Friday, April 10, 2009

Lack of Mandatory Secondary GT Certification is Killing College Programs



Dear Dick,

I appreciate your posing these questions.
University of Houston sustains a marginal, reduced program in gifted and talented education (G/T) at the graduate level. Much of what we used to offer has been downsized because of the State of Texas' de-emphasis on accountability in G/T within the school districts. Moreover, as you are aware, teachers in Texas are required only to complete 30 clock hours of G/T training, which incidentally is less than 3/4 of ONE graduate course; seemingly, the State feels this is adequate preparation to teach our future leadership in business, medicine, government, education, and so forth. When one examines neighboring states, one finds much more rigorous requirements. For example, Alabama requires a master's degree in G/T to teach high ability students, as do Georgia, Mississippi, and Louisiana. I might add that Alabama has successfully attracted a spate of international businesses (to wit, the USA's only Mercedes Benz
assembly and research facility). You simply cannot tell international parents that teachers who have sat in a 30 clock-hour course of study are equivalent to those with master's degrees when it comes to teaching the typically high-ability children who end up migrating from overseas to the
USA. Do you think this has economic implications for Texas? Then, one should consider how Texas places in contrast to other states in terms of testing that has more rigor than does our very minimalistic TAKS system. While accountability makes sense, I fail to understand a system that bases educational "excellence" on relatively low-level instruments that cost taxpayers huge sums when there exist many nationally standardized tests that offer much more rigorous assessment options. Let's face it: Texas has dumbed everything down by making G/T education all but optional, by basing accountability on a minimalistic testing system, and by failing to require educators to be
well-versed in developing students' highest abilities. I predict that
Texas will eventually experience the same sort of economic downturn that has beset California and for similar reasons; attaining excellence has apparently become passé and politically incorrect here.

Thank you for your efforts in helping to keep our busy leadership informed. The way in which these issues are addressed will surely serve either to pave our future smoothly or cause us to drive a rutted roadway in the years ahead.

Best regards,
F. Richard Olenchak, Ph.D., P.C.
Professor, Psychologist, and Co-Director
Urban Talent Research Institute
Associate Chair for Special Programs
Department of Curriculum and
Instruction
University
of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-5023





3 comments:

  1. Here is more evidence that our “Lack of Mandatory Gifted and Talented Teacher Certification” is killing GT Education in Texas. Here is an abbreviated e-mail from Dr. Joyce Juntune at Texas A&M University:

    “As to the changes in courses due to the state requirements changing – yes it does make a difference… We do not offer separate GT courses- because the demand disappeared once the GT endorsement was lifted (by the TX State Legislature-my comment). Everything is tied to dollars-we hire teaching staff to match the demands of students (no mandatory GT certification required means no student demand- my comment). Obviously when the demand dropped with the lifting of GT endorsement- the department assigned out teaching time to the areas which were in demand. Everything at the university is really related to the people who are teaching there. I suspect that the day I retire both the emphasis on gifted and the emphasis on creativity will leave with me. Someone with new interests will offer new courses in a new area.

    Joyce E. Juntune, Ph.D.
    Institute for Applied Creativity
    Department of Education Psychology
    Texas A & M University
    College Station, TX 77843-4225
    979-776-9347

    We do not have to dismantle our GT program in Texas. All we need is to add two things to the current system.

    1] Require mandatory GT teacher certification (by TX certification exam).
    2] Require a GT screening exam for all students entering the TX public school systems during their first year in school.

    Sincerely,

    Dick Kantenberger
    Texas Certified Math, Physics, Special Ed., Gifted and Talented Teacher.
    12715 Taylorcrest Rd.
    Houston, TX 77024
    713-465-6077
    rfkantenberger@sbcglobal.net
    http://rfkantenberger.blogspot.com

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  2. Dick-

    Several states are experiencing difficulty holding on to their gifted and talented legislation and funding. We have 18 states that have no requirements for teachers of the gifted. I think it is clearly a national problem.

    joyce




    Joyce VanTassel-Baska, Ed.D.
    Jody and Layton Smith Professor in Education and Executive Director,
    Center for Gifted Education,
    College of William and Mary
    Past President, National Association for Gifted Children

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  3. Dear Richard,

    I wouldn't be surprised if that is the case. At Baylor, we have very few applicants for master's level programs in gifted education. Maybe one every three years. We do have an undergraduate program that offers a dual certificate (GT and elementary certificates) and have about 11-15 students who graduate from that program each year. Our undergraduate program is nationally recognized by NCATE, and our graduates often receive outstanding teacher awards in their school districts.

    Teachers in Texas only have to have a 30 clock-hour certificate with only minimal topic requirements. In Louisiana, teachers are required to have a master's degree in gifted education and 18 hours of coursework. They have strong university programs.

    The requirements in Texas do not allow teachers to meet national standards and ultimately affect not only courses offered at universities but also the quality of the education of gifted students.

    Thanks for asking the question,
    Susan



    Susan K. Johnsen, Ph. D.
    Professor, Department of Educational Psychology
    School of Education
    Baylor University
    One Bear Place #97301
    Waco, TX 76798

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