Grade Skipping Your Gifted Student

Is Whole-Grade Acceleration Right For the Gifted Child?

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Education's Standard Pace Doesn't Serve All - Daniele Musella/morgueFile.com
Education's Standard Pace Doesn't Serve All - Daniele Musella/morgueFile.com
One of the toughest decisions a gifted child's parents may have to make is whether skipping a grade is right for their child, not only now but also in the long run.

Why Consider Whole-Grade Acceleration?

When a gifted child excels in math, art, music, or literature, parents and teachers can work as a team to ensure he or she is challenged in that particular subject area. Common methods include in-class differentiation, single subject pullout, online distance learning, public school gifted programs, and enrichment opportunities through private classes and summer camps designed for gifted youth.

Occasionally, parents and teachers run across a profoundly gifted and talented student whose achievement is above grade-level across the board. Sometimes this child is twice exceptional, with deficits in social and emotional skills. Other times the gifted child belies this stereotype and fits in quite well. In either case, academically challenging a profoundly gifted student presents unique problems necessitating flexible education solutions.

Your child may be lucky enough to live in a public school district with a self-contained full-time gifted program, but these are rare. Maybe you can afford private education or a vast array of enrichment activities to supplement deficiencies in traditional academics. Your child may even qualify for a gifted magnet school.

Unfortunately, outside of a few major metropolitan areas, these choices are not available to most of the nation’s gifted students. Gifted specialists will often recommend homeschooling for smart kids with limited gifted education options. If homeschooling is not possible, your child’s best and only option may be grade skipping for a better academic fit.

Is Acceleration Right for Your Child?

In the past, the decision to accelerate a gifted child was a highly subjective process leaving many educators and parents wary of unforeseen negative outcomes. Misconceptions and anecdotal evidence of failed accelerations often dominate the decision-making process. Luckily, schools now have a research-based tool to assess whether a child is a strong, good, or marginal candidate for whole-grade acceleration.

The Iowa Acceleration Scale is a manual and assessment tool combining research and case studies along with a scoring system to objectively determine if your child is likely to have a positive outcome after acceleration. It examines academics, behavior, motivation, social, emotional, and motor skills along with family and school support systems.

What’s Next?

When whole-grade acceleration is necessary for your gifted student, strong advocacy will be essential. Prepare your case that acceleration best meets your child’s academic needs. Know the evidence-based benefits of acceleration, the risks for gifted children who aren’t challenged, and be ready to skillfully refute deeply entrenched misconceptions about social and emotional risks for kids skipping grades.

Carla Boulianne, Kate Kelebek

Carla Marie Boulianne - Background and Interests I am a former feature writer for Parenting a Gifted Child. I relish combining personal parenting and childhood ...

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Nov 26, 2008 9:35 PM
Guest :
I feel that if a child is academicaly and emotionally ready they should be able to skip a grade. Sometimes they are not learning where they are. I tried to get my daughters school to put her in first grade when she was in kindergarted, they refused and didn't know what to do with her. Now she is in the fifth grade and next week the school is accelerating her into the sixth grade so maybe she will get some challenge out of being moved up.
Nov 11, 2010 3:54 PM
Guest :
Please, if your child is gifted and emotionally ready then let them skip. My parents never let me skip, so now I am stuck reading all class because I am so ahead. And everyone avoids me because they are intimidated. Please consider the consequences of not skipping for the child in later life.
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