| Gifted & Talented
Advanced Academic Services
Organizations and Resources
National Organizations and
Resources
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American Association for Gifted Children (AAGC)
Nation's oldest advocacy organization for gifted children that produces materials
for the educational research community, for people in the medical profession,
and for parents and teachers of gifted children.
Association for the Education of Gifted Underachieving Students
This international organization provides a forum for ideas and
interventions aimed at helping these underachieving, twice-exceptional
students reach their full and considerable potential.
The Council for Exceptional Children (CEC)
Largest international professional organization dedicated to improving educational
outcomes for individuals with exceptionalities, students with disabilities,
and/or the gifted. CEC advocates for appropriate governmental policies, sets
professional standards, provides continual professional development, advocates
for newly and historically underserved individuals with exceptionalities, and
helps professionals obtain conditions and resources necessary for effective
professional practice.
Hollingworth Center for Highly Gifted
Children
National support and resource network focused on the needs of highly gifted
children primarily serves as a clearinghouse of information and events.
National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC)
National organization of parents, teachers, administrators, and community members
which exists to support gifted and talented students through publications, professional
development conferences, and scholarships among other things.
The National Research Center
on the Gifted and Talented (NRCGT)
A collaborative effort of university staff, teachers, parents, and community
members to plan, conduct, and disseminate research as it relates to gifted and
talented students. An emphasis is placed on traditionally underserved populations.
Supporting the Emotional Needs of the Gifted,
Inc. (SENG)
Focuses on the unique social and emotional needs of gifted individuals, which
are often misunderstood or ignored. SENG underwrites and provides education,
research, theory building, and staff development.
Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC)
A national information system designed to provide access to an extensive body
of education-related literature. Products and services include research summaries,
bibliographies, computer searches, and document reproduction.
State and Local Organizations and Resources
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Texas Education Agency (TEA)Advanced
Academics
State agency providing direction and leadership to K-12 advanced academic programs.
Unit staff assists districts statewide with implementation of the Texas
State Plan for the Education of Gifted/Talented Students, oversees the
Texas AP/IB Incentive Programs and collaborates with the Texas Association for
the Gifted and Talented, The College Board, and other groups to meet the needs
of gifted and academically advanced students. The Advanced Academics Unit provides
on-going communication with the field about current issues pertaining to the
gifted/talented and advanced programs and policy interpretations related to
the Texas Administrative Code Chapter 89 and graduation requirements in Chapter
74.
Texas Association for the Gifted & Talented
(TAGT)
State organization of parents, teachers, administrators, and community members
which exists to support gifted and talented students through publications, professional
development conferences, and scholarships among other things.
Austin Association for the Gifted and
Talented (AAGT)
Austin G/T parent advocacy group which provides information and opportunities
to parents regarding their gifted children.
The Texas State Plan for
the Education of Gifted/Talented Students (English)
The Texas State Plan for
the Education of Gifted/Talented Students (Spanish)
Document is the basis of program accountability for gifted and talented as
well as a guide for the improvement of services.
Training
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Professional Development
Academy (PDA)
Austin ISD teacher and parent training opportunities including online registration.
Education Service Center XIII (ESC XIII)
Regional service center gifted and talented department with new information
from the Texas Education Agency, events in and around the region, workshops,
and links to resources, publications, etc.
GT Credit Request Forms
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GT Credit Request Form - Campus
GT Credit Request Form - Departments
GT Credit Request Form - Non-AISD
Book Studies
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All of the following titles are available for campus check-out
in groups of ten. To request the books or for additional information on book
studies please call 414-0279.
Non-Curriculum Titles:
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Castellano, Jaime A. (2002). Special populations in gifted education: Working
with diverse gifted learners. Allyn and Bacon.
Castellano, Jaime A., & Eva I. Diaz. (2001). Reaching new horizons:
Gifted and talented education for culturally and linguistically diverse students.
Allyn and Bacon.
This user-friendly text offers a comprehensive overview at the interface between
bilingual/multicultural/ESL education and gifted education. Reaching New Horizons
is the first book of its kind. Written by nationally recognized and award-winning
leaders in both gifted and bilingual education, the authors have collaborated
to create a book that bridges research and practice and has far-reaching implications
for educators at all levels as culturally and linguistically diverse students
continue to impact public education. The book includes chapters on program delivery
models (Ch. 6), bilingualism (Ch. 3), and identification and assessment (Ch.
5)-all topics that have come into the forefront of issues faced by bilingual
and gifted education teachers of grades K-12. For educators in bilingual and
ESL studies, as well as special educators. (back cover)
Covey, Sean. (1998). The 7 habits of highly effective teens.
Fireside.
