First time poster - hello board!
Macro question/topic...
Our kids (DD13, DS11, DD7) are very bright kids who have, since Kindergarten, been enrolled in our (good, not great, IMO) suburban public schools.
Our kids are significantly above the average for their schools in both learning speed and current knowledge level. i.e. They read, do math, etc above their level, AND, in my opinion, can absorb new material significantly faster than their school peers.
This situation is probably rather typical for most gifted kids.
What I struggle with is shaping a learning environment that accommodates both their learning speed AND level.
i.e. Two common recommendations for gifted kids are:
1) Group the high ability kids together, have them learn some extra material.
2) Accelerate specific kids - have them grade skip or at least skip within certain subjects (and thus learn with kids one or more years older than them).
But...
IMO, neither of these two scenarios are ideal.
In the first case, the PACE of learning may be a bit faster, but overall learning level is largely clamped at the top by the fact that the more advanced student(s) must [EDIT: generally], every year, start classes with others who did NOT learn that extra material the year before.
In the second case, skipping ahead to learn with older kids may put my kids in classes with others closer to their current level of KNOWLEDGE, but not necessarily their learning SPEED (for new material). It sorta kicks the can down the road.
I realize that what I just typed comes off a little muddy. Here's another way of putting it...
If my kids are capable of learning at a rate 50% (or more) faster than the average of their peers, then they could learn 1.5 (or more) grade levels of new material, per calendar year.
But that depends, to some extent, on a classroom environment that progresses at that speed, and even if it DID, the faster learner would quickly be out of synch in terms of knowledge level with peers who learn at the standard pace.
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OK, moving away from the theoretical a bit...
Our schools do offer some ability grouping (faster pace), and some ability to skip (our DS11 is taking Geometry). But I think what is offered is still not optimal for our kids (they could probably go faster, and the level skipping is imperfect in various ways).
I understand the schools' dilemma - they have limited resources, and bending over backwards to accommodate our kids can strain those resources.
I'm aware of at least SOME of the alternatives:
1) Private school
2) Move to an area with stronger public schools
3) Homeschool
4) Supplemental instruction/resources outside of the school
5) Lean on the current school, within reason
So far we are doing #4 and #5.
Homeschooling would solve both the pace and level issues - the kids could learn at whatever level they're at, at whatever pace they're capable of. But for a variety of reasons, I don't think homeschooling is an ideal option for our kids and our family generally.
Hmm, I've got more thoughts and such on this, but this post is quite long already. I suppose it's mostly venting, but a bit tossing it out there for others. I assume our situation is fairly common among parents of gifted kids...
Anyways, thanks for reading if you've made it this far.
