Pender McKeel AIG Review

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    P O W E R P O I N T P R E S E N T A T I O N B Y :

    C H R I S T I N E M C K E E L

    &

    L A T O N Y A P E N D E R

    AIG REVIEW

    forJohnston County, NC

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    1. How is a child nominated for the gifted program in elementary, middleand high school in Johnston county?

    Steps for nomination, referral, identification and placement are as follows:

    y The AIG program accepts nominations at any time.

    y The Site Review Team (SRT) will review nominations of transfers, along with returning fourth andfifth grade students following the first six weeks. The Central Review Team (CRT) will review thirdgrade students following the receipt of system testing results.

    y Information on candidate is gathered from the following indicators: grades, performance data,teacher and/or parent observation (as specified), and standardized testing history if available.

    y The SRT reviews the information and makes a recommendation to refer or not to refer.

    y The SRT provides information for candidates, referred and not referred, to the Gifted ProgramSpecialists (GPS).

    y If a referred candidate requires testing, the GPS sends home permission to test form and a copy ofthe parents rights.

    y GPS file information for candidates not referred for one year.y GPS gathers remaining information from the indicators on candidates and presents the candidate

    to the CRT for an identification decision.

    y The CRT makes a decision for identification based on the indicator information.

    y The CRT places Identified candidates into a service option.

    y GPS file Non-identified candidates information for one year.

    y The AIG lead teacher informs parents and teachers of CRT decisions for all candidates.

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    2. What are the legal guidelines and provisions regarding the gifted program inyour county?

    Johnston County Schools adheres to the Legal Guidelines and Provisions of theState of North Carolina.

    Article 9B, Academically or Intellectually Gifted Students [N.C.G.S. 115C-150.5-.8 (Article 9B)]provides a state definition for Academically or IntellectuallyGifted (AIG) students and requires local education agencies (LEA) to develop

    three year AIG local plans with specific components, to be approved by localschool boards and subsequently sent to the State Board of Education andDepartment of Public Instruction (DPI) for review and comment. Article 9B isthe current legislation mandating identification and services for giftededucation K-12.

    Each LEA determines how to identify and serve its own AIG student population.

    This honors local context and supports each LEA to do what is best for its ownAIG student population. LEAs must adhere to state legislation, which guidesLEAs and defines academically or intellectually gifted students (see below), andwill also use the NC AIG Program.

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    3. List and describe the assessment process for identification for gifted children atthe elementary level.

    Present: Johnston County Schools employs multiple criteria for student identification, including measures that reveal student

    aptitude, student achievement, or potential to achieve in order to develop a comprehensive profile for each student. While the

    review teams take motivation and interest into consideration, they will view these criterions in respect to student observation and

    performance. Johnston County Schools has utilized multiple criteria since Article 9B legislation became legislation. However, the

    system has examined identification data from across the district and noticed the lack of consistency in the usage of this multiple

    criteria by several of the school site teams.

    Current criteria reviewed for placement includes:

    y Observation The classroom teacher must fill out the observation checklist for a nominated candidate. If a parent or other

    person makes the nomination, they too must fill out an observation.

    y Performance Classroom performance information includes current grades, previous years grades, 9 weeks

    assessments, literacy assessments, and portfolio samples of differentiated work.

    y Student aptitude Aptitude refers to the percentile from a nationally normed standardized test.

    y Student achievement Achievement refers to subject area tests percentile for either a state administered end of year

    achievement test or a nationally normed standardized test. All third graders are assessed with the Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT) and

    the Iowa Test of Basic Skills (ITBS) in order to conduct a broad general screening. The Gifted Program Specialists will analyze the test

    data. The Central Review Team will examine other multiple criteria to determine placement. The Central Review Team will review a

    preponderance of evidences of the childs academic and intellectual abilities to determine placement into AIG services.

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    4. List and describe the assessment process for identification for gifted children atthe middle level.

    Nomination, Referral, Identification, and Placement for Grades 6-8:

    Placement into the middle school advanced language arts and into thetop tier of the mathematics sequences requires a review of multipleindicators. The gifted program will identify students who place intothese highest-level courses.The AIG program accepts nominations and follows the grades 3-5process as outlined. The CRT bases identification and placement onservice options matches for middle school.

