Gifted Education Podcast - The Prufrock Press Blog show

Gifted Education Podcast - The Prufrock Press Blog

Summary: The Gifted Education Podcast features interviews and discussions with leaders in the field of gifted and talented education. Highlighting issues related to both parenting and educating gifted and advanced learners, this podcast offers engaging conversations with Prufrock Press' most popular authors.

Podcasts:

 Learning Options for Gifted Kids: A Podcast for Parents | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:15:55

Parents are often presented with a menu of learning opportunities for talented kids. From special accelerated classes and dual-enrollment college programs, to homeschooling and online courses, the decisions about quality learning opportunities can seem endless. In this podcast, I sit down with Carol Fertig, the author of, Raising a Gifted Child: A Parenting Success Handbook, in order to help make sense of some of these many options.

 Differentiating Instruction for Gifted Students | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:22:05

Best-selling author Laurie Westphal discusses exciting strategies for teaching gifted students in a mixed-ability classroom. In this podcast, we explore practical ways to ensure that gifted students are engaged and challenged.

 Ability Grouping of Gifted Children | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:24:19

Today’s topic is one that impacts gifted kids in schools on a regular basis. In the past, gifted children often were placed into special gifted classes or accelerated learning groups. The thinking went that gifted children learned at a faster pace than other kids, and if you could group gifted children together it was easier for those students and their teachers to move at a faster pace through the class’ subject matter. However, the practice of grouping students by ability has become a controversial topic in many schools. As a result, during the last few years we have seen the dismantling of special gifted classes. We’ve seen teachers move away from the use of ability groups in their classrooms. How are gifted students affected by this change and does it make sense to move away from ability grouping?

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