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Welcome to the Intermediate Enrichment
Program
Our program for gifted students currently follows a pull out
model, as is common at the elementary level. Students’
enrichment schedules are developed in collaboration with
classroom teachers. Missed classroom work is made up
according to each teacher’s discretion.
The overall goals of the program are to encourage higher
level thinking skills and creative thinking, and to provide
some measure of both acceleration and enrichment through
small group and individualized instruction. The small group
structure is a key element of the program, as it promotes
both instructional flexibility and the development of
cooperative skills among students.
Math activities have included word problems, logic grid
problems, logic “mind benders,” graphing, Math games such as
“24” and “Set,” and participation in the Continental Math
League math problem contests at various grade levels.
Problem solving can also consist of a general question, such
as “How many sneakers can fit in the Enrichment classroom?”
or of “lateral brain teasers,” visual puzzles, etc. The goal
is to challenge students by enhancing and extending their
mathematical skills.
Language Arts can encompass a wide variety of activities
involving reading, speaking and writing. There is an
emphasis on creative writing, which includes stories, poems,
essays and book reports. Lessons can also include analogies,
vocabulary development, and group discussion of both Junior
Great Books stories, and students’ individualized reading.
Students have also worked on group projects such as
“newspapers” and “magazines,” and yearbooks for their
homeroom classes. Students have also conducted debates,
written and acted in plays and skits, done readers’ theater,
and given oral presentations in their own and other
classrooms. The goal is to further develop student
communication skills.
Science and Social Studies extension activities are tied to
both the curriculum and individual student interests. Areas
that have been emphasized include U.S. and world geography
and history, current events, space and ecology. Students
typically choose a topic, do research and write reports, and
given oral presentations on their projects. Fourth and Fifth
grade students discuss current events, and participate in
the quarterly National Current Events Meet. Fifth grade
students also work in small teams twice a year to play the
Stock Market Game, a national Internet contest that
simulates the buying and selling of stock over a ten-week
period. We have a great track record, despite the current
state of the market!
Enrichment students use computers extensively and
enthusiastically. Students use computers for writing and
graphics, develop Power Point presentations, and hone their
research skills through supervised use of the Internet.
Integration of the gifted program with the regular
curriculum has consisted of collaboration with classroom
teachers on the individual needs of their gifted and/or high
achieving students, and extension of areas covered in the
curriculum. For example, to complement third grade “animal
reports,” enrichment students have researched endangered or
extinct species, and to extend the fourth grade study of the
U.S. Southwest, students each researched particular
Southwestern states. In addition, students have worked on
writing projects that they shared with their homeroom
classes.
Students also develop their presentation skills by
presenting their enrichment projects in other classrooms,
often those with younger students. Enrichment groups have
also worked on specific enrichment projects as part of their
classroom requirements, such as writing a play to dramatize
the fourth grade’s “Farmer Boy,” or portraying the lives of
famous people when their class worked on a unit on
biographies.
Integration with the regular curriculum has also consisted,
at times, of providing challenging materials to classroom
teachers, or of conducting in-class and/or pullout Math
enrichment for combined gifted/high achieving groups.
Further ongoing integration of the gifted program with the
regular curriculum is expected. For example, this year most
students will work on quarterly Science or Social Studies
extension projects, based on the unit being studied in their
classroom.
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ALA |
| American
Library Association - Resources for Parents,
Teens and Kids |
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ERIC |
| Education
Research Information Clearinghouse on
Disabilities and Gifted Education - a good
source for current research information |
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Hoagies Gifted Educational Page |
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an excellent website, with sections for
parents, educators and kids: theories,
standards, activities, contests, and other
interesting links |
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NAGC |
| National
Association for Gifted Children |
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