use compensation strategies such as talking to professors,
using other students notes to supplement their own, taking fewer classes, taking advantage
of extended time for testing, listening to books on tape, and utilizing technology to
compensate for weaknesses.

Social and Emotional Support

Twice-exceptional students should receive counseling do develop self-esteem and high selfefficacy.
These students need many opportunities to exercise their areas of high ability.
They need supportive adults at home and at school.
Twice-exceptional students should enhance their capacity to cope with mixed abilities.

EXPLANATION OF RESEARCH GAINS FOR THESE STRATEGIES


Appropriate Identification
Many gifted students with learning disabilities appear to be average students because their
giftedness and disability merge. Because of this, 41% of gifted students with disabilities are
not diagnosed until college (McEachern & Barnot, 2001).
IQ tests may not be sensitive enough to determine significant discrepancies between subtest
scores, particularly for gifted populations (Kavale & Forness, 1984).
Compensation and Remediation

Twice-exceptional students are particularly vulnerable during transitions from one level of
education to the next. One program in New Mexico found success with a plan designed to
follow students from elementary through high school ( Nielsen, Higgins, Wilkinson, & Wiest
Webb, 1994)
A study of twice-exceptional students who were successful in college found that all of the
students in the study used compensation strategies. They were also willing to work harder
than their peers to obtain the same level of results (Reis & Neu, 1994).

Social and Emotional Support

In a study of the resiliency and risk factors of twice-exceptional students it was found that they
are at great risk for poor self-concept, poor self-efficacy, hypersensitivity, emotionality, high
levels of frustration, anxiety, and self-criticism.
The students who were more successful had good self-esteem and high self-efficacy. Those
who had supportive adults also were more successful students. (Dole, 2000)

Fall2009
33

Classroom Implementation
Teachers need to be very perceptive in recognizing contradictory high abilities and disabilities so that
students may be identified and receive compensation, remediation, acceleration and modifications.
Because each student who is twice-exceptional has a unique set of abilities and disabilities, the
specific strategies used in the classroom will vary from student to student.

34

Fall2009

Characteristics of Advanced Learners

During a childs first five or six years some of the most commonly exhibited characteristics
are:

extraordinary vocabulary at an early age;


varying sleep patterns and needs, often beginning in infancy;
exceptional understanding of complex or abstract ideas;
precocity in math and language tasks knowledge and behaviors that are not taught or
coached, but surface on their own;
advanced sense of humor and understanding of jokes and puns;
heightened sensitivity to feelings and ideas; and/or
amazing curiosity questioning and touching almost everything (it seems!).

General Intelligence

Recalls facts easily


Is very well informed about one or more topics
Shows keen insight into cause-effect relationships
Has exceptional ability to solve problems
Has phenomenal memory

Intelligence in a Specific Academic Area

Exhibits extended attention in math, science and/or humanities


Displays a passion for a topic of interest
Makes independent contact with or carries on correspondence with experts in the field
Puts extensive efforts into a project - time is of no consequence
Manages to change a topic under discussion to the discipline of his/her interest (e.g., a
discussion on todays weather soon becomes focused on meteorology or global warming)

Creativity

Possesses strong visual thinking or imaginative skills


Transfers ideas and solutions to unique situations
Prefers variety and novelty and an individual way of solving problems
Asks many and unusual questions
Often has several projects going at once
Resists external controls, tests and challenges limits

Leadership

Relates to and motivates other people


Organizes others for activities
Demonstrates high levels of self-assurance when making decisions or convincing peers
Sees problems from many perspectives
Listens to and respects the opinions of others (or listens to, and debates the opinions of
others)

Fall2009
35

Visual/Performing Arts

Shows very high ability in the visual arts, i.e., painting, sculpting, and/or arranging media in a
unique way
Possesses unusual ability to create, perform, or describe music
Possesses unusual talent in drama or dance
Uses aRtIstic ability to express or evoke feelings
Persists with an artistic vision

