Educational Options Newsletter
March, 2008
Greetings:
Ah, March in Minnesota. One minute it feels like spring, and the next it is
cold and blustery with huge flakes of wet snow falling from the sky. Then five
minutes later it is all melted and crocuses are poking through the compost.
Well, then, it must be time to start looking for summer camps! In this issue,
besides continuing Dr. Ruf’s articles on School is Not Real Life, we list summer
programs for gifted children.
Sincerely, Kathy Hara, Editor
In this issue:
- School is Not Real Life: Teaching to the Average
in Same-Aged Classrooms
-
Summer camps
- Educational support
- Some fun websites
- In Minnesota

School is Not Real Life: Teaching to the Average in
Same-Aged Classrooms
By Deborah L. Ruf, Ph.D.
Remember how I said that the average IQ difference between
people who get our jokes—people most likely to become our friends—is 12 points
(on a 100 point scale with a 100 IQ being average)? And remember I told you that
the typical same-aged elementary classroom has a 70 to 80 IQ range in it? You
probably have been told by others—not me—that this is good for children because
it teaches them about the real world. Well, in the real world we choose our
friends and our activities by how comfortable we are in that environment and by
who else we get to spend time with. Also, although it may be nice to have a mix
of abilities in the office, we pretty much want all CPAs or medical doctors to
have a certain high ability, no lower than what is required to get the job done,
right? That’s why we have examinations at the end of such training to guarantee
that everyone who earns the title actually can do the job.
Did you know that every job or career actually has its own
IQ average and its own proven necessary minimum? Google Linda Gottfredson and
Frank Schmidt to get you started. They are among those who have shown that
people in the professions or other very complex careers need a minimum IQ of
about 120 in order to both learn what they need to learn and perform it well.
Like IQs or not, these numbers keep correlating with real life outcomes. Oh, and
in case you are assuming that you can change somebody’s IQ, there are no
replicated studies that show any more than an average 6 point temporary increase
in testable IQ with even the most intrusive interventional approach, adoption.
So, the way I look at it, we need to start educating and training people for
what they can do and for what will give them satisfaction, pride, and the
ability to take care of themselves.
Most people think that teachers teach to the average. Well,
no, they don’t. They can’t! If they taught to the average, too many of the
slower learners simply wouldn’t catch on to most of what was happening in the
classroom. Teachers teach to the top of the bottom third once they know their
class. This way, they reach the slower learners fairly well and the majority of
the kids in the middle get lots of encouragement and opportunity to manage their
time, learn study skills, and how to handle a certain amount of intellectual
struggle and feel success when they finally “get it.” The sad truth, though, is
that the brightest students end up spending a lot of time waiting for something
new to happen. Depending on a number of other factors, like whether they are
male or female and their personality profiles, they learn a lot that ends up not
being helpful to real life. They learn that if you are smart, you don’t need to
study or work hard. They learn that their parents and teachers don’t know what
they are talking about if they think this assignment matters. They learn that
they are smarter than everyone else in the class and are in for a shock when
they actually do get out into the real world.
David Lohman says that by 1st grade the typical same-aged
mixed-ability classroom already has 12 grade equivalencies of achievement in it.
Brighter children absorb more from their environments than lower ability
children, so regardless of their preschool environment, brighter kids will know
a great deal more than low ability children by the time they reach 1st grade.
Environment is an extremely important factor in someone’s development, but it
does not change whether or not someone is very bright or very slow. A child
whose IQ is 120 could finish the typical elementary curriculum in about 4½
years, not six. A child whose IQ is 130 could finish it in less than three
years. Above 140 needs only one year, but they are required to stay all six and
go at the pace of everyone else their age. What a waste of time and talent.
Folks, there has got to be a better way.

