Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities

There are both achievement and opportunity gaps for low-income students when compared to their economically advantaged peers; and, for rural students, these gaps may be even more pronounced. In this manuscript we draw from our ongoing work in a five-year federally-funded, Jacob K. Javits grant focus...

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Main Authors: Amy Price Azano, Carolyn M. Callahan, Annalissa V. Brodersen, Melanie Caughey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mercy College 2017-04-01
Series:Global Education Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/302/252
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spelling doaj-dcb372259e8d4e1bba272e87b0f6e10e2020-11-24T22:18:58ZengMercy CollegeGlobal Education Review2325-663X2017-04-01416277Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural CommunitiesAmy Price Azano0Carolyn M. Callahan 1Annalissa V. Brodersen2Melanie Caughey3Virginia TechUniversity of Virginia University of Virginia University of Virginia There are both achievement and opportunity gaps for low-income students when compared to their economically advantaged peers; and, for rural students, these gaps may be even more pronounced. In this manuscript we draw from our ongoing work in a five-year federally-funded, Jacob K. Javits grant focusing on promoting gifted education in rural schools. To address issues of under-identification of gifted students in these settings, and to investigate ways to maximize achievement, we established an alternative process for identifying gifted students in rural schools; and we created units integrating place-based pedagogy within an evidence-based curriculum model as an intervention. Finally, we discuss preliminary findings from the pilot year and first half of the second year of the study documenting success in augmenting the pool of identified students and engaging teachers in implementing the curriculum. Perhaps more importantly, we document lessons learned and more global takeaways for the field. Specifically, we discuss the influence of deficit thinking with regard to rural schooling (and subsequent recognition of gifts and talents), the risk of generalizing rural to all rural places, and the nuances of rural poverty not captured in commonly used metrics, such as Free and Reduced Lunch. http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/302/252Gifted educationgifted studentsrural educationgifted students’ rural educationplace-based pedagogyrural schoolsunder-identificationachievement gapopportunity gap
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amy Price Azano
Carolyn M. Callahan
Annalissa V. Brodersen
Melanie Caughey
spellingShingle Amy Price Azano
Carolyn M. Callahan
Annalissa V. Brodersen
Melanie Caughey
Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
Global Education Review
Gifted education
gifted students
rural education
gifted students’ rural education
place-based pedagogy
rural schools
under-identification
achievement gap
opportunity gap
author_facet Amy Price Azano
Carolyn M. Callahan
Annalissa V. Brodersen
Melanie Caughey
author_sort Amy Price Azano
title Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
title_short Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
title_full Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
title_fullStr Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
title_full_unstemmed Responding to the Challenges of Gifted Education in Rural Communities
title_sort responding to the challenges of gifted education in rural communities
publisher Mercy College
series Global Education Review
issn 2325-663X
publishDate 2017-04-01
description There are both achievement and opportunity gaps for low-income students when compared to their economically advantaged peers; and, for rural students, these gaps may be even more pronounced. In this manuscript we draw from our ongoing work in a five-year federally-funded, Jacob K. Javits grant focusing on promoting gifted education in rural schools. To address issues of under-identification of gifted students in these settings, and to investigate ways to maximize achievement, we established an alternative process for identifying gifted students in rural schools; and we created units integrating place-based pedagogy within an evidence-based curriculum model as an intervention. Finally, we discuss preliminary findings from the pilot year and first half of the second year of the study documenting success in augmenting the pool of identified students and engaging teachers in implementing the curriculum. Perhaps more importantly, we document lessons learned and more global takeaways for the field. Specifically, we discuss the influence of deficit thinking with regard to rural schooling (and subsequent recognition of gifts and talents), the risk of generalizing rural to all rural places, and the nuances of rural poverty not captured in commonly used metrics, such as Free and Reduced Lunch.
topic Gifted education
gifted students
rural education
gifted students’ rural education
place-based pedagogy
rural schools
under-identification
achievement gap
opportunity gap
url http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/302/252
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