    Mathematics Placement:Schools will use EVAAS data to determine mathematics placement atthe middle school level. This data system projects using trend data ofall EOGs taken to determine the probability of a students academicsuccess in Algebra 1. The system will use the following guidelines formathematics placement during 2010-2011. As the system gathersadditional data, the scores or percentages may change to bestaccommodate the needs of the students and the schools.

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    List and describe the assessment process for identification for gifted children at the middle level.Continued:

    With the implementation of the revised mathematics placement into middleschool coursework, the gifted program will monitor those students who qualify forthe highest tier of mathematics in order to determine the progress of thesestudents.

    6th Grade Placement*Tier 1 - Pre-Algebra (all of 6th & 7th grade math)Tier 2 - Advanced Math 6Tier 3 - Regular Math 67th Grade Placement**Tier 1 - Algebra 1 (plus 8th grade math)Tier 2 - Advanced Math

    Tier 3 - Regular Math 78th Grade PlacementTier 1 - GeometryTier 2 - Algebra ITier 3 - Advanced Math or Regular Math

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    8. How are the gifted children in your county served at the elementary level?

    Grades K-2y Primary Education Thinking Skills (PETS)y Research-based gifted curriculum models (Williams, Parnes, etc.)y Flexible grouping opportunities for students demonstrating potential in certain

    areas

    Grades 3-5y Primary Education Thinking Skills (PETS) (Grade 3)y Identification of AIG potential through CogAT and ITBS (Grade 3)

    y Jacobs Ladder Higher Level Thinking and Comprehension Skills Program (Grades3-5)

    y Advancement via Individual Determination (AVID) Elementary (Grades 4-5)y Cluster grouping for students who demonstrate high potential based upon

    benchmark assessments, etc.y In-Class/Across Class flexible grouping (student movement based upon current data

    to encourage development of potential)y Duke Fourth and Fifth Grade Talent Search (nurture highest achieving students -

    GPS monitor)

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    5. List and describe the assessment process for identification for gifted children atthe high school level.

    Nomination, Referral, Identification, and Placement for Grades 9-12Johnston County Schools Gifted Education Program has developed the expectationthat all high school students must enroll in honors and advanced placement coursesconsistently at least one per semester. GPS will check schedules at the beginning ofthe school year to verify enrollment in honors/AP courses. If students identified AIG inmiddle school enroll in at least one honors course per semester (two per year), they willretain AIG identification and remain on headcount.

    The Central Review Team will review students who self-select two or more honors/APcourses per year using multiple criteria. Students must enroll in at least one honors/APclass per semester. The Site Review Team will place AIG Identified students who donot maintain this enrollment requirement on probation for one semester with theexpectation they enroll in an honors or Advanced Placement course the followingsemester. If they do not, the program will remove the student from AIG headcount.

    The program will send notification and parents may contact the GPS for furtherinformation. The AIG program will consider gifted identification annually.

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    6. What are the gifted students rights?

    Students/Parents/Guardians Rights:

    y All academically or intellectually gifted students must be provided a freeappropriate public education. Differentiated services will be provided for theacademically or intellectually gifted student (1) at no expense to the parent, (2)according to the guidelines of the North Carolina Department of PublicInstruction and the Johnston County Schools Academically or IntellectuallyGifted Program, and (3) according to the students Differentiated EducationPlan (DEP).

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    What are the rights of parents/guardians of gifted students?

    y Parents have the right to disagree with student nomination, placement, or service options. They must follow theprocedures as outlined:

    1. The parent may request in writing a conference with the AIG Central Review Team.

    2. If the parent still disagrees with the committee decision, he/she may appeal the decision by making a written request tothe Chief Academic Officer within 30 days of the conference with the AIG Central Review Team. The Chief AcademicOfficer and Central Review Team will review the decision of the team and grant a conference within 10 school days of

    the parental request and will respond in writing within 5 days of that conference.3. If the disagreement is not resolved with the Chief Academic Officers decision, the parent may request to have the

    decision reviewed by mediation. The parent may ask the school system to contact the Department of Public Instructionfor a mediator, a person knowledgeable about the area of gifted education. The mediator selected will review thedecision made by the school system and will render a decision within 30 days.

