Archive | August, 2010

The Future of Gifted Education

The third post in our sum­mer series on gifted edu­ca­tion comes from Jerry Blu­men­garten, bet­ter known to many as Cybrary Man (@cybraryman1 on Twitter). Cybrary Man taught sev­eral sub­jects over 32 years in one of the tough­est areas of NYC, the last 12 years of that as the teacher-​​librarian of his mid­dle school. He started Cybrary Man’s Edu­ca­tional Web Sites as a library site and it now serves all grade lev­els and sub­ject areas. He has also writ­ten edu­ca­tional mate­ri­als for the util­ity indus­try over the past 30 years. Most recently, Jerry gave the keynote at ntcamp in Philadel­phia.

Life is not easy for any of us. But what of that? We must have per­se­ver­ance and above all con­fi­dence in our­selves. We must believe that we are gifted for some­thing and that this thing must be attained. (Marie Curie)


Stu­dents, teach­ers and par­ents need us to change the way we deliver and sup­port our gifted edu­ca­tion programs.

One of the great­est learn­ing expe­ri­ences that my son had was while work­ing on his West­ing­house Sci­ence (now Intel) project. He had the oppor­tu­nity to work directly with sci­en­tists once a week at a Sci­ence Insti­tute. I did not mind car­pool­ing until he got his license, because I saw the great value in this con­nec­tion between stu­dents and spe­cial­ists work­ing in the real world. Local busi­nesses and med­ical facil­i­ties could pro­vide stu­dents with hands-​​on train­ing and intern­ships and the pro­fes­sion­als there could act as men­tors. On a Mid­dle School level, my school had a Health Careers Pro­gram that gave our stu­dents a won­der­ful oppor­tu­nity to do com­mu­nity ser­vice while learn­ing along with med­ical and sup­port staff in hos­pi­tals, clin­ics, nurs­ing homes and senior centers.

We should be tak­ing this same approach with our gifted stu­dents. We can eas­ily accom­plish this with the plethora of great web tools and our abil­ity to con­nect with Skype, etc. Dis­tance learn­ing has to be revived with the lat­est tech tools. We should also be mak­ing bet­ter asso­ci­a­tions with higher edu­ca­tion insti­tu­tions. Pro­vi­sions can be estab­lished for gifted high school stu­dents to earn col­lege cred­its with col­leges. We have to do more to join our stu­dents with experts out­side the tra­di­tional class­room walls. I can envi­sion Ellu­mi­nate ses­sions with experts in a wide range of fields address­ing and answer­ing ques­tions from stu­dents. This should be stan­dard pro­ce­dure in classes. It would also be nice to have stu­dents shadow pro­fes­sion­als in dif­fer­ent fields We also have to exam­ine how indi­vid­ual stu­dents learn best. Some need struc­tured learn­ing envi­ron­ments where oth­ers need less struc­tured learn­ing experiences.

All pre­ser­vice, grad­u­ate and lead­er­ship edu­ca­tion pro­grams should include spe­cial­ized train­ing for teach­ing and men­tor­ing gifted learn­ers. Empha­sis should be focused on dif­fer­en­ti­ated edu­ca­tion of gifted learners

Teach­ers must also reach out to local muse­ums. The Philadel­phia Museum of Art, for exam­ple, has the Wachovia Edu­ca­tion Resources Cen­ter that helps teach­ers use art and art images to enhance lessons in core cur­ric­u­lar areas. The Explorato­rium in San Fran­cisco pro­vides tools to make your work eas­ier and more enrich­ing, includ­ing things to do at the museum, hands-​​on activ­i­ties, and a wealth of Web fea­tures about impor­tant sci­ence top­ics. Each year more than 10,000 edu­ca­tors take advan­tage of The Field Museum’s resources for pro­fes­sional development.

Reflect­ing on my own edu­ca­tion I felt that the best classes I had on the under­grad­u­ate and grad­u­ate lev­els were ones that were taught by peo­ple who actu­ally worked in that field or were called in as experts.

I feel that there has to be a strong com­mit­ment to gifted pro­grams, the ongo­ing train­ing of gifted teach­ers as well as all school staff mem­bers, and follow-​​up research on chil­dren who have gone through these pro­grams. Coun­sel­ing and guid­ance ser­vices must be pro­vided on a con­tin­u­ous basis for gifted students.

More sup­port ser­vices not only for the chil­dren but their par­ents to help them deal with their chil­dren are also needed. Every school dis­trict should have a gifted edu­ca­tion school committee.

Much should be done to improve the deliv­ery of edu­ca­tion for our gifted stu­dents to meet the chal­lenges of the 21st Century.

[Please check out Jerry’s Gifted and Tal­ented page: http://​cybrary​man​.com/​g​i​f​t​e​d​.​h​tml]