Originally Posted by indigo
Great article, thanks for sharing. I'm glad the blog author is discontinuing those practices, and appreciate that she shared the reasoning and sources which had informed her view. Hopefully more classrooms may be made free of these and other ineffective and counterproductive practices.

Adding a link to the thread Introduction from Arizona, in which a 6th grade teacher seeks resources and planning.

Regarding peer tutoring... In the current educational climate in US public schools, both school ratings/rankings and teacher evaluation/compensation are increasingly based on achieving equal outcomes for all. Therefore US public schools may be less concerned with helping gifted pupils achieve their potential and more concerned with closing achievement gaps and excellence gaps. Unfortunately, sometimes this is accomplished by capping the growth of the students at the top. Other threads discuss buzzwords for educational experiences and different grading strategies which may be utilized to accomplish this.

Some may state that gifted kids benefit from a requirement that they use their school day tutoring other students rather than learning new material, concepts, and ideas themselves. However many parents of gifted children believe that children who may have already mastered the grade-level standards in a given subject ought to spend their school day learning something new and challenging, rather than being required to tutor others (effectively being treated as free labor, or slaves, doing the work which teachers are paid to do).

To be blunt, my honest opinion is that gifted learners do not even belong in public schools. US public schools are not only unconcerned with advancing gifted students, most educators can not even grapple with the idea of students requiring courses ahead of grade level. Teachers are not trained to recognize advanced learning, thus forming their own opinion of what gifted learners might look like. Thus when most educators hear the word "gifted" they think of a student who does exceptionally well at grade level, not those who have potential well beyond that.