    4. If mediation fails to resolve the disagreement satisfactorily, the parent may file a petition for a contested case hearingunder Article 3 of Chapter 150B of the General Statutes. The hearing will be limited to consideration of (1) whether thelocal school unit improperly failed to identify the student as an academically gifted student or (2) whether the local planhas been implemented appropriately.

    y Informed about AIG referral, screening, identification, and services via letters, brochures, or handbook (Parent guide toAIG program)

    y Informed about the procedures for disagreement

    y Give consent at each stage of the process

    y Option to review documentation as it is available

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    7. Describe terminology related to gifted programs.

    Accelerated A strategy of progressing through education at rates faster or ages younger thanthe norm.

    Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT) - a test of reasoning skills. It is a norm-referenced test andthe national average is 50th percentile. There are three parts to the CogAT: Verbal Battery,Quantitative Battery, and Non-Verbal Battery.

    Differentiated Modifying curriculum and instruction according to content, pacing, and/orproduct to meet unique student needs in the classroom.

    Gifted - persons between the ages of five and twenty-one whose abilities, talents, and potential foraccomplishment are so exceptional or developmentally advanced that they require specialprovisions to meet their educational programming needs. Gifted students include giftedstudents with disabilities (i.e., twice-exceptional) and students with exceptional abilities orpotential from all socio-economic and ethnic, cultural populations.

    Intelligence - The ability to learn, reason, and problem solve. Debate revolves around the natureof intelligence as to whether it is an innate quality or something that is developed as a result ofinteracting with the environment.

    Twice-exceptional - Students who are identified as gifted and talented in one or more areas ofexceptionality and also identified with a disability defined by Federal/State eligibility criteria.

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    Acronyms Relating to Gifted Education

    AIG (Academically Intellectually Gifted): category for students who consistently demonstrate evidence of masteryof the curriculum that is well above grade level in reading/language arts and/or mathematics.

    AP (Advanced Placement): Advanced Placement - A program developed by the College Board where highschools offer courses that meet criteria established by institutions of higher education. In many instances,college credit may be earned with the successful completion of an AP exam in specific content areas.

    DEP (Differentiated Education Plan): outlines the instructional setting where delivery of DEP services will occur,the way curriculum content will be modified, and the specific differentiated instructional strategies that will beused

    DPI (Department of Public Instruction): The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction is the agencycharged with implementing the States public school laws and the State Board of Educations policies andprocedures governing pre-kindergarten through 12th grade public education. The elected State Superintendentof Public Instruction heads the Department and functions under the policy direction of the State Board ofEducation.

    IEP (Individualized Education Plan): A written plan and legal document that states a childs present level offunctioning; specific areas that need special services; annual goals; short term objectives; services to beprovided; and the method of evaluation to be implemented for children 3 to 21 years of age who have beendetermined eligible for special education.

    IQ (Intelligence Quotient): Intelligence Quotient - A numerical representation of intelligence. IQ is derived fromdividing mental age (result from an intelligence test) by the chronological age times 100. Traditionally, anaverage IQ is considered to be 100.

    LEA(Local Education Agency): a school district or county office of education

    NCSCOS (North Carolina Standard Course of Study): identifies the minimum competencies for each grade levelfor the state of North Carolina

    NAGC (National Association for Gifted Children): an association that provides support to gifted children andtheir supporters.

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    9. How are the gifted children in your county served at the middle school level?

    Grades 6-8

    y Subject grouping

    y In-class/Across-class flexible grouping

    y Academic competitions

    y Advancement via Individual Determination (AVID)

    y Duke TIP Seventh Grade Talent Search (nurture

    highest achieving students - GPS monitor)

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    10. How are the gifted in your county served at the high school level?

    Grades 9-12

    y Honors classes

    y Advanced placement classes

    y Academic competitions

    y Advancement via Individual Determination (AVID)

    y Distance learning

    y Summer programs offered by colleges anduniversities

    y North Carolina Governors School