Friday, December 12, 2008

Learning 2.0: A Colorado Conversation

For those of you interested in learning more about some of the amazing things teachers are doing around Web 2.0 technology in Colorado and around the world, Learning 2.0: A Colorado Conversation is an upcoming free conference on Saturday, February 21st (9:00-3:00). Participants can attend either virtually from the comfort of your home or in person at Heritage High School in Littleton.

I attended last year's conference on-site (here are my notes from 2008)and found it cutting edge and useful. I was especially inspired by Anne Smith's work around Socratic fishbowls and live blogging. While the technology in my building could not support live blogging, I was able to modify the Anne's idea with my students who were reading Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson and S.E. Hinton's The Outsiders. You can read more about that work on this page of a wiki that I created in anticipation for my interview for my current position.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Middle school underachievers and some strategies to reverse the habit

I recently had the pleasure of listening to a presentation by Sue Whitnah titled "Intelligence Doesn't Equal Success: Developing Habits of Mind Necessary for Students to Excel" in which she addressed the problem of underachievement in gifted students. As a middle school educator, it came as no surprise to me that a typical underachiever hits rock bottom in the 7th and 8th grades. What was new and interesting to me were some of the pattern indicators which put elementary students at a greater risk of falling into the habit of not excelling in school.

In the early elementary years, a child who is frequently praised for intelligence, finishes work quickly, rarely needs to study, has a great deal of free time, has difficulty losing, and is possibly highly creative could be on the road to underachievement. As he grows older, the student becomes disengaged in his own learning despite the fact that he probably enjoys being the smartest in the class.


While the signs of underachievement tend to vary in different age groups, middle school students may demonstrate the following:

  • Frequently compares self to peers

  • Needs to be the best

  • Has lower grades than in previous years

  • Avoids work

  • Uses excuses such as "I forgot"

  • Is dissatisfied with work products because they do not match the level of sophistication the student might envision

  • Avoids competition unless guaranteed to win

  • Can be manipulative in fear of failure

What then, can we do to help reverse underachievement in gifted students? Whitnah suggests some strategies that educators can employ:

  • Help students develop an intrinsic sense of pleasure in learning by rewarding effort, not abilities; giving genuine, specific praise for progress toward a learning goal; and emphasizing the joy of the learning process.
  • Teach goal-setting skills, both personal and academic, that include prioritizing and self-reflection.
  • Require students to use organizers, but give them choices about which to use.
  • Identify and address individual students’ needs—learning styles, motivational, intellectual, social-emotional—and seek ways to connect these needs to learning tasks.
  • Tap into strengths, but continue to work on weaknesses.
    Share own and others’ stories about overcoming weaknesses, limitations, and disadvantages.
  • Encourage risk-taking. Many gifted students are perfectionists, and dealing with competition is stressful. Pretending to not care becomes a habit to combat the stress of not being the best. Try to convey messages such as the following: Everyone fails from time-to-time. Failure is only a minor setback that teaches us how to grow. Keep a sense of humor. Be gentle on yourself.

Sue has a great list of reading resources to share with parents:
G/T Parent Resources: Encouraging Children to Excel

She also recommends the following readings and resources to help combat underachievement:


Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades (Rimm, 1995)

Encouraging Achievement (Coil, 1999) -- You can see the reporoducables HERE.

Becoming an Achiever: A Student Guide (Coil, 2004)

Discovering & Exploring Habits of Mind (Costa & Kallick, ed, 2001)

"How Not to Talk to Your Kids: The Inverse Power of Praise"

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Users of Schoolwide Enrichment Model Reading

Schoolwide Enrichment Model-Reading is a UConn program based on the Renzulli Enrichment Triad Model that is being implemented by some schools in my district. I am looking for teachers and schools who also use this and are interested in collaboration.

If this is you, please contact me either by leaving a comment or sending me an email.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Curriculum Compacting Online Learning Module

Thanks to the people at the University of Connecticut, the following online learning module about curriculum compacting is a great resource for teachers who would like to learn more on their own time:

Implementing Curriculum Compacting and Type III Studies to Reverse Underachievement

Monday, September 8, 2008

Enrichment 2.0

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: enrichment talented)
Michelle Eckstein will be a presenter at CAGT and NAGT next month.  It will be a pleasure to meet her.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

GT & Technology

A few conversations on Plurk about how gifted students can benefit from technology:

here
here
here