Being a teenager is both wonderful and challenging. In The 7 Habits of Highly
Effective Teens, author Sean Covey applies the timeless principles of the
7 Habits to teens and the tough issues and life-changing decisions they face.
In an entertaining style, Covey provides a step-by-step guide to help teens
improve self-image, build friendships, resist peer pressure, achieve their goals,
get along with their parents, and much more. In addition, this book is stuffed
with cartoons, clever ideas, great quotes, and incredible stories about real
teens from all over the world. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens
will engage teenagers unlike any other book. An indispensable book for teens,
as well as parents, grandparents, and any adult who influences young people,
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens is destined to become the last
word on surviving and thriving as a teen and beyond. (back cover)
Rimm, Sylvia. (2003). See Jane win for girls: A smart girl’s guide to success.
Free Spirit.
In the 1990’s, child psychologist Sylvia Rimm and her daughters surveyed more
than 1,000 satisfied, successful women. Their goal was to "identify the
essential childhood elements that encouraged these women to achieve fulfilling
careers" so other parents could give their daughters the same advantages.
Their findings were published in See Jane Win, a New York Times best-seller.
See Jane Win teaches parents how to help their daughters. See Jane
Win For Girls teaches daughters how to help themselves. The comments and
experiences of successful women inspire young readers; practical advice helps
them make positive changes and choices. Girls learn to win in all areas of their
lives, from family and friends to school and learning, motivation, character
development, and more. Includes quizzes and resources.
Rimm, Sylvia. (1996). Why bright kids get poor grades: And what you can
do about it. Three Rivers Press.
Millions of capable children with average, above average,
or even gifted abilities – including those from homes where education is valued
– simply do not perform up to their capabilities. This is what Dr. Sylvia Rimm
terms underachievement syndrome. Now Dr. Rimm offers desperately needed help
for parents of underachieving children. Drawing on both clinical research and
years of experience counseling families, she has developed a “Trifocal Model”
to help parents and teachers work together to get students back on track. It
is effective for both average and gifted students, from preschool through college.
Dr. Rimm spells out a practical, six-step program that really works. If you
are the parent or teacher of an underachiever, don’t give up – get this book.
(back cover)
Slocumb, Paul, & Ruby Payne. (2000). Removing the mask: Giftedness in
poverty. RFT Pub.
This work is a first step in looking at students’
gifts and talents in a context of opportunities afforded within the home environment.
Their giftedness is shaped differently and, therefore, must be examined differently.
The gifted from poverty do not come to school with middle-class experiences
and values; programs thus must be adjusted to accommodate the experiences and
values that are fostered in the culture of poverty. This work addresses two
major questions: 1) How do I identify gifted students from low socioeconomic
environments? 2) Once the district has identified them, how do school officials
design and implement programs that will meet these students’ needs and keep
them in the program? Removing the Mask: Giftedness in Poverty is for
the practicing professional who is committed to finding and serving the best
and the brightest from the culture of poverty. (excerpted from Introduction)
Curriculum Titles:
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Erikson, H. Lynn. (2002). Concept-based curriculum and instruction: Teaching
beyond the facts. Corwin Press.
The author explores concept-based learning on a more
in-depth level across disciplines and grade levels. Teachers can use the specific
strategies to create a seamless learning program that teaches students the skills
they really need to think conceptually and to solve problems in today’s complex,
changing world. (back cover)
Gunter, Mary Alice, et. al. (2002). Instruction: A models approach (4th
edition). Allyn and Bacon.
What is the "models approach" to teaching?
It is a method which enables readers to understand instruction as a field of
study, not simply a collection of practices. Written in a style that is both
concise and user-friendly, this book provides busy educators with the tools
they need to enhance and improve the learning process. This book provides a
research-based, yet easily accessible discussion of the models of teaching using
a user-friendly, step-by-step format. Practical examples and end-of-book case
studies illustrate key points and are drawn from a variety of grade levels and
classroom experiences. Each chapter covers one model, broken down into "Steps,"
followed by a summary, variations of the model, exercises, the research base,
activities, and scenarios, offering a consistent, user-friendly chapter format.
"Activities," and "Scenarios" provide hands-on application
of each model. (back cover)
Strong, Richard, et. al. (2001). Teaching what matters most: Standards and
strategies for raising achievement. ASCD.
With 10 years of research and work in 300 schools
to guide them, Silver, Strong, and Perini offer four standards that can be used
to help students meet the various standards dictated by districts, states, and
regions: Rigor: helping students make sense of challenging texts and ideas;
Thought: helping students become adept users of powerful learning disciplines;
Diversity: helping students understand themselves and others; Authenticity:
helping students apply what they learn to the real world. In this book, the
authors go beyond simply showing what what each standard looks like in various
school settings. They provide research-based teaching strategies that can help
all students meet each standard along with assessment practices that allow schools
and teachers to respond thoughtfully to the diversity of students’ needs. (excerpted
from back cover)
Tomlinson, Carol Ann. (1999). The differentiated classroom: Responding to
the needs of all learners. ASCD.