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Glossary of RtI/Gifted Terms

504 Act: Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended by the Americans with Disabilities
Act Amendments Act of 2008 (ADAAA) states that a student is eligible for accommodations under
Section 504 if the student has a mental or physical impairment that substantially limits one or more of
the students major life activities that impacts education.
Ability or Achievement Grouping: Children of high ability or with high achievement levels are put
into a separate group for differentiating their instruction. Can be full or part-time, permanent or flexible
sorting.
Accelerated Pace of Presentation: Substantial increase in tempo of content presentation and
acquisition.
Acceleration: Interventions that move a student through an educational program at a faster than
normal rate.
Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate Courses: Provision of course with advanced
or accelerated content at the secondary school level, affording student opportunity to test out of or
be given credit for completion of college-level course work.
Cluster Grouping: Identify and place top five to eight high ability students in the same grade level in
one class with a teacher who likes them, is trained to work with them, and devotes proportional class
time to differentiating for them.
Compacted Curriculum/Compacting: Streamlining the regular curriculum to buy time for
enrichment, accelerated content, and independent study. Usually involves pre-assessment or pretest
of what the students have already mastered.
Complex Tasks: Providing multiple-step projects for advanced knowledge and skill acquisition.
Conceptual Discussions: High-level discussions of themes, concepts, generalizations, issues, and
problems, rather than review of facts, terms, and details.
Concurrent Enrollment: Allowing students to attend classes in more than one building level during
the same school year.
Cooperative Learning Groups: Providing grouped activities for the purpose of developing peer
interaction skills and cooperation. May be like or mixed ability groups.
Credit by Examination: Provision of testing programs whereby the student, after successful
completion of a test, will be offered a specified number of course credits. The College Level
Examinations Program (CLEP) is the program widely used at the university level.
Credit for Prior Learning: Allowing students to demonstrate mastery of previously learned material
through some form of assessment; same as testing out.
Cross-Grade/Cross-Age Grouping: Grouping children by their achievement level in a subject area
rather than by grade or age level, also known as multi-age classrooms.
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Differentiated Instruction: A matching of instruction to meet the different needs of learners in a


given classroom by modifying delivery, time, content, process, product, and the learning environment.
One or more of these elements can be modified to provide differentiation.
Early Admission to College: Permitting a student to enter college as a full-time student without
completion of a high school diploma.
Early Content Mastery: Giving students access to knowledge and concepts in a content area
considerably before expected grade- or age-level expectations.
Early Entrance to School: Allowing selected gifted children showing readiness to perform
schoolwork to enter kindergarten or first grade one to two years earlier than the usual beginning age.
Evaluation: Summarizing assessment results, then making decisions based on these results.
Evidence-Based Instruction (EBI): Refers to empirical research that applies rigorous, systematic,
and objective procedures to obtain valid knowledge. This includes research that: employs systematic,
empirical methods that draw on observation or experiment; has been accepted by a peer-reviewed
journal or approved by a panel of independent experts through a comparably rigorous, objective and
scientific review; involves rigorous data analyses that are adequate to test the stated hypotheses and
justify the general conclusions drawn; relies on measurements or observational methods that provide
valid data across evaluators and observers and across multiple measurements and observations; and
can be generalized.
Flexible Project Deadlines: Occasional renegotiation of when projects or assignments will be due,
especially when high quality work has already been shown.
Flexible Service Delivery: Describes the prescriptive, focused, research-based interventions
provided to students by any trained or skilled staff member, regardless of the childs special or
general education categorization or the educators special or general education job description.
Flexible Tasks: Allowing students to structure their own projects and investigations according to their
strengths and interests.
Full-Time Ability Grouping: Sorting students, usually once a year, by ability level and then
scheduling all of their academic (sometimes nonacademic) classes together.
Grade Telescoping (Rapid Progress): Shortening the time of progressing through a school level,
such as middle, junior or senior high by one year, while still covering all curricula.
Grade-Skipping: Double promoting a student such that he/she bypasses one or more grade levels.
Higher-order Thinking Skills: Questioning in discussions or providing activities based on processing
that require analysis, synthesis, valuation, or other critical thinking skills.
Implicit Instruction: An instructional ideology that assumes that students are naturally active learners
who construct new personalized knowledge through linking prior knowledge and new knowledge. In
implicit instruction, the teacher guides students only as much as is necessary for them to build their
own understanding. Scaffolding, or teacher support through questioning and explaining, is provided
only as needed.

