Please join us for a CPA Parent Coffee Chat this Saturday

Ever want a sympathetic ear for those perplexing, frustrating and even proud moments? We know parenting those gifted kids can be a lonely job, but rest assured you don’t have to go it alone!

Join your fellow parents and ask a question, share a tip, a story or just a knowing smile.

Come, grab yourself a cup ‘o Joe, pull up a chair and let it all hang out.

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011 at 1:00 PM

Corner Coffee Bar in Perrinville (at the corner of 76th and Olympic View Drive)

Alert – Message from the Coalition for Gifted Education

This message has been sent to you by The Washington Coalition For Gifted Education. Comments or questions can be sent towagifted@earthlink.net or grevewandi@gmail.com If you wish to have your name deleted from our mailing list, send a notice towagifted@earthlink.net.

This is an urgent message deserving of your immediate attention.

Today the House Ways & Means committee heard proposed substitute house bill 1086 and has fast tracked it for executive session on Thursday, January 19, at 3:30 pm. This bill provides no funding to districts for Highly Capable Programs for the current school year, retroactive to September 2010.

We understand that there will need to be cuts to non-protected programs but a total elimination retroactive to September 2010 is neither proportional nor equitable.

When the House Ways & Means committee meets on Thursday, members can propose amendments to this inequitable provision. We urge you to write immediately to all members of the committee to ask that any cuts made to Highly Capable Programs be proportional to cuts to all other programs and that they not be retroactive. Retroactive cuts will be seriously disruptive to districts and the students they serve.

http://www.leg.wa.gov/House/Committees/WAYS/Pages/MembersStaff.aspx is a complete list of all members of the House Ways & Means committee. Each name constitutes a link to a legislator’s home page from which you can send an email.

If you write now, there is still time to amend this bill to provide some level of funding for Highly Capable Programs. It is easier to amend a bill in committee than when it gets to the floor so please WRITE IMMEDIATELY.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION FOR THOSE WHO WANT MORE

1. The bill and the summary document are available at http://leap.leg.wa.gov/leap/default.asp

Click on Legislative Proposals with the yellow ‘new’ button. Then click again on Legislative Proposal with the yellow ‘new’ button on the next page.

2. Here is the summary in brief. This budget proposal suspends funds to districts  for Highly Capable Programs for the entire school year 2010-2011. The $ 2 million in the bill covers some payments made in 2010 for 2009 plus funding for Centrum and Future Problem Solving/Destination ImagiNation for 2010-2011. To repeat, there is no district funding for Highly Capable Programs for the current school year.

From the bill summary, page 49:

“The state allocation for highly capable students is suspended, effective at the beginning of the 2010-11 school year. The 2010 supplemental budget allocated a rate of $401.08 per funded student, up to a maximum of 2.314 percent of each district’s full-time equivalent basic education enrollment. The remaining funding in this budget reflects program costs from the prior school year, two months of which fall in FY 2011.”

3.Based on prior biennial and supplemental budgets for the current year, funds have already been sent to districts and these funds will be recaptured by the state through cuts in basic education appropriations for the remainder of the school year.

From a power point presentation by Supt. Randy Dorn on January 6, 2011:

“If adopted by Legislature, OSPI will adjust district apportionment payments to reflect cuts.

“OSPI will transfer Highly Capable program to General Apportionment in order to then make adjustments to district apportionment.”

Connections Conference–January 29th, Redmond High School

Northwest Gifted Child Association and Lake Washington Gifted Education Advisory Council are sponsoring The CONNECTIONS conference on Saturday, January 29th from 8:00 to 12:30 p.m. at Redmond High School.

CONNECTIONS is a symposium for parents of gifted children, providing information and sharing opportunities on the unique issues they face. Listen to and talk with experts on gifted children and meet other local parents who may be dealing with the same issues or have stories of what has worked for their families. See the graphic below for details on presenters and location.

People who register at www.nwgca.org using PayPal before January 25th can get the discounted registration fee. Registration fees include a one-year membership in Northwest Gifted Child Association for those who do not have a current membership.

