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<div><font style="background-color: transparent;" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">You made my day, but it is a shame you had to do this. Would you also be labled a helicopter parent?</font></div>
<div>Mary Collier (an older parent)</div>
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<div style="color: black; font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: 10pt;">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: Jane Brewster <JBrewster@brewsterandbrewster.com><br>
To: Ohiogift <Ohiogift@lists.service.ohio-state.edu><br>
Sent: Tue, May 28, 2013 12:09 pm<br>
Subject: Re: [Ohiogift] gifted parents as advocates<br>
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<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>I have never posted before, but this topic is near and dear to my heart. I am
not an educator. I am the parent of several gifted children (and a past school
board member). Parents absolutely MUST step in and advocate for their children,
beginning with the local classroom. My daughter entered kindergarten a year
early and is currently in second grade. During an early conference with a
teacher this year, I was told my daughter was not motivated. She was disruptive
in the classroom and not progressing beyond the beginning second grade reading
level the teacher had given her. I discovered it was the teacher's habit to
make each child read the same book three times. I asked the teacher (okay, I
wasn't that nice) to quit making her read the same thing three times, when she
clearly already understood it, provide her with more challenging work, increase
the difficulty of her spelling assignments, and, in addition to the usual test
for the reading level, allow my daughter to p
rovide a report or project for each book she had read. Amazingly (not really),
she has progressed in her reading level to about the end of the fifth grade.
She and I did some really cool projects at home, too (no help from the teacher).
Sadly, had I not intervened, I believe my daughter would have continued to
disrupt the classroom and refuse to do her work, making it appear that she was
actually BEHIND rather than ahead of the other kids. I will say that the
teacher later indicated to me that she had never had a child like my daughter
and was thankful for the insight I had provided into differentiation in the
classroom.
Jane
Katie and other gifted parents,
Margaret is absolutely right. You must advocate for your son. Talking to your
legislators is crucial. Ann Sheldon and/or the Ohio Association for Gifted
Children website at oagc.com can give you advice. Click on advocacy on the
left, and then advocacy alerts you will see that gifted is once again embroiled
in a fight to have units reinstated so that districts actually have gifted
teachers and gifted coordinators who understand and actually like gifted
students and know how to address their needs. The House had addressed this
issue, but the Senate seems poised to revert to the initial budget which did not
specify exactly how money should be spent for gifted--if at all. Regrettably
most classroom teachers have had zero coursework of any kind on gifted children.
Your representative needs to hear your story.
Good luck to you,
Barb
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