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Independent Study Projects: Structured projects agreed upon by student and supervising teacher
that allows a student to individually investigate areas of high interest or to advance knowledge.
Individual Education Plan (IEP): A written statement for a student with a disability that is developed,
reviewed and revised in accordance with the state of Administrative Rules of Montana (ARM) and
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) 2004 Part B.
Individual Educational/Learning Plans (IEP or ILP or EP): Provision of formal written plan for
managing and delivering the curricula for a child with extraordinary differences in ability or
educational needs.
Individualized Benchmark Setting: Working with an individual student to set performance
outcomes for the students next product or performance.
Instructional Intervention: Explicit and systematic instruction delivered by highly skilled teachers
tailored to meet the identified needs of struggling learners. This instruction is delivered in small
groups.
Intense Intervention: Explicit and systematic instruction delivered by highly skilled teacher
specialists. This instruction is targeted and tailored to meet the needs of struggling learners in small
groups or one-on-one with increased opportunities for practice and teacher feedback.
Intervention: Provided by general and special educators, based on training, not title. Designed to
help a student improve performance relative to a specific, realistic and measurable goal.
Interventions are based upon valid information about present levels of performance relative to gradelevel expectations, realistic implementation with fidelity, and may include modifications and
accommodations. Interventions are multi-tiered, research-based, target-specific skills, time limited
and parent inclusive.
Learning Contracts: Student and teacher jointly develop a contract for accomplishment of learning
outcomes(s); often involves a streamlining of regular class work.
Like-Ability Cooperative Learning: Organizing groups of learners in three-to-four member teams of
like ability and adjusting the group task accordingly.
Magnet School: Provision of a separate school focused on a specific subject area or areas (arts,
math, etc.) or on a specific group of students (academically gifted or mathematically talented) with
students gifted in that area.
Mentoring: Establishment of one-to-one relationship between student and outside-of-school expert in
a specific topic area or career.
Modifications (Assessments): Changes in the test or assessment conditions that fundamentally
alter the test score interpretation and comparability. Providing a student with a modification during a
state accountability assessment constitutes a test irregularity because it invalidates the students test
score.
Multi-Grade/Multi-Age Classes: Combining two or three grade levels into one classroom and
placing the brightest children as the youngest children in the class.
Multisensory: Simultaneously engaging the visual, auditory and kinesthetic modalities.

