Gifted & Talented
Welcome to Monfort Elementary Gifted and Talented
My name is Danae Rosse, and I am the G/T Specialist at Monfort Elementary School. Please continue to read to learn more about our Gifted and Talented Program, or visit our District Gifted and Talented Program.
My focus is working with advanced students and helping teachers meet the needs of gifted students in the classroom as well as identifying students who may qualify for our program. Each day is a delight getting to work with not only our Gifted/Talented students but our high-ability learners as well.
An important part of the work I do is to administer assessments for students who have been referred for further testing. Identifying students for the GT program is a crucial step in the process of providing services to those students.
Parents and families are vital to our students' success. Identified students' families can expect to receive an e-newsletter from me each month; additionally, I will meet with each family each year to review, revise, and update each GT student's Advanced Learning Plan. Communication is a two-way street and I would love to hear from you whenever you have a question or comment! Since I work in multiple buildings, email is the best way to communicate with me.
Danae Rosse, Gifted and Talented Specialist, drosse@greeleyschools.org
Danae Rosso
Identification of Gifted & Talented Students
Greeley-Evans School District follows established procedures for the identification of Gifted/Talented students that align with state guidelines (CDE, 2003). Identification is an ongoing process that is facilitated by the GT teacher in each building. It uses both formal and informal data and requires the collection of a body of evidence over time to substantiate a student's talent in specific areas. Ultimately, the process guides programming for each identified student. A complete identification kit is available at each school.
Purpose
To find gifted students whose abilities, talents and potential for accomplishment are so outstanding that they require special provisions in the form of appropriately challenging programming to meet their educational needs.
Student Identification Process
- Step 1: Student Search
- Step 2: Collect Body of Evidence
- Step 3: Review Body of Evidence
- Step 4: Identification
- Step 5: Programming Math (Advanced Learning Plan ALP)
- Periodic Review
Step 1: Student Search
Step 2: Collect Body of Evidence
Step 3: Review Body of Evidence
Step 4: Identification
Step 5: Programming Math (Advanced Learning Plan ALP)
Periodic Review
Collecting a Body of Evidence for Identification
Multiple sources and tools allow children to reveal their exceptionalities or potential. A variety of assessment tools should be used to collect information on a student whose background or talent area makes him/her unique from others. A complete "body of evidence" will consists of data from at least three of the four areas of intellectual ability, achievement, behaviors/characteristics, and demonstrated performance. Identification is based on S (strong), M (moderate), B (borderline) evidence for each piece of data.
Curriculum
- William and Mary Language Arts Curriculum for High Ability Learners
- Jacob's Ladder
- Building Language and Caesar's English I and II
- Word within a Word
- Educational Program for Gifted Youth (EPGY) Math