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The
Gifted Education Centre
To Go Beyond the Known
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ABOUT
US >
WHO WE HELP > TEACHERS
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| The
Gifted Education Centre is run by experienced
educational practitioners: |
we come from early childhood, primary and secondary
teaching background
we know exactly what it's like to work in the classroom
situation, and we understand at first hand the demands
you have to meet on a daily basis
we're here to work with you on what's involved in identifying
and catering for the gifted children in your class and
school - we're part of your resource team in meeting
this challenge! |
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To
meet this challenge, we draw on our work throughout
New Zealand, with small schools and with large, in
primary and secondary, and in early childhood and
tertiary, with teachers in classrooms and in management
and with other resource professionals. We link
what we do to research so that we may constantly evaluate
and extend the knowledge base we share with you.
On
this page you will find out more about how we can
help you as a teacher of gifted children.
QUICKLINKS
What does this mean in practice for
you?
Support you can access - professional
development, workshops, seminars and conferences
Individual support - visits,
meeting attendance, information/advice, research
support
Resources - ideas and publications
Linking to One Day School and GO
- professional partnerships
Supporting you in working with parents
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| What
does this mean in practice for you? |
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Are
you looking for answers to questions like these?
Classroom
teachers
How do I know if a pupil is gifted?
What's the difference between gifted and bright?
What am I supposed to do in the classroom for this
child?
How can I cater for this one different child when
I've got 30 others as well?
Shouldn't we fix his (her) behaviour (social skills)
first?
How do I know if what I'm doing is working?
Where can I go for help?
Management
Is what we're doing now okay? If we think we've got
it covered, how can we check this out?
If we haven't yet started, where should we start?
What should be in our school policy?
What
can we do to make sure this is genuinely working schoolwide?
What does this mean for planning, for resources, for
teacher appraisal?
What does it mean for classroom programmes?
Do we need other measures, like acceleration or withdrawal?
When should we identify giftedness? How should we
identify giftedness?
How do we deal with parents who say their child is
gifted?
How can we evaluate what we do?
Gifted Education Centre staff can help with these and
many other related questions.

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| Support
you can access |
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Professional
development
The Gifted Education Centre is New Zealand's most
widely experienced provider of professional development
in gifted education. It has delivered workshops and
seminars to teachers at every level from early childhood
to secondary and from pre-service trainees to principals
and senior management. Its emphasis is always on providing
thoroughly practical advice, firmly grounded in its
own extensive experience, internationally recognised
best practice and research findings. See our Professional
Development page for more information.
Workshops
and seminars
The Centre offers a range of workshops and seminars.
See our Professional
Development page for more information.
Conferences
Approximately every second year, the Centre organises
a major national conference featuring leading practitioners
and researchers in the field of gifted education.
These are advertised in the Gazette and elsewhere,
and provide an invaluable professional development
opportunity for all teachers
interested in this field.
Conferences
previously held have focussed on giftedness in early
childhood, teaching gifted students at secondary level,
and understanding the gifted child. See our Conferences
page for more information.

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| Individual
support |
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The Centre is able to support individual teachers
and small groups of teachers in a number of different
ways:
Observation
visits
The Centre's One Day School venues are open to visits
by teachers wishing to observe a gifted programme
in action. Such visits can give you a valuable insight
into the real learning behaviour of gifted children
when they are working together in an appropriate environment,
and this can be helpful to your thinking about what
you need to do and what you can do in your own context.
We are happy to arrange such visits and see them as
an extension of our provision of professional development.
They are especially useful for you if one of your
own pupils attends One Day School. We warmly welcome
such visits, and the children themselves are often
very touched to find that their classroom teacher
takes the trouble to do this. For you, it's rather
like putting a face to a name: those homesheets and
what your pupil may tell you (or forget to tell you!)
take on reality and you can see for yourself what
he or she gets up to on "ODS" day. For us
it's a chance to share, learn from you what you think
about the child, and build a closer working relationship
with you.
Obviously we do need to manage visits in terms of
duration and frequency so that our classes and teachers
are not overwhelmed, and sometimes there are times
when visits are not appropriate, for example when
we ourselves have a new teacher still in training.
Therefore we ask that you contact head office if you
are in Auckland or your local coordinator to organise
a suitable time (see our Contact
us page), and we ask that visits do not exceed
1 to 2 hours in length. You will be given an information
sheet to help you make the most of your visit.
Meeting
attendance
Wherever possible, Centre staff will make themselves
available to attend case meetings discussing individual
children where the information they can give would
assist in planning for that child and support school
and parents in decision-making.
Information
and advice
Centre staff answer many "on the spot" queries
from teachers and indeed from many other professionals
and from students and from parents which come to us
by phone or email. We are happy to do this and there
is no charge.
When more complex issues are involved, eg planning
a staff presentation or reviewing a policy, senior
staff are happy to meet with you or work vith you
via phone and email to assist you with appropriate
practical advice and information.
Research
support
If you are undertaking research in gifted education
as part of your post-graduate work, we would very
much like to hear about this and will do whatever
we can to support such research. See our Supporting
Research page.
Costs
Visits are free if you are the teacher of a One Day
School child; a koha is requested from all other visiting
educators in recognition of this as a professional
development opportunity.
Meeting attendance is generally free of charge when
One Day School children are involved, unless extended
or repeated attendance is required, in which case
a modest fee is set to cover our staff member's time.
A similarly modest fee applies to other meeting attendance.
More extended information and advisory support may
incur a modest fee, negotiated with you.
Research
support is free of charge.