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Multi-tiered Intervention: Provides different levels of intensity (core, strategic, intensive) based upon
student response to instruction/intervention and with ongoing progress monitoring and focused
assessment.
Non-Graded Classes: Placing learners in a classroom without regard to age or grade and allowing
them to work through the materials at a pace and level appropriate to their individual ability and
motivational levels.
One-on-One Tutoring/Mentoring: Placing a gifted student with a personal instructor who will offer
curriculum at the appropriate level and pace.
Parent-School Partnerships: When parents and school staff collaborate for school success. In the
RtI process at Tier 1, all parents are notified and encouraged to ask questions about the change in
school procedures to effectively challenge students in the learning process. Parents are included in
data collection and decision making through participation in the Student RtI Team. There is
collaboration to develop effective intervention and practice opportunities for school and home.
Partial Day/Send-Out Grouping: Removal of gifted children from a regular classroom for a specified
period of time each day or week to work with a trained specialist on differentiated curriculum.
Personal Goal Setting: Teaching students to identify personal goals and how to prioritize time and
activities to reach those goals.
Positive Behavioral and Intervention Supports (PBIS): A system of tiered preventative and
remedial programs, activities and interventions that provide a positive school climate and support
student social/behavioral success.
Problem: A problem in the problem-solving process is defined as the difference between
grade/age-level expectations and student present level of performance (PLOP). The difference
between these two numbers describes the nature and extent of the problem and serves as a guide
for goal setting and intervention decisions. An example of a problem is a grade-level expectation in
Grade 2 for a minimum oral reading fluency (ORF) rate in the fall of 23 correct words per minute
(CWPM); a Grade 2 student ORF score of 10 CWPM; the problem is the difference between 23 and
10, or 13 CWPM."
Problem-Based Learning: Providing students with unstructured problems or situations for which
they must discover the answers, solutions, concepts, or draw conclusions and generalizations.
Problem-Solving Skills Training: Providing students with problem-solving strategies matched to
differing problem types.
Problem-Solving: A process that uses assessment data to identify the problem, analyze why the
problem is occurring, develop and implement an intervention/instructional plan, and evaluate
outcomes. The RtI Teams use problem solving to evaluate student learning and instructional
effectiveness at both the system/school level as well as at the student level.
Progress Monitoring: The ongoing process of collecting and analyzing assessment data to
determine student progress toward specific skill goals or general outcomes. At Tier 2 and Tier 3,
progress monitoring data is used to make instructional decisions about the effectiveness of

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intervention to accelerate student learning that increases the learning rate and enables the student to
meet a specific goal designed to meet at least minimum proficiency levels.
Regrouping by Performance Level for Specific Subject Instruction: A form of grouping, usually
sorted for once a year that delivers appropriately differentiated curriculum to students at a specific
ability or achievement level.
Research-based: Interchangeable term with evidence-based."
Scaffolding: Support given to assist students in learning a skill through explicit instruction, modeling,
questioning and feedback, etc., to ensure student performance. Scaffolding should gradually be
withdrawn as students become more independent of teacher support.
School for the Gifted: Provision of a separate school with admission requirements that students be
identified or certified as gifted.
School-within-a-School: Gifted students are placed in self-contained classes at every grade level in
an otherwise heterogeneous school.
Secondary: Tier 2 intervention level in a Positive Behavioral and Intervention Support (PBIS) system
that is delivered to the students in need of additional training and supports for behavioral success.
These are often delivered in a small group of students with similar training and support needs.
Service Learning Projects: Provision of academic credit for student volunteer work on community
and welfare projects.
Single-Subject Acceleration: Allowing students to move more quickly through the progression of
skills and content mastery in one subject where great advancement or proficiency has been
observed; other subjects may be at grade level.
Skill: Something a student knows how to do expertly and automatically. Basic skills of reading,
written expression and math are critical life skills.
Special Education: Special education is specially designed instruction, at no cost to the parents, to
meet the unique needs of a student with a disability, including instruction conducted in the classroom,
in the home, in hospitals and institutions and in other settings; and instruction in physical education.
The term includes speech-language pathology services and may include other related services, travel
training and applied technology education, if they meet the definition of special education.
Strategy: A conscious use of a specific, evidence-based method.
Supplemental Intervention: An addition to Tier 1 classroom instruction targeted to meet specific
needs of students in one or more of the five critical elements of reading instruction.
Supplemental Materials: Materials that are aligned to and support the core instructional program.
Systematic Instruction: A carefully planned sequence for targeted instruction.
Talent Development: Provision of experiences for an individual student with demonstrated high
performance or potential in a specific area either through individual work or with a group of students
with like talent.
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Talent Search Programs: Provision of highly challenging, accelerated learning experiences, usually
on a college campus in a specific talent area (math, writing) for highly talented students.
Talent/Ability Grouping: Grouping students of like ability or like interest on a regular basis during
the school day for pursuit of advanced knowledge in a specific content area.
Targeted: Focused instruction on an identified skill.
Team Members (IEP): special education teacher, parent, student when appropriate, person to
interpret data and others as needed.
Telescoping of Learning Time: Any technique that shortens the amount of time a student is
provided to acquire content and skills, i.e., rapid progress, acceleration, compacting, tempo; can be
subject specific or across a grade level.
Tertiary: Tier 3 intervention level in a Positive Behavioral and Intervention Support (PBIS) system
that is delivered to the few students in need of very specific, unique and intensive supports for
success. These are often part of a Behavioral Intervention Plan (BIP) that is the result of a Functional
Behavioral Assessment (FBA) evaluation.
Tier 1 Intervention: Tier 1 interventions are actually preventative programs that are provided to all
students in a classroom, school, district or rural educational cooperative, regardless of individual
needs. Examples include: Bully-proofing," Character Education," Evidence-based core curriculum
and instructional practices, and Guided Reading."
Tier 2 Intervention: Tier 2 intervention is strategic and targeted intervention that is implemented as a
result of assessment that indicates a student is not making adequate gains from Tier 1
instruction/programs. Tier 2 intervention is typically delivered in small groups of students with similar
skill concerns. Examples include Sound Partners," Read Well," social skills training and Knowing
Mathematics."
Tier 3 Intervention: Tier 3 interventions are for students who require highly individualized,
systematic, and explicit instruction to accelerate learning rate and/or to support learning. Intervention
is considered to be intensive and is typically delivered one-on-one or in very small groups of
students(2-3) with similar skill needs.
Tutoring: Additional practice for struggling students provided by trained individuals. Tutoring does
not serve as an intervention. Tutoring may also be conducted between peers, either within grade, or
cross-grade peer tutoring.
Universal: Tier 1 preventative programs, services, activities in a Positive Behavioral and Intervention
Support (PBIS) system that is school-wide and delivered to all students and staff in the school
building.
Within-Class Ability/Performance Grouping: Sorting of students, topic-by-topic or subject-bysubject within one classroom for the provision of differentiated learning for each group.