It's an age-old challenge: How can teachers divide their time, resources, and
efforts to effectively instruct students of diverse backgrounds and interests,
as well as skill and readiness levels? The Differentiated Classroom: Responding
to the Needs of All Learners offers a powerful, practical solution. Tomlinson
looks at elementary and secondary classrooms in nearly all subject areas to
show how real teachers turn the challenge of differentiation into a reality.
Her insightful analysis of how, what, and why teachers differentiate lays the
groundwork for you to bring differentiation to your own classroom. Tomlinson's
commonsense, classroom-tested advice speaks to experienced and novice teachers
as well as educational leaders who want to foster differentiation in their schools.
Using a "think versus sink approach," Tomlinson guides all readers
through small changes, then even larger ones, until differentiation becomes
a way of life that enriches both teachers and students. (excerpted from back
cover)
Tomlinson, Carol Ann, & Susan Demirsky Allan. (2000). Leadership for
differentiating schools & classrooms. ASCD.
Try going a week without hearing a call for a massive
overhaul of our educational system. Parents, students, educators, bureaucrats,
pundits . . . everyone says something must be done. But what? And who should
do it? In this environment, school leaders must build bridges for change. As
the system now stands, many students spend great portions of their lives feeling
inferior if they struggle, invisible if they already know the material, problematic
if they're not a child of the dominant culture, and perverse if they question
the school agenda. This book explores how school leaders can develop responsive,
personalized, and differentiated classrooms. Differentiation is simply a teacher
attending to the learning needs of a particular student or small group of students,
rather than teaching a class as though all individuals in it were basically
alike. Expert educators teach individuals the most important things in the most
effective ways. No single approach works with all students. Classrooms function
best when teachers and students join to develop multiple avenues to learning.
Until every student is growing and successful, our own growth is unfinished.
The authors show how school leaders can encourage and support growth in our
classrooms. (back cover)
Tomlinson, Carol Ann, & Caroline Cunningham Eidson. (2003). Differentiation
in practice: A resource guide for differentiating curriculum, grades K-5.
ASCD.
Focusing on the elementary grades, but applicable at all levels, Differentiation
in Practice, Grades K-5 will teach anyone interested in designing and implementing
differentiated curriculum how to do so or how to do so more effectively. Inside,
you'll find: annotated lesson plans for differentiated units in language arts,
social studies, science, and mathematics; samples of differentiated product
assignments, learning contracts, rubrics, and homework handouts; an overview
of the non-negotiables in differentiated classrooms and guidelines for using
the book as a learning tool; An extended glossary and recommended readings for
further exploration of key ideas and strategies. Each unit highlights underlying
standards, delineates learning goals, and takes you step by step through the
instructional process. Unit developers provide running commentary on their use
of flexible grouping and pacing, tiered assignments and assessments, learning
contracts, and numerous other strategies. The models and insight presented will
inform your own differentiation efforts and help you meet the challenge of mixed-ability
classrooms with academically responsive curriculum appropriate for all learners.
(back cover)
Tomlinson, Carol Ann, & Caroline Cunningham Eidson. (2003). Differentiation
in practice: A resource guide for differentiating curriculum, grades 5-9. ASCD.
Differentiation in Practice, Grades 5-9 will teach anyone interested
in designing and implementing differentiated curriculum how to do so or how
to do so more effectively. Included are: annotated lesson plans for differentiated
units in social studies, language arts, science, mathematics, and world/foreign
language; samples of differentiated worksheets, product assignments, rubrics,
and homework handouts; an overview of the essential elements of differentiated
instruction and guidelines for using the book as a learning tool; an extended
glossary and recommended readings for further exploration of key ideas and strategies.
Each unit highlights underlying standards, delineates learning goals, and takes
you step by step through the instructional process. Unit developers provide
running commentary on their use of flexible grouping and pacing, tiered assignments
and assessments, negotiated criteria, and numerous other strategies. The models
and insight presented will inform your own differentiation efforts and help
you meet the challenge of mixed-ability classrooms with academically responsive
curriculum appropriate for all learners. (back cover)
Torrance, E. Paul, & Dorothy Sisk. (1997). Gifted and talented children
in the regular classroom. Creative Education Foundation Press.
It is time to devise concepts and procedures which
will engage the gifted and non-gifted in such a way that all children may attain
their highest potential. [The authors] have described methods of instruction
that are capable of involving all children in putting forth their best efforts.