Summer camps
Summer
camps
For those who have not yet found a summer camp for their bright kids, here is a
list of web sites of summer programs, put together by a Minnesota Council of
Gifted and Talented (MCGT) group. And besides all these entries listed here,
don’t forget to contact your local art, history and science museums to see what
they offer during the summer.
This first group of websites contain lists of summer programs:
Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth
http://cty.jhu.edu/imagine/linkA.htmHoagies’
Gifted Education Page
http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/summer.htm
Davidson
Institute
http://www.gt-cybersource.org/Record.aspx?NavID=2_0&rid=14063Massachusetts Institute of Technology
http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/before/summer_programs/juniors_mit_and_other_summer_p.shtml
http://www.mitadmissions.org/topics/before/summer_programs/index.shtml
The following are summer programs taking place around the U.S. and the world:
THINK Summer Institute
http://www.ditdservices.org/Articles.aspx?ArticleID=114&NavID=5_0
Centre for
Talented Youth Ireland Summer Programme
http://www.dcu.ie/ctyi/summer/general/sumprogs.htmJohns
Hopkins University Center for Talented Youth CTY Programs
http://cty.jhu.edu/summer/index.html
Center for
Talent Development, Northwestern University
http://www.ctd.northwestern.edu/summer/(Rocky
Mountain) Center for Innovative and Talented Youth Summer Programs
http://www.du.edu/city/programs/summer-programs/index.html
Office of
Precollegiate Programs for Talented and Gifted (Iowa State)
http://www.opptag.iastate.edu/Stanford
University EPGY Summer Programs
http://epgy.stanford.edu/summer/index.html
MathPath
http://www.mathpath.org/MathCamp
http://www.mathcamp.org/
Ross
Program
http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/ross/
Summer
Institute for the Gifted
http://www.giftedstudy.com/
Middlebury
Monterey Language Academy
http://www.mmla.middlebury.edu/Greatbooks
Summer Program
http://www.greatbookssummer.com/
SPARK
http://brown.edu/Administration/Continuing_Studies/pc/spark/index.phpPhillips
Exeter Summer School
http://306.exeter.edu/summer/programs/academic_access.htm
Interlochen Summer Arts Camp
http://www.interlochen.org/camp/Exploration Summer Programs
http://www.explo.org/
Duke TIP
Summer Programs
http://www.tip.duke.edu/summer_programs/Secondary
School Program : Harvard Summer School
http://www.summer.harvard.edu/2008/programs/ssp/
TASP
http://www.tellurideassociation.org/tasp1.html
Leadership
Education and Development Program in Business (LEAD)
http://www.leadnational.org/
Yunasa
Summer Camp for the Gifted
http://www.educationaladvancement.org/pages/programspages/yunasa.html
These
summer camps and programs are located in Minnesota:
Bakken Library and Museum
http://www.thebakken.org/education/education.htm
Institute
of Technology Center for Educational Programs
http://www.itcep.umn.edu/sumenrich/index.phpMinnesota
Institute for Talented Youth
http://www.mity.org/
Concordia
Language Villages
http://clvweb.cord.edu/prweb/Intermediate District 287 (West Suburban Summer School)
http://www.district287.org/index.php
Rochester
College for Kids
http://www.rctc.edu/community/youth/cfk.htmlSchool
Chess Association
http://www.schoolchess.org/
The Loft
Literary Center
http://www.loft.org/
iD Tech
Camps Minnesota
http://www.internaldrive.com/minnesota/
Gifted and
Talented Institute, ISD 191
http://www.giftedtalented.org/

Educational support
Last year about this time we
included information about the Jack Kent Cooke Young Scholars Program, which
provides educational opportunities and support to high-achieving youth with
financial need. The program is now accepting applications from current 7th
graders, and the deadline is Monday, May 5. For more information, visit the
Jack Kent Cooke Foundation.

Some fun websites
Over the last six months or so we
have heard of some fun websites that you and/or your children might enjoy.
The first site is Doodle 4 Google,
which features a contest sponsored by Google. It is run through schools, with a
registration deadline of March 28 – so there is still time, but not much. The
idea is for students to make a design incorporating the Google logo with this
year’s theme “What if . . . .” If nothing else, it’s fun to look at the site and
see what creative students have done with the logo over the years.
One can get lost in the National
Geographic websites.
The National
Geographic World Atlas for Young Explorers, Third Edition, which ties in
with the book, includes an Animals section, with Crittercam access; a maps
section for fun or to use for school reports; world music, where you can listen
to Arab classical music and more; and a games section which features interactive
adventures, puzzles and action games. Clicking on the Country menu item leads to
even more choices, including more animals, daily news, a green guide, and
history. And throughout the site there are the incomparable National Geographic
photos.
Sponsored by the Minnesota Zoo,
our third site is Wolf Quest. Along with
information about wolves, the site also features a free downloadable game in
which the player lives the life of a wild wolf in Yellowstone National Park.
With single- or multiplayer versions, new episodes will be released periodically
during the year.

In Minnesota
There will be a School Options
Fair for MCGT members from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 19. Attendees
will be able to speak with representatives of various schools, from pre-K to
colleges with dual enrollment programs, about what those schools have to offer
gifted children. The site is the Edina Community Center, 3rd floor, Room 350,
5701 Normandale Road, Edina. (On the east frontage road of Highway 100 south of
50th St.)
For more information, go to
MCGT and Chapter Events

The foundation of every state is the education of its
youth. -- Diogenes Laertius
Deborah Ruf’s book, “Losing Our Minds: Gifted Children Left
Behind,”
is available through Great Potential
Press or
Amazon.com.

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