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Resources

http://www.mtagate.org/
Montana AGATE, state Association for Gifted and Talented Education
http://www.gifted.uconn.edu/
Neag Center for Gifted Education and Talent Development, The National Center for the Gifted and
Talented (NRC/GT). TONS of free information and research as well as connections to other
resources
http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/
Hoagies gifted education page for all things gifted Inclusive information about Gifted kids, great for
parents and educators
http://www.nagc.org/
National Association for Gifted Children, inclusive
http://www.nagc.org/index.aspx?id=1069
Information about The Parallel Curriculum, a curriculum design model to develop high potential and
challenge high-ability students. Free professional development materials.
http://www.sengifted.org/
Supporting the Emotional Needs of Gifted Children
http://www.gt-cybersource.org/?NavID=0_1
Davison Institutes gateway to information and resources for and about gifted children, great clearing
house of information on GT
http://www.apa.org/ed/cgepweblinks.html
American Psychological Associations center for gifted education policy, great links to other
information on GT
http://cfge.wm.edu/
College of William and Marys Center for Gifted Education, includes curriculum for GT students
http://www.whitworth.edu/Academic/Department/Education/Gifted/Index.htm
Whitworth University (Spokane, Washington) Gifted Education Department
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http://www.coe.uga.edu/gctweb/index.html
University of Georgias Gifted Education home page
http://www.cec.sped.org
Council for Exceptional Childrentwice-exceptional
http://www.eric.ed.gov/
Education Research Information Clearinghouse
http://www.ascd.org/
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, great information about curriculum and
differentiation, includes online courses
http://www.opi.state.mt.us/
Montana Office of Public Instruction, use pull down menu (Programs and Services of OPI) in upper
right, scroll down to Gifted and Talented Grant Program
http://www.cde.state.co.us/gt/
Colorado Dept. of Education Gifted Web site. They have done a lot of good work with RtI and GT,
including these documents:
http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdesped/download/pdf/slThinkingPoints_RtIGT.pdf
http://www.cde.state.co.us/gt/download/pdf/TwiceExceptionalResourceHandbook.pdf

