Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students

Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students
Title Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students PDF eBook
Author Donna Y. Ford
Publisher
Total Pages 236
Release 1996
Genre Education
ISBN 9780807735350

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This text offers a discussion of the effort to end underachievement among gifted Black students and to increase the multicultural and multiracial representation of youth in gifted education.

Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students

Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students
Title Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students PDF eBook
Author Donna Y. Ford
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 0
Release 2011
Genre African American students
ISBN 9781593634872

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Explores the importance of identifying these students and the necessity of nurturing these unique young individuals. Presents the challenges facing gifted African American students in schools and examines alternate ways of addressing these issues. Focuses on the social, cultural, familial, school, and psychological factors that work to undermine gifted black students' achievements, but if explored, could benefit them. Provides educators with promising approaches to aid in the prevention of underachievement and under-motivation.

Multicultural Gifted Education

Multicultural Gifted Education
Title Multicultural Gifted Education PDF eBook
Author Donna Y. Ford
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 282
Release 2021-09-03
Genre Education
ISBN 1000494772

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Each year, the United States witnesses significant changes in the demographics of its citizens. Accordingly, schools—and the students we teach—are also changing. With such changes come the need, responsibility, and obligation for educators to provide students with an education that is both rigorous and culturally responsive. This book bridges the gap that exists between educating advanced learners and educating culturally different learners. Multicultural Gifted Education, 2nd ed. addresses various topics, including racially and culturally diverse students and families, historical and legal perspectives on educating gifted and minority students, culturally responsive curriculum and assessment, and counseling students from a multicultural perspective.

Recruiting and Retaining Culturally Different Students in Gifted Education

Recruiting and Retaining Culturally Different Students in Gifted Education
Title Recruiting and Retaining Culturally Different Students in Gifted Education PDF eBook
Author Donna Y. Ford
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 276
Release 2021-09-09
Genre Education
ISBN 1000502910

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One pervasive educational issue is the national underrepresentation of Black and Hispanic students in gifted education. Virtually every school district is grappling with having too few students from these groups identified as gifted and served in gifted classes and programs. Recruiting and Retaining Culturally Different Students in Gifted Education addresses this long-standing national problem through the dual lens of recruitment and retention. The focus is on how to equitably recruit (screen, refer, and/or assess) culturally different students and, just as importantly, to retain them. Recruitment and retention require providing academic, cultural, and social supports to culturally different students and ensuring that educators are willing and able to address issues and barriers. No time is better than now to address and correct the underachievement albatross, and the focus on recruitment and retention holds the greatest promise. Nominated for a 2014 NAACP Image Award in the Outstanding Literary Work-Instructional Category

Black Boys are Lit

Black Boys are Lit
Title Black Boys are Lit PDF eBook
Author Brian L. Wright
Publisher IAP
Total Pages 125
Release 2021-11-01
Genre Education
ISBN 1648027490

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This book of matrices with Black boys as the main character is designed to help gifted and talented education teachers leverage Black boys’ identities to inform and shape how they plan and deliver curriculum and instruction and manage the multicultural, democratic, and culturally responsive classroom. Ford and colleagues (2005) spoke to the notion of and need for ‘self-reflective instruction.’ We argue that all teachers must want to and learn how to legitimize the “everyday” experiences that are learned and cultivated in the homes and communities of Black boys, and how these experiences shape their self-identities and contribute to agency (Wright, Counsell, & Tate 2015). We, therefore, advocate for the rethinking of literacies by repositioning White-centered texts that often reflect and represent power and privilege toward centering the brilliance of Black identities of Black children in general, Black boys in particular. Black boys (of all ages) want to and need to physically see positive images of themselves in books reflected at them. This representation, we argue, has the potential to become an example of a compelling counter-narrative to the history of the “all-White world” (Larrick, 1965) of children’s books that only presented Black characters as “objects of ridicule and generally inferior beings” (Sims Bishop 2012, p. 6). When Black boys see themselves portrayed visually, textually, and realistically in children’s books, vital messages of recognition, value, affirmation, and validation are conveyed. Recognition of the sociocultural contexts in which they live is celebrated. Books for and about Black boys must be rigorous, authentic, multicultural, and developmentally appropriate to allow them to synthesize what they have read, heard, and seen during literacy instruction in authentic and meaningful ways. Multicultural books must introduce children to information about the values of justice, fairness, and equity. Developmentally appropriate books should vary with and adapt to the age, experience, and interests of gifted and talented Black boys to allow them the opportunity to demonstrate critical thinking, textual analysis skills and convey conceptual knowledge. These stories must expose Black boys to culturally relevant counter stories -- stories that counteract the dominant discourse that has primarily depicted Black boys as “at risk” versus placed at risk; “without hope” versus hopeful; or “out of control and dangerous” (Tatum, 2005, p. 28) versus developing self-control like all other children (Wright et al., 2018).

The Underachieving Gifted Child

The Underachieving Gifted Child
Title The Underachieving Gifted Child PDF eBook
Author Del Siegle
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 126
Release 2021-10-17
Genre Education
ISBN 1000489817

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Why are some gifted children willing to tackle new challenges whereas others seem insecure or uninterested? Why do some gifted students achieve while others become caught in a cycle of underachievement? Are there strategies teachers and parents can implement that promote an achievement-oriented attitude? The Underachieving Gifted Child: Recognizing, Understanding, and Reversing Underachievement answers these important questions. Although there are many factors that contribute to achievement, achievement-oriented students exhibit four key traits: they believe that they have the skills to perform well, they expect that they can succeed, they believe what they are doing is meaningful, and they set realistic expectations and implement strategies to successfully complete their goals. This book offers specific strategies to help increase student achievement by improving students' attitudes in these four important areas.

Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades and what You Can Do about it

Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades and what You Can Do about it
Title Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades and what You Can Do about it PDF eBook
Author Sylvia B. Rimm
Publisher Great Potential Press, Inc.
Total Pages 412
Release 2008
Genre Education
ISBN 0910707871

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Millions of gifted children fail to reach their potential-something Dr. Sylvia Rimm calls "underachievement syndrome." Drawing on clinical research and experience counseling families of gifted children, Dr. Rimm has developed a six-step program that provides everything you need to know to turn your child's underachievement into success.