I met with my daughter's homeroom teacher this afternoon to discuss grade the recent grade skipping decision. To my surprise, she was very well informed about gifted education and for many years has handled clusters of gifted kids, sprinkled with the rare highly and exceptionally gifted. We reviewed my daughter's test scores, academic record from EPGY, list of books read since last year, as well as her own assessment academic readiness. I was left speechless when she argued that my daughter could be skipped to third grade and that it could be arranged if I requested it. Say what?????? Did I hear the teacher argue for the radical acceleration of my child? Is this possible in the LAUSD? I explained to the teacher that I thought it best to allow one year for my daughter's writing to rise to third grade standards. We agreed that the best course of action would be to skip over third grade next year provided that the writing proficiency goal is accomplished.
The surprises continued this afternoon after I got to my house. I received an email from the homeroom teacher following a meeting with the principal. She informed me that my daughter will be accelerated to third grade math. Logistically, this means that Paulina will leave her homeroom every day to take math in one of the third grade classrooms and then return to second grade for the remainder of the day. Moreover, my wife and I will be allowed to come to class to help proctor Paulina while she spends part of her English and math classes working on EPGY. In exchange, we have offered to help the teacher since budget cuts mean she has no teaching assistant this year.
Here is a bullet point summary of what I learned today:
- radical acceleration is possible in the LAUSD
- homeroom teachers and school principals make the final decision to accelerate
- it is possible to do single-subject acceleration simultaneously with grade skipping
- this seems to work best when the teachers and principal are well-informed
- offer to help when the school accommodates your child
I am having a bit of trouble coming up with a prescription for success. I did some things right. Good luck played a big role. However, I also believe that "Chance favors the prepared mind." This implies that you can best advocate for your child by being ready:
- Talk to parents of current students to find out how the school has handled acceleration and grade skipping in previous years
- Learn the rules and regulations governing grade skipping and acceleration in your district
- Document your child's talents by collecting IQ test scores, grades from prior courses, scores from standardized exams, transcripts from gifted and talented programs (i.e. Stanford's Education Program for Gifted Youth, John Hopkins' Center for Talented Youth, etc.), evaluations from former teachers, etc.
- Enroll the help of gifted education advocates. You may want to contact the Davidson Institute. The Davidson Institute's Davidson Young Scholars offers guidance, free consulting services, and may help you communicate with local school officials.
- Read as much research as possible on the benefits of grade skipping, acceleration, ability-based grouping, etc. Become an expert. Knowledge is the most powerful tool at your disposal.
- Become a relentless advocate for your child's rights.
Hope this helps,
Pablo
4 comments:
Pablo -
Great blog. How do you reconcile the two-year grade skip they gave your daughter with your other post on minimum age requirements? I'd be curious.
What school is this in? I'd love to know for my own children! Thanks.
Rebekka
While the LAUSD has published age limits for various grades, it turns out the districts puts the power in the hands of the principal and homeroom teacher. If they deem your kid is ready to skip, they can allow it even if it violates the age limits. An LAUSD officer explained to me that the district views these age limits as a guide more than a law. That is not the way they read to me from the board of education's documents, but that is what LAUSD has communicated to me.
- pablo
hi pablo ~
i am asking for a grade skip for my PG daughter here in eagle rock. they are resistant claiming they do not know where this is done in the LAUSD and that they don't think it is socially appropriate. can you please publish the name of your elementary school where you are so i can refer the principal?
thank you!
I am sorry I never replied to a few of the comments.
First, on the question of how I reconcile the two-year skip my daughter got. Actually, she was skipped only one year from K to 2nd grade. By this I mean that she finished K and then went to 2nd, skipping 1st grade. If I recall correctly, she would still be allowed to skip one more year based on her birth date.
Second, on the question of my daughter's school. She attends Hancock Park Elementary. Ms. Ashley Parker is the principal. I am aware of two kids who skipped from 1st grade this year. My daughter and one of her friends.
Email me at PabloAPerezFernandez@gmail.com with your email address if you want the LAUSD Board of Education documents where the rules for grade skipping are detailed. I will even point out for you the pertinent sections.
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