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ProgramsforGiftedandTalentedStudents

http://www.gifted.uconn.edu/mentor/
University of Connecticut summer program for talented kids
http://www.ctd.northwestern.edu/
Center for Talent Development at Northwestern University
http://www.davidsongifted.org/?NavID=0_2
The Davidson Institute for Talent Development
http://www.tip.duke.edu/
Duke University Talent Identification Program
http://epgy.stanford.edu/
Stanford Universitys program for Gifted Youth
http://cty.jhu.edu/
Johns Hopkins University, Center for Talented Youth
http://www.carroll.edu/academics/gifted/index.cc
Carroll College Gifted Institute
http://www.giftedstudy.com/
Summer Institute for the Gifted
http://www.renzullilearning.com/default.aspx
Online resources for Gifted Children
http://www.gifted.uconn.edu/projectm3/
Mentoring Mathematical Minds
http://www.du.edu/city/about/index.html
Center for Innovative and Talented Youth, University of Denver.

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http://www.du.edu/city/programs/academic-year-programs/rocky-mountain-talent-search.html
Rocky Mountain Academic Talent Search, valuable assessment information by taking an above-level
test, information about special summer programs for high-ability students and the opportunity to
qualify for summer programs at the University of Denver and other universities throughout the United
States
http://www.nationalhistoryday.org/
National History Day is an annual contest that engages students in historical research using primary
documents.
http://www.renlearn.com/am/
Accelerated Math helps create differentiated instruction to meet individual student need.
http://www.odysseyofthemind.com/
Odyssey of the Mind, is an international educational program that provides creative problem-solving
opportunities for students from kindergarten through college. Team members apply their creativity to
solve problems that range from building mechanical devices to presenting their own interpretation of
literary classics. They then bring their solutions to competition on the local, state, and world level.
http://www.moems.org/
Math Olympiad, math contests for 4th--8th graders
http://soinc.org/
Science Olympiad, one of the premiere science competitions in the nation, provides rigorous,
standards-based challenges to more than 530 teams in 48 states.
http://firstlegoleague.org/community/default.aspx
First Lego League (FLL) introduces children around the world to the fun and experience of solving
real-world problems by applying math, science and technology.

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AppendixA
FromColoradoDepartmentofEducationLearningContract
Strategy

GradeLevel

Subject

PreparedByName
District
Telephone
EMailAddress
Concept

ContentStandard

Benchmark
Know:
Understand:
Do:
Assessment(Demonstrationofthelearning)

LessonDuration

____day/s

PreAssessment

Alternative Lesson or assignment for students passing the pretest


(Donotrecordhereforthepurposeofthiscontribution.)

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Materials(Appropriateforreadinessofadvancedlearners)

Introduction

Instruction,StudentGroupingsActivitiesEngagement

AssessmentRubric:Product/Performance

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AppendixB

THE DOs AND DON'Ts OF INSTRUCTION:


What It Means To Teach Gifted Learners Well
by Carol Ann Tomlinson, Ed.D, The University of Virginia

