How a School District Proved Gifted Programs Can Be Racially Diverse
Copy Link Albuquerque studentsâ artwork and a poem about volcanoes, displayed at the 2019 National Association for Gifted Children conference.
(Danielle Dreilinger for The Hechinger Report)
April Wells grew up west of Chicago, a bright and avid bookworm in a low-income family. Her district, U-46, had gifted classes, but most of the students in them were white, and no one suggested that Wells, who is Black, might benefit from them.
Until middle school, when a U-46 administrator Wells’ friend’s mother, also Black noticed that April’s grasp exceeded her classes’ reach. She coached Wells on how to talk with her middle school counselor. Wells spoke up for herself and got into honors classes, where she remained through high school.
An Illinois district proved programs for gifted students can be diverse hechingerreport.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hechingerreport.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
a sputnik moment for the united states when we realized that the soviet union was passing us by and we feared it and we made changes. is this our sputnik moment when it comes to educating our kids? i actually do not think so. there s nothing in these results that i think are surprising in the least. we ve known that we have a huge poverty problem in this country. i believe that our child poverty rate is only slightly higher than mexico s. we re a very, very rich country, obviously, but we re also a very, very poor country. and our poor opportunities are just not getting great educations. and this is just further proof of that. jonathan plucker, center for psychology and education policy at indiana university. thanks for your thoughts today. thank you. a wake-up call, you know? it s got to be. well, it s the storm that just won t quit. a northeast college town getting