Grab every opportunity to give her extras such as Latin, interesting science (such as Robotics), and in-depth Social Studies, Art History, film making and other categories that she will not get anywhere else. She had an Art History program in elementary school that was amazing.
Can you expand on where you found these opportunities? The Art History in elementary sounds like a rare find!
Were the extras formal programs or something else? I'll be keeping my eye out for these kind of things. Thanks!
Sorry this took so long to answer.
In Austin, there was a lot of interest in film school and many summer camps and computer ed courses do it and then have a premiere at a popular theatre. I am sure you can find this somewhere. We did this at our small school using imovie and created our own premiere in my classrooom.
Robotics is very popular now. My daughter took it in Mad Science when she was in young elementary school, but there are versions of it for older kids - and tournaments.
Our Art History program was parent invented and run. We presented seven artists each year - beginning in Kinder. Our school had many professors at the university who taught in subjects, but I started doing this also and loved it. We presented bio info, and then went into a more critical type of thinking (again depending on age). Much of the time, we started by asking what they see so they will have pure answers and we expand on that. Depending on the artist, we branch into tone, use of certain colors or whatever the artist is known for. Then, the students worked a project based on the style of this artist. The kids loved it and learned so much.
We started with artists such as Arcimboldo in Kinder (the guy who painted fruit or flowers on faces for the seasons). This is really accessible for young students. We saved Kahlo and Rivera for the older grades since they can be difficult to take psychologically sometimes. We had great African American artists (Tanner, Alma Thomas), female artists (Grandma Moses and Georgia O'Keefe), muralists (Rivera), sculpturers (Rodin), and mobiles (Calder). We covered most of the art that is seen everywhere such as "Washington Crossing the Delaware" by Leutze and "The giant wave" by Hokusai.
You can usually find teaching sources on the web for this now.