[They] have also described devices which can take children beyond learning and
doing the things they love and do best and giving those who need mentors these
kinds of experiences. (excerpted from Preface)
Wiggins, Grant, & Jay McTighe. (2000). Understanding by design.
Prentice Hall.
What is understanding and how does it differ from knowledge? How can we determine
the big ideas worth understanding? Why is understanding an important teaching
goal, and how do we know when students have attained it? How can we create a
rigorous and engaging curriculum that focuses on understanding and leads to
improved student performance in today’s high-stakes, standards-based environment?
The book explains the rationale of backward design and explores in greater
depth the meaning of such key ideas as essential questions and transfer
tasks. Readers will learn why the familiar coverage- and activity-based
approaches to curriculum design fall short, and how a focus on the six facets
of understanding can enrich student learning.
Journals and Periodicals
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Creative Kids, a magazine for students. Prufrock Press, 800.998.2208;
www.prufrock.com
Gifted and Talented International. The journal of the World Council
for Gifted and Talented children is a peer-reviewed journal published twice
a year. The journal publishes manuscripts that are based on research in the
field of gifted education, including intervention studies of classroom practice,
methods employed in the education of gifted students, and cross-cultural studies
on topics of interest to the field. For information, contact Center for Gifted
Education, College of William and Mary, PO Box 8705, Williamsburg, VA 23185-8705
Gifted Child Quarterly is the official publication of the National Association
for Gifted Children (NAGC). It contains articles of interest to professionals
and those with some reading experience in the field of gifted education. The
journal also publishes quantitative or qualitative research studies as well
as manuscripts which explore policy and policy implications. Prufrock Press,
800.998.2208; www.prufrock.com
Gifted Child Today (G/C/T) offers educators practical and timely information
about motivating and educating talented learners. It avoids jargon and provides
useful classroom projects written by educators who work with gifted, creative,
and talented children. Prufrock Press, 800.998.2208; www.prufrock.com
Gifted Education Communicator, published quarterly by the California
Association for the Gifted (CAG), geared for all parents and educators of the
gifted; available with or without CAG membership. CAG, 15141 E. Whittier Blvd.,
Suite 510, Whittier, CA 90603, 562.789.9933; e-mail: CAGOffice1@aol.com;
www.CAGifted.org
Gifted Education International, published three times a year for the
international community. For information, contact A B Academic Publishers, PO
Box 42, Bicester, Oxon, OX6 7NW, England
Gifted Education Press Quarterly uses a newsletter format to provide
articles on unusual topics in gifted education. For subscription information,
contact Maurice Fisher, www.cais.com/gep/
Imagine. A periodical for middle and high school students who want to
take control of their learning and get the most out of their precollege years.
Published five times a year by Johns Hopkins University's Center for Talented
Youth. www.jhu.edu/gifted/imagine/
Journal for the Education of the Gifted (JEG) is the official publication
of The Association for the Gifted (TAG), and is committed to the analysis and
communication of knowledge and research in the field of gifted education. It
is aimed at the experienced reader of the literature. Prufrock Press, 800.998.2208;
www.prufrock.com
The Journal of Secondary Gifted Education (JSGE) offers education professionals
a mixture of innovative theory and research focused on adolescents. It is designed
especially for professionals interested in secondary and post-secondary programs
for gifted and talented children. Prufrock Press, 800.998.2208; www.prufrock.com
Parenting for High Potential is NAGC’s quarterly magazine designed for
parents. Each issue includes special features, expert advice columns, software
and book reviews, ideas from parents, and a pull-out children’s section. Prufrock
Press, 800.998.2208; www.prufrock.com
Roeper Review, published quarterly, focuses on current research and
issues that relate to the lives and experiences of gifted children. For educators,
counselors, and parents who have had some experience in reading in the field.
www.roeperreview.org/
Understanding Our Gifted, published quarterly, addresses the intellectual,
social, and emotional needs of gifted youth through regular columns and feature
articles. Provides practical information on current issues in a clear, interesting
writing style. Open Space Communications, Inc., 800.494.6178; www.openspacecomm.com
Source: Information Center on Disabilities and Gifted Education. Council for
Exceptional Children. Available: http://www.ericec.org/fact/gt-journals.html
(October 28, 2004)
Catalogs/Publishers
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Prufrock Press
www.prufrock.com
Dandy Lion Publications www.dandylionbooks.com
Great Potential Press, Inc. www.giftedbooks.com
Free Spirit Publishing
www.freespirit.com
Zephyr Press www. zephyrpress.com
Pieces of Learning www.piecesoflearning.com
Interact www.interact-simulations.com
Engine-Uity www.engine-uity.com
Professional Associates Publishing www.kingore.com
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