Some people suggest that gifted education is just sort of "fluffy" or enriching-gravy on the potatoes,
perhaps, but not anything especially substantial or critical in the way of mental fare. Others propose
that all gifted education is what's good for all students. Unfortunately, those two criticisms sometimes
stem from observing classrooms where gifted learners are taught inappropriately.
So what does it mean to teach a highly able student well? Of course it will vary some with the age of
the child, the subject, the learning style of the student-and possibly even the child's gender or culture.
Certainly appropriate instruction for such learners varies for a child who comes to school rich with
experiences vs. a child who is equally able but lacks richness of experience. And it will vary with a
child who has immense potential versus a peer with somewhat less capacity. Nonetheless, there are
general indicators of appropriate curriculum and instruction for highly able students (in their areas of
strength), and general indicators of inappropriate curriculum and instruction for such learners.
Good Instruction for Gifted Learners
1) Good curriculum and instruction for gifted learners begins with good curriculum and
instruction. It's difficult, if not impossible, to develop the talent of a highly able student with insipid
curriculum and instruction. Like all students, gifted learners need learning experiences that are rich.
That is, they need learning experiences that are organized by key concepts and principles of a
discipline rather than by facts. They need content that is relevant to their lives, activities that cause
them to process important ideas at a high level, and products that cause them to grapple with
meaningful problems and pose defensible solutions. They need classrooms that are respectful to
them, provide both structure and choice, and help them achieve more than they thought they could.
These are needs shared by all learners, not just those who are gifted. Good instruction for gifted
learners must begin there.
2) Good teaching for gifted learners is paced in response to the student's individual needs.
Often, highly able students learn more quickly than others their age. As a result, they typically need a
more rapid instructional pace than do many of their peers. Educators sometimes call that
"acceleration," which makes the pace sound risky. For many gifted learners, however, the
comfortable pace-like walking "quickly" suits someone with very long legs. It's only "fast" for someone
with shorter legs. On the other hand, it's often the case that advanced learners need a slower pace of
instruction than many other students their age, so they can achieve a depth or breadth of
understanding needed to satisfy a big appetite for knowing.
3) Good teaching for gifted learners happens at a higher "degree of difficulty" than for many
students their age. In the Olympics, the most accomplished divers perform dives that have a higher
"degree of difficulty" than those performed by divers whose talents are not as advanced. A greater
degree of difficulty calls on more skills, more refined skills, applied at a higher plane of sophistication.
A high "degree of difficulty" for gifted learners in their talent areas implies that their content,
processes and products should be more complex, more abstract, more open-ended, more
multifaceted than would be appropriate for many peers. They should work with fuzzier problems, will
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often need less teacher-imposed structure, and (in comparison to the norm) should have to make
greater leaps of insight and transfer than would be appropriate for many their age. Gifted learners
may also (but not always) be able to function with a greater degree of independence than their peers.
4) Good teaching for gifted learners requires an understanding of "supported risk." Highly able
learners often make very good grades with relative ease for a long time in school. They see
themselves (and often rightly so) as expected to make "A's," get right answers and lead the way. In
other words, they succeed without "normal" encounters with failure. Then, when a teacher presents a
high-challenge task, the student feels threatened. Not only has he or she likely not learned to study
hard, take risks and strive, but the student's image is threatened as well. A good teacher of gifted
students understands that dynamic, and thus invites, cajoles and insists on risk but in a way that
supports success. When a good gymnastics coach asks a talented young gymnast to learn a risky
new move, the coach ensures that the young person has the requisite skills, then practices the move
in harness for a time. Then the coach "spots" for the young athlete. Effective teachers of gifted
learners do likewise.

Inappropriate Instruction for Gifted Learners


1) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when it asks them to do things they already know
how to do, and then to wait for others to learn how. Many advanced learners regularly complete
assignments calling on materials, ideas and skills they have already mastered. Then they wait for
peers to catch up, rather than being pre-assessed and assigned more advanced materials, ideas and
skills when they demonstrate competency.
2) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when it asks them to do "more of the same stuff
faster." Reading more books that are too easy and doing more math problems that have ceased
being a challenge are killers of motivation and interest.
3) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when it cuts them loose from peers and the teacher
for long periods of time. Asking a highly able student to sit at a desk in the back of the room and
move through the math book alone ignores a child's need for affiliation, and overlooks the fact that a
teacher should be a crucial factor in all children's learning. It also violates the importance of
meaningful peer interaction in the learning process, as well as in the process of social and emotional
development.
4) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when it is structured around "filling time." Highly able
students are often asked to go write a play, complete a puzzle, or do classroom chores because they
have completed required tasks that take others longer. It would be difficult to defend such practices
as a high-quality use of educational time.
5) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when they spend substantial time in the role of tutor
or "junior teacher." All students need to be colleagues for one another, giving a hand or clarifying
procedures when needed. That's quite different from when advanced learners spend chunks of time
on a regular basis teaching what they already know to students who are having difficulty. Some
educators suggest that doesn't harm highly able learners because their test scores remain high. That
begs the question of the extended learning these students might have garnered had the same
amount of time been spent in pursuit of well-planned new ideas and skills.