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| Resources |
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The
Centre is able to advise on:
specific book resources for your staff professional
development library
the types of resources it is useful to have for pupil
use in the classroom or in a withdrawal group
useful contacts in some fields.
We
also recommend Rosemary Cathcart's They're Not
Bringing My Brain Out, a comprehensive and highly
practical teacher's manual. See our Articles
and Publications Page for details.
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| Linking
to One Day School and GO |
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"All
teachers can benefit from the expertise developed
in the one-day schools"
- Hon. Trevor Mallard, opening our Wellington One
Day School, April 2004
If
you've thought about One Day School, you've probably
thought about it primarily in relation to your gifted
pupil.
But both One Day School and its online version, GO,
have the potential to offer real benefits for you
too. As the classroom teacher of an ODS or GO child:
you are linked directly to New Zealand's centre of
expertise in this field
you have a continuous opportunity to talk with a colleague
who is working specifically in this field and who
knows your pupil, not just someone coming in from
outside
you receive a weekly homesheet and semester reports,
each of which can give you both added insight into
your pupil AND ideas you may be able to use in your
own teaching with this and other pupils
you are entitled to a significant discount (generally
about one third) on most of the workshops and seminars
we present.
If
you're not already familiar with either of these programmes
and would like to know what they involve, read our
One Day School
and GO pages
to find out more.

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| Supporting
you in working with parents |
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Teachers
often express concern about parents' attitudes towards
giftedness. For example:
Sometimes,
in some areas, the fear is that, if the school says
it's about to offer a gifted programme, every parent
will be on the principal's doorstep demanding to know
why their child hasn't been included
In
other areas, teachers are sometimes worried about
parents' reluctance to have children recognised as
gifted
In
individual instances, teachers may feel doubtful about
a parent's claim that a child is gifted and unsure
how to deal with the parent's insistence that steps
should be taken to provide for the child's alleged
needs.
Centre
staff are often able to help you with issues like
these.
Parent
forums
If we have a base in your area or if we are visiting
your area, we can arrange to run an "open forum"
to help educate your wider parent community towards
a better understanding of what giftedness really is
and acceptance of the need to make specific provision
for these children.
Our experience is that forums like this are popular
with parents and that they go a long way towards de-mystifying
a topic often sensationalised and misrepresented in
the media and towards clarifying perceptions of who
the gifted are and what their needs are. Parents are
reassured by meeting with experts in the field in
an open question-and-answer situation.
Your
support for events like this helps show parents that
you do have a genuine commitment to children in this
category, and better informed parents are likely to
be more responsive to what you put in place for gifted
pupils.
Individual
cases
Wherever possible, Centre staff will make themselves
available for consultation on individual cases. Sometimes
a phone call is all it takes. Sometimes more in-depth
discussion and review of material is needed. We'll
talk this through with you.
Costs
Costs incurred in running parent forums may be covered
by a small entry charge or a modest fee may be negotiated
with the school or in some circumstances a fee may
be waived. Consultations which necessitate more in-depth
work incur a fee; phone calls remain free of charge.

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