The CONNECTIONS Conference is sponsored by Northwest Gifted Child Association and Lake Washington Gifted Education Advisory Council.

Message from the Coalition for Gifted Education

This message has been sent to you by The Washington Coalition For Gifted Education. Comments or questions can be sent towagifted@earthlink.net or grevewandi@gmail.com If you wish to have your name deleted from our mailing list, send a notice towagifted@earthlink.net.

1. Early indications are that an unofficial deadline of February 4 has been set for the supplemental budget. The biennial budget is likely not going to be considered until the next revenue forecast, about March 17, and certainly not until the supplemental is done.

  • Hearings and work sessions are going on right now. Therefore, messages to Legislators should concentrate on the supplemental budget for now. If we learn differently, we will notify you.
  • Our message is: no retroactive decrease of funds for HCP and to provide some level of funding for what remains of the school year.

2. Some errata items to the Gifted Handbook. As soon as you send out something that big, someone goes and changes things on you.

Changes to the information on page 10.

  • Senator Joe Fain, 47th District, has become a member of the Senate Early Learning K-12 Education Committee.
  • Senator Steve Hobbs, 44th District, has also been added to the committee.
  • Rep, Tim Probst, 17th District,  is vice chair of the House Education Appropriations Committee.
  • Rep. Shelly Short, 7th District, is on the House Education Appropriations Committee.
  • Rep. Eric Pettigrew, 37th District, is on the House Ways & Means Committee.

The Senate has added 5 members to the Ways & Means Committee:

  • Lisa Brown, 3rd District
  • Janea Holmquist, 13th District
  • Jim Kastama, 25th District
  • Derek Kilmer, 26th District, vice-chair
  • Karen Keiser, 33rd District.

3. All the email addresses of legislators have been changed. If you have legislators in your email address book, you need to check the web sites and make the necessary changes. If you use the web site to send your emails, no action is necessary.

https://dlr.leg.wa.gov/MemberEmail/Default.aspx?Chamber=H

https://dlr.leg.wa.gov/MemberEmail/Default.aspx?Chamber=S

4. The large cafeteria in the Pritchard Building is closed for renovations. The only place to buy lunch on campus is the snack shop near the Columbia Room and much of its seating space has been taken over by offices. We strongly suggest you brown bag lunch and plan to eat in the Columbia Room on Gifted Education Day.

5. In his initial presentation to the House Ways & Means Committee on January 11th,  Superintendent Dorn described Highly Capable Programs as a “critical” piece of education and proposed funding them. Dollar amounts were not given. Read all about it at:http://www.k12.wa.us/Communications/LegislativeUpdates.aspx

For other support for Highly Capable Programs, see page 9 of the Handbook.

6. What have we done the first week of session?

  • We submitted written testimony to the House Ways & Means Committee and the House Education Appropriations Committee.
  • We are preparing both written and oral testimony for the Senate Ways & Means Committee on January 17th.
  • We are following closely the introduction on January 18 of a proposed substitute to the Governor’s supplemental budget bill in the House. You can follow this action at http://www.leg.wa.gov/house/committees/WAYS/Pages/Agendas.aspx
  • Click on 1/18/2011. 1086 is the Governor’s budget proposal – Sec. 511. A copy of the proposed substitute is not available as of this writing.

Join us in Olympia on Gifted Education Day, February 11, 2011.

Summer Enrichment Program at the University of Oregon

The Summer Enrichment Program (SEP) at the University of Oregon is now taking applications for our 2011 sessions.  SEP is a residential summer program that supports the academic enrichment of gifted and highly able students in grades 6 – 10.  In each of the program’s two-week sessions, students attend six academic classes of their choice during the day and participate in a variety of social activities in the evening.  The program encourages students to create a personalized schedule that reflects their academic and personal interests.  In addition, residing on the university’s main campus offers them some early exposure to learning and living in a university environment.

