Rti Gifted Talented
Rti Gifted Talented
Rti Gifted Talented
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
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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.
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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
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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.
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TIER 1
COMPONENT
INSTRUCTION
Benchmark screenings, (at least 3 times per year), outcomebased assessments, ongoing program assessment, preassessment, and informal assessment for all students
Curriculum
Instructional
Organization
Instructor
Assessment
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Time
Setting
Support
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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.
Active Engagement
Agendas
Choice
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.
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Compacting
Conceptual Discussions
Extensions
Flexible Assessments
Flexible tasks
Flexible project
deadlines
Grouping
Higher-order thinking
skills
Independent study
Jigsaw/Cooperative
learning
Learning centers or
stations
Learning contracts
Learning programs
Mini-lessons
to
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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
Pre-assessment
Problem-based learning
RAFT
Subject integration
Theme-based units
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
Vary pacing
Vary tasks
Adapted from: The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners, Carol Ann Tomlinson
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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
Cross-graded classes,
cross-age grouping
Like-ability cooperative
learning
Regrouping by
achievement for subject
instruction
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NotesonGroupingStrategiesforGiftedStudents
Giftedstudentstendtomistrustthebenefitsofsmallgrouplearning;
caremustbetakenthatthetasksdemonstratethatthegroupcan"do
better"thantheindividual.
Giftedstudentsperformsignificantlymorehighlywhenthemajority
oftheirtimeinacademiccoreareasisspentintruepeerinteractions.
Giftedstudentsshowapreferenceforselfstructuredtasksandself
imposeddeadlines.
Giftedstudentsshowapreferenceforworkingonprojectsaloneor
withonelikeabilitypeer.
Somegiftedstudentsdonotappreciate,andactuallyresent,being
peertutors.Thisisespeciallytrueiftheyarecalledupontoteach
othersonaregularbasis.
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Tier2:EssentialElementsofInstructionalInterventions
COMPONENTS
Curriculum and
Materials
Instructional
Organization
INSTRUCTION
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Instructor
Assessment
Time
Setting
Support
*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..
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DESCRIPTION
RESEARCH GAINS
Ability grouping
Abstraction
Cluster grouping
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
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Concept-based
programs
Programs
such
as
Mentoring
Mathematical Minds and Accelerated
Math focus on mathematical reasoning,
creativity and conceptual understanding
Cooperative
grouping with likeability learners
Cross-graded
classes
Curriculum
compacting
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Early instruction in
presentation,
research, study
and organizational
skills
Extra-curricular
learning
Goal setting for Early planning and goal setting for post
secondary education
college planning
Honors, Advanced
Placement courses
Method of inquiry
Mentorship
Organization
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Pull-in programs
Above
Real audiences
Real
problems
Regrouping by
achievement for
subject instruction
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.
Specialized
curriculum
programs,
Intentional
academic
programs, groups
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Study of people
Talent
opportunities
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
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Tier3EssentialElementsofInstruction
COMPONENTS
INSTRUCTION
Curriculum and
Materials
Instructional
Organization
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
Time
Setting
Support
Effect size and comments (Third column) from research by Karen B. Rogers and Richard Kimpston.
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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
Wholegrade
skipping
Early
entrance to
school
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Non-graded
Classroom
Curriculum
Compacting
Grade
telescoping
Concurrent
enrollment
AP courses
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Mentorship
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.)
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Distance
learning
Extracurricular
programs
http://www.davidsonacademy.unr.edu/
Acceleration: What we do vs. what we know Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development (ASCD) October 1992
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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.
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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:
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.
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Anger
Self-criticism
Crying
Withdrawal
Daydreaming and fantasy
Apathetic behaviors
Disruptive behaviors
Clowning behaviors
Denial of problems
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
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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.
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.
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).
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)
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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.
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During a childs first five or six years some of the most commonly exhibited characteristics
are:
General Intelligence
Creativity
Leadership
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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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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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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
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Materials(Appropriateforreadinessofadvancedlearners)
Introduction
Instruction,StudentGroupingsActivitiesEngagement
AssessmentRubric:Product/Performance
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AppendixB
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.
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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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