gt coordinator’s meeting october 9, 2009
DESCRIPTION
GT Coordinator’s Meeting October 9, 2009. Introductions. Introduce yourself and tell us one good thing that happened this week. Gifted/Talented Standards: 39.236. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
GT COORDINATOR’S
MEETINGOCTOBER 9,
2009
INTRODUCTIONS Introduce yourself and tell us one good thing that happened this week.
GIFTED/TALENTED STANDARDS: 39.236
The commissioner shall adopt standards to evaluate school district programs for gifted and talented students to determine whether a district operates a program for gifted and talented students in accordance with
the Texas Performance Standards Project; or another program approved by the commissioner
that meets the requirements of the state plan for the education of gifted and talented students under Section 29.123.
NEW STATE STANDARDS-HB 3 Regional Focus Groups Hosted at the service centers
How this bill will be implementedTexas Performance StandardsOther approved program
WHAT WE NEED TO KNOW How many students participated in the
TPSP program last year…elem, middle, high school.
How many districts participated? What is the cost to implement? How many students identified gt were in
CTE classes last year? How many gt students were enrolled in
Tech Prep?
Performance Standards Projects
Admin walk throughPrimary RubricsPursuit of Passion Taskhttp://www.texaspsp.org
STATE PLAN REVISION
OVERALL CHANGE On section it clearly states that the
board of trustees of a school district or the governing body of an open-enrollment charter school has primary responsibility for ensuring that the district or school complies with all applicable requirments of state educational programs (TEC §7.028)
KEY CHANGES--ASSESSMENT Acceptable category change to “In
Compliance” Written policies on students assessment—
given to all parents—attached to student handbook or something that every parent will see.
Provide for ongoing identification—meaning every year—included in board policy
GT committee must meet and review all individual student data. Cut score is not in compliance. Anecdotal information is necessary—preponderance of evidence.
KEY CHANGES—PROGRAM DESIGN Gifted/talented students are ensured
opportunities to work together as a group, work with other students, and work independently during the school day as well as the entire school year as a direct result of gifted/talented service options
KEY CHANGES--CURRICULUM (In compliance column) A continuum of
learning experiences is provided that leads to the development of advanced-level products and/or performances such as those provided through the Texas Performance Standards Project (TPSP)
Provisions to improve services to gifted/talented students are included in district and campus improvement plans.
KEY CHANGES—PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Gifted/talented teachers receive a
minimum of 6 hours annually of professional development in gifted/talented education that is related to state teacher education standards.
STATE PLAN Revised State Plan to debut at TAGT in
December. Copies will go out to
School Board MembersSuperintendentG/T CoordinatorPrincipalsG/T Lead teacher or Counselor
RTI/GT Handout information NAGT Proposal
PBS AWARENESS Posters 30 second spot on DVD
COLLEGE CREDIT REQUIREMENT Advanced Placement International Baccalaureate Dual Credit Early College High School Middle College High School Articulated Technical credit Locally Articulated Credit District may choose to pay part or all of
students’ tuition and/or purchase required textbooks.
Dual Credit: Content and method of instruction are defined by the college; high school credit may be awarded if the TEKS are taught; college credit awarded immediately.
Articulated Credit: Content is defined by TEKS; college credit is awarded upon the student’s completion of requirements outlined in the articulation agreement
AP course: content is defined by the College Board; use of AP trademark requires specific College Board approval. College credit is dependent of the student’s exam score and the chosen college/university.
EXAMPLES Developmental Education courses can never be
offered for Dual Credit. College Entrance requirements apply. Other limitations apply:
11th and 12th graders onlyNo more than 2 courses per semester
Faculty must be appropriately credentialed.
OTHER AREAS OF CONCERN Funding: If the student must pay, no ADA.*Class time: Specific requirements exist for college
credit while high school credit is defined purely by the TEKS.
Grades: TEA recommends that they be the same on both transcripts; dual performance scales should not be used.
*Put off by HB 3646 for 2009-2010 and 2011-2012.
HB 3646, Section 15 Author: Hochberg Sponsor: Shapiro
Statute Amended or Added: Amends §28.009, Education Code
Summary: This section of the bill adds a provision that states that a school district is not required to pay for a student’s tuition and costs associated with taking a course for college credit as part of the College Credit Program.
OTHER AREAS OF CONCERN Funding: If the student must pay, no ADA.*Class time: Specific requirements exist for college
credit while high school credit is defined purely by the TEKS.
Grades: TEA recommends that they be the same on both transcripts; dual performance scales should not be used.
*Put off by HB 3646 for 2009-2010 and 2011-2012.
HB 2480 Author: Hochberg Sponsor: Seliger
Statute Amended or Added: Adds §130.008(d) and (d-1), Education Code
Summary: This bill allows an independent school district (ISD) to establish a partnership, for the purposes of offering its students dual credit, with any community college, provided that the community college in whose service area the ISD is located is unable to provide the requested dual credit course to the satisfaction of the ISD.
CREDIT BY EXAM-ACCELERATION
A student in any of Grades 1-5 must be accelerated one grade if he or she meets the following requirements:The student scores 90% on a criterion-
referenced test for the grade level he or she wants to skip in each of the following area: language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies.