SEP applications for 2011 are now available to be downloaded directly from our website at www.uoyouth.org.  In addition to obtaining an application, by visiting uoyouth.org you will discover course offerings from last summer, a sample of the camp’s daily schedule, the enthusiastic remarks made by participants and their parents, and other informational materials to download and share with your gifted students and their families.  Visiting uoyouth.org is the quickest and easiest way to obtain current program information and locate answers to frequently asked questions.  By downloading application materials, you also allow us to direct program resources towards our educational endeavors rather than mailing costs.

While we encourage you to save time and conserve resources by accessing and distributing the wealth of information available onwww.uoyouth.org, we do understand the potential advantage of having physical documents at the ready.  If you would like to receive paper copies of SEP applications, brochures, or other informational materials, please let me know.  We are able to accommodate requests for mailing program materials in batches of two to two-hundred.  We also frequently share information about SEP through school and district websites and newsletters, and we can provide program descriptions for those purposes as needed.

Recommendations from educators and support associations for gifted students have always been critical to our recruiting process. Your work makes our programs possible.  If you know students who might benefit from a program like this, or if you have specific questions about SEP, I would love to speak with you.  Please get in touch anytime.

Take care,

James Engberg, Ph.D.

SEP Coordinator

Superintendent’s Roundtable is this Wednesday

From the Edmonds School District:
Please join us this Wednesday, Jan. 12 from noon to 1 p.m. at the Educational Service Center for this month’s Superintendent’s Roundtable, on the topic “Role of Federal Money in Our Schools: AYP and Stimulus Dollars.” Panelists featured for the roundtable include:
  • Bill McKeighen, Budget and Finance Manager
  • Nancy Katims, Assessment and Research Director
  • Katy Wysocki, Student Services Director
  • Charlotte Beyer, Cedar Valley Community School Principal
  • Margaret Mesaros, Spruce Elementary Principal
  • Dan Davis, Meadowdale Elementary Principal

The Educational Service Center is located at 20420 68th Ave. W., Lynnwood, 98036.

“Everyday Intensity” blog post

Meeting the Needs of Intense Grown-ups

I’m excited to be heading to Seattle this week to give a presentation to the Seattle Public Schools  titled “Intensity Through the Ages—Celebrating Our Children’s Passion, Creativity, and Excitability” (it’s free and no registration is required, so if you live in the area, please consider stopping by!). The title, however, is just the beginning. Parents and teachers often attend talks such as this one to understand their children better, and they come away knowing that there is much to understand and celebrate about themselves, as well.

What are your social-emotional needs? Intellectual needs? Creative needs? Physical needs? Twice-exceptional needs? Not your children’s. Yours.

Are you meeting them?

If the very question makes you squirm with discomfort (Sure, my kids are gifted, but me??), spend some time with the following resources, then comment here on your own experience with living as an intense adult and learning to celebrate your own passion, creativity, and excitability.

Intensity Through the Ages – Celebrating Our Children’s Passion, Creativity, & Excitability

This free presentation is a must for parents and teachers of gifted children and anyone who would like to learn and understand more about giftedness. Seating is limited to 200.

Lisa will discuss the role that intensity plays in giftedness—intensity not just of the intellect, but of emotions, sensations, imagination and physical movement—and how understanding gifted intensity can help us to help our children.

Presentation by Lisa Rivero*
Thursday, January 13, 7:00 – 8:30 PM
Seattle Public Schools, Stanford Center Auditorium
2445 3rd Avenue S.
Seattle 98134

*Lisa Rivero is the author of A Parent’s Guide to Gifted Teens, The Smart Teens’ Guide to Living with Intensity, and other books and articles on education and giftedness. She lives and writes in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where she also teaches at the Milwaukee School of Engineering. Lisa speaks regularly at both local and national conferences on giftedness, learning, and creativity, and she is an active board member for the non-profit organization Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted (SENG).

Gifted Education Day Planning Meeting–Thursday, January 6th

Please join the CPA board on Thursday, January 6th in the Terrace Park Commons at 6:30 for a planning and information session on Washington State Gifted Education Day.