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6) Instruction for gifted learners is inappropriate when it is rooted in novel, "enriching" or piecemeal
learning experiences. If a child were a very talented pianist, we would question the quality of her
music teacher if the child regularly made toy pianos, read stories about peculiar happenings in the
music world and did word-search puzzles on the names of musicians. Rather, we would expect the
student to work directly with the theory and performance of music in a variety of forms and at
consistently escalating levels of complexity. We would expect the young pianist to be learning how a
musician thinks and works, and to be developing a clear sense of her own movement toward expertlevel performance in piano. Completing word-search puzzles, building musical instruments and
reading about oddities in the lives of composers may be novel, may be "enriching," (and certainly
seems lacking in coherent scope and sequence, and therefore sounds piecemeal). Those things will
not foster high-level talent development in music. The same hold true for math, history, science and
so on.
It's Actually Simple-In Theory
What it takes to teach gifted learners well is actually a little common sense. It begins with the premise
that each child should come to school to stretch and grow daily. It includes the expectation that the
measure of progress and growth is competition with oneself rather than competition against others. It
resides in the notion that educators understand key concepts, principles and skills of subject
domains, and present those in ways that cause highly able students to wonder and grasp and extend
their reach. And it envisions schooling as an escalator on which students continually progress, rather
than a series of stairs, with landings on which advanced learners consistently wait.
It's not so hard to articulate. It's fiendishly difficult to achieve in schools where standardization is the
norm, and where teachers are supported in being recipe followers, rather than flexible and reflective
artisans. In schools where responsive instruction is a carefully supported indicator of professional
growth, the capacity to extend even the most capable mind is a benchmark of success.

This article reprinted from the May 1997 issue of Instructional Leader, with permission from the Texas
Elementary Principals and Supervisors Association.

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AppendixC
Research Support for Acceleration, From the Acceleration Work Group,
Council of State of Directors Programs for the Gifted
As an educational intervention, acceleration is decidedly effective for high ability students. The
research support for acceleration that has accumulated over many decades is robust and consistent.
The research allows us to confidently state that carefully planned acceleration decisions are
successful.
Both grade-based and content-based acceleration are effective interventions in academic and socialemotional domains for high-ability students. Grade-accelerated students generally outperform their
chronologically older classmates academically, and both groups show approximately equal levels of
social and emotional adjustment (cf., Assouline et. al., 2003; Colangelo et. al., 2004; Kulik, 2004;
Kulik & Kulik, 1992; Lipscomb, 2003; Sayler & Brookshire, 1993; Southern & Jones, 1991). To be
clear, there is no evidence that acceleration has a negative effect on a students social-emotional
development.
Some educators are reluctant to accelerate a student because they are concerned about long-term
outcomes. However, longitudinal research has demonstrated that accelerants attain advanced
degrees, produce scholarly works and contribute professionally at rates well above societal baselines
(Lubinski et. al., 2001, 2006). In follow-up interviews, the students indicated they wished they would
have had more acceleration opportunities while in the K-12 setting (Lubinski et. al., 2001, 2006).
The review of acceleration research presented in A Nation Deceived (Colangelo et al., 2004) provides
the necessary supporting evidence for our recommendations for developing an acceleration policy.
For more information about acceleration research, visit IRPAs Web site at
http://www.accelerationinstitute.org.

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