A school district representative recommends that the student be accelerated, and
The student’s parent or guardian gives written approval for the acceleration.
CREDIT BY EXAM A school district may allow a student to
accelerate at a time other than one required in paragraph 1 of this subsection by developing a cost-free option approved by the district board of trustees that allows students to demonstrate academic achievement or proficiency in a subject or grade level.
HB 3, Section 25 Author: Eissler Sponsor: Shapiro
Statute Amended or Added: Amends §28.002, Education Code
Summary: This legislation requires the State Board of Education to adopt rules requiring students in grades six, seven, and eight to successfully complete a minimum of one fine arts course during those grade levels as part of a district’s fine arts curriculum.
DISTINGUISHED ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM
Entered Grade 9 before 2007-08
Entered Grade 9 2007-08 or later
English Language Arts 4 credits 4 credits
Mathematics 3 credits 4 credits
Science 3 credits 4 credits
Social Studies 3.5 credits 3.5 credits
Economics with emphasis on the free enterprise system and its benefits
.5 credit .5 credit
Languages other than English 3 credits 3 credits
Physical Education 1.5 credit 1.5 credit
Health Education .5 credit .5 credit
Speech .5 credit .5 credit
Technology Applications 1 credit 1 credit
Fine Arts 1 credit 1 credit
Electives 2.5 credits 2.5 credits
Total 24 26
RECOMMENDED HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM
Entered Grade 9 before 2007-08
Entered Grade 9 2007-08 or later
English Language Arts 4 credits 4 credits
Mathematics 3 credits 4 credits
Science 3 credits 4 credits
Social Studies 3.5 credits 3.5 credits
Economics with emphasis on the free enterprise system and its benefits
.5 credit .5 credit
Languages other than English 2 credits 2 credits
Physical Education 1 credit 1 credit
Speech .5 credit .5 credit
Fine Arts 1 credit 1 credit
Electives 6 credits (includes speech)
6 credits (includes speech)
Total 24 26
MINIMUM HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM
Entered Grade 9 before 2009-10
Entered Grade 9 2009-10 or later
English Language Arts 4 credits 4 credits
Mathematics 3 credits 3 credits
Science 2 credits 2 credits
Social Studies 2.5 credits 2.5 credits
Economics with emphasis on the free enterprise system and its benefits
.5 credit .5 credit
Academic Elective 1 credit 1 credit
Physical Education 1.5 credit 1.5 credit
Health Education .5 credit .5 credit
Speech .5 credit .5 credit
Technology Applications 1 credit 1 credit
Fine Arts None 1 credit
Electives 5.5 credits 4.5 credits
Total 22 22
Freshmen 2010-2011
MINIMUM HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM
In order for a student to opt into the minimum high school program, the student must
(1) be at least 16 years of age;(2) have completed two credits required
for graduation in each subject of the foundation curriculum; or
(3) have failed to be promoted to the tenth grade one or more times as determined by the school district.
MINIMUM HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM A student must meet one of the 3
circumstances.
A student has the right to re-enroll in the RHSP at any time.
A student must satisfy all the course requirements listed in 19 TAC Chapter 74 for a total of 22 credits to graduate.
HB 3 AMENDS §28.021
HB 3 requires districts to consider all of the following in determining whether a student should be promoted to the next grade:
The recommendation of the student’s teacher
The student’s grade in each subject or course
The student’s score on the TAKS (English or Spanish) in grades 3-8 or an alternate assessment under §39.023(b) or (l)
Any other necessary academic information
HB 3 AMENDS §28.021
HB 3 AMENDS §28.021 The removal of the SSI grade 3 requirement that
students pass the TAKS reading assessment in order to be eligible for promotion to grade 4
Accelerated instruction in the applicable subject area for any student who fails any TAKS assessment in grades 3 - 8
Students who fail the reading or mathematics TAKS in grade 5 or grade 8 and who are promoted to the next grade level to complete the required accelerated instruction as a condition of promotion
HB 3 AMENDS §28.021 A grade 5 or 8 student who is promoted
by a grade placement committee be assigned to a teacher in the next grade who meets all state and federal qualifications to teach the subject in which the student failed the TAKS
School districts to make public the requirements for student advancement by the start of the school year 2009-2010
OTHER PROVISIONS OF HB 3 Section 32 Amends §28.0252(b), Education
Code deletes language that would require use of a
method for calculating grade point average established by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board
Section 41 Amends §29.182(b), Education Code requires the (Perkins) state plan to define CTE as
an option for student learning that provides a rigorous course of study
EDUCATOR SUPPORT WEB PORTAL
www.txccrs.org
BPC LISTSERV AND ONLINE SURVEY Visit BPC at http://www.tea.state.tx.us/bestprac/.
Join the Clearinghouse listserv to receive updates at http://miller.tea.state.tx.us/list/.
Provide feedback via the BPC Online Survey at http://www.tea.state.tx.us/bestprac/.
Contact Ertha Patrick for questions or to submit a best practice at [email protected] or (512) 463-6235.
PROGRAM EVALUATIONS Ten Questions
Cisco, Breckenridge, and Rising Star have sent me copies of g/t plans. Yea!!
THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING TODAY Questions, comments:
Phyllis Baum [email protected] 325.675.7007