Gifted Education Day is an annual event held at the Capitol in Olympia. Challenge program families have attended in large numbers for several years now. While annual attendance is important, this is an especially crucial year for us to show the legislature how important gifted education is for our children and our families.

CPA will provide light snacks and beverages for the meeting. We will also have handouts from the Coalition for Gifted Education and other organizations involved in the planning and preparations for Gifted Education Day.

How to talk to Your Kids – from the Washington Coalition for Gifted Education

How to Talk to Your Kids about Budget Threats to Highly Capable Education

Times are tough.  Many of you may have read about the Governor’s proposal to

eliminate state highly capable education funding in the next two-year budget

(starting July 1, 2011).  Your children may have, also.  As concerned parents, we

have put together this set of talking points to help you navigate your children’s

(and possibly your own) reaction to these discussions, both in the media and in

their own school communities.  We welcome feedback and thoughts on how to

discuss these issues with kids.  Highly capable children often have a heightened

sense of empathy and may need special emotional support as they may feel a

deep personal connection to the specific impacts of these proposed budget cuts

to their unique educational needs, as well as the economic recession in general.

When children have been through a parent’s job loss or other direct impacts to

their family from the recession, the thought of losing their school situation can be

even more challenging.

Suggested steps:

1) As the adult, get all of the facts.  The budget situation this year is

especially complex.  There has already been one supplemental budget

adopted during the recent special session.  There are negotiations

underway in preparation for a likely second supplemental budget in early

January to make additional cuts to balance the 2010 budget.  There is a

separate discussion now beginning for the regular budget covering the

2011 – 2013 biennium.  Stay apprised by joining the Washington Coalition

for Gifted Education email list (contact  wagifted@earthlink.net to

subscribe, or become a fan of WCGE on Facebook at

www.facebook.com/wagifted), and joining email lists of parent

organizations concerned about these issues.  Especially for older children

(middle, high school), you can discuss the facts with them to make sure

they have the whole picture.  District budgets AND the state budget are

important, so the debate will play out in two places.  And, every District is

impacted differently by any state cuts, although the huge cuts to K-12

overall mean that every District’s own investment in highly capable funding

is especially at-risk this year.

2) Make sure your student advisors have the facts.  You can share

information with your school administration and teachers for them to be

able to appropriately guide and support children so that they do NOT feel

alone in this process.

3) Let children know that many people care about them and are doing

everything that they can to ensure they continue to receive the education

they need.  Talk about the challenges of the overall economy and how

government is facing challenges just like other sectors are.  Let them

know that elected leaders have choices in balancing the budget, and how

people are working to encourage them to support these students’

education.

4) Do not assume.  Don’t assume that your child wants more information

than s/he is asking for.  Answer direct questions, as straightforwardly and

factually as you can.  This is particularly true for many younger kids.

Giving more information and too frequently can create more anxiety.  Your

child may need time to process the information you provide before they

come back with more questions.

5) If your child is interested in the political process, and feels very

strongly about making his/her feelings known to elected officials, it is

appropriate to encourage action.  Here are some specific things kids CAN

do:

a. High School:  Form or join a student union for highly capable

kids.  (Garfield HS model)

b. Middle and Elementary:  If you can, address the student

councils at your schools – getting them all of the facts that are

appropriate for their age group.

c. Gifted Education Day:  There will be lobby day on Feb. 11,

sponsored by the Washington Coalition for Gifted Education.  Sign

yourself and your child up!  Schedule an appointment with your

representatives and go to Olympia.  Legislators like to hear from

real people about the impact of policy decisions.  Be sure to

understand the key message that all groups supporting highly

capable children are reiterating:  Basic education for a highly

capable child is in a highly capable program.  Eliminating funding

erroneously ignores these unique needs and assumes that highly

capable education programs are an add-on and that these kids will

somehow teach themselves and succeed without support and

challenge.

d. Write letters to the editor together.  Look at the National

Association for Gifted Children’s website

for talking points abouthow to advocate for gifted kids.  It’s important to use messages that

resonate with legislators and elected leaders.

e. Meet with your school board members.  In many districts, the

district invests more local money in highly capable programming

than is received from the state.  You can and should encourage

your kids to talk with board members about why District investment

(if it exists) is not an ‘add on’ but rather critical for their learning

success.  School board members may or may not support highly

capable funding, but they need to hear from parents and students

regularly about the needs of highly capable kids.  And the risks of

not addressing them.

f.  Sign the petition that parents will be sharing with legislators.  If

you feel it is appropriate, give your child the option to sign, as well.

http://www.petitiononline.com/budgcuts/petition.html

6) Don’t play the victim.  As frustrating as all of this is, it’s important to

support kids in their empowerment.  Remember that this may be a long

process.  There may be cuts.  Prepare yourself by talking at a family

meeting about how changes happen in life, and the best ways to deal with

them.   Try to make a plan of action as best you can as a family to address

how you will ensure that your own child’s needs will be met if there are

indeed cuts that impact your district.  And, don’t give up.  Continuing to

organize with other parents will ensure that there will be an ongoing voice

for the needs of highly capable learners in your own District over time.

Help your student to understand that you will ensure that they remain

connected to their school community, in whatever form that takes in the

future.

7) Children who are acutely aware:   If your child is experiencing anxiety

that is significant, seek advice of your teacher, school counselor, or an

outside professional.  You can also find good resources on the social and

emotional needs of the gifted at  http://www.seng.org.   If your child wants

to discuss the situation every day, consider reserving one day a week for

discussion, or just critical ‘decision’ times – such as when the legislature

makes an update to the budget or there is a school board meeting.  For

children who have been through several educational transitions (as many

of our kids have as we sought the right situation for them, or as our

districts have made prior decisions that have impacted them), do remind

them that they are ok, and that they will be ok.  Changes are hard, but

people can get through them.

8) And, above all, remember that there are lots of people who care about

your children, including other parents, teachers, counselors, state

legislators, school superintendents, board members, counselors and

members of the community.  And, with a strong movement across the

state, we can make a difference.

Important Message from the Washington Coalition For Gifted Education

This message has been sent to you by The Washington Coalition For Gifted Education. Comments or questions can be sent to wagifted@earthlink.net or barbaragmaurer@yahoo.com. If you wish to have your name deleted from our mailing list, send a notice to wagifted@earthlink.net.


“Failure to help the gifted child is a societal tragedy, the extent of which is difficult to measure, but which is surely great. How can we measure the sonata unwritten, the curative drug undiscovered, the absence of political insight? They are the difference between what we are and what we could be as a society.” — Dr. James J. Gallagher, University of North Carolina

The Governor has just proposed to eliminate all state highly capable program funding for the next two years.  This is the third time she’s made such a proposal.  Her last attempt was rebuffed by the legislature during the just completed special session only five days ago.  The only way she can legally do this is if the Legislature suspends implementation of ESHB 2261.

Highly capable programming is not something extra to be funded only when times are good.  As the legislature declared in ESHB 2261 in 2009, “for highly capable students, access to accelerated learning and enhanced instruction is access to a basic education.” The Washington Coalition for Gifted Education will work together with families of highly capable students and advocates for highly capable programming across the state to oppose the Governor’s short sighted decision.  The first step in our campaign will be to write letters to the editors of our local newspapers protesting this action and sharing the important role highly capable programming has had in the education of our students

You can find contact information for your local paper in the print edition of the paper or at the paper’s website. The Secretary of State also maintains a listing of newspaper websites at http://www.sos.wa.gov/library/wa_newspapers.aspx.  Most papers will provide contact information on an “About Us” or “Contact Us” page.  Many will accept letters to the editor submitted via email, while others will provide a mailing address.

If you have never written to a paper before, the National Association for Gifted Children’s advocacy web site at http://www.nagc.org/index.aspx?id=3148 has some excellent suggestions and examples of where to begin.  Be sure to adapt your letter to reflect your personal experiences and the issues facing highly capable programming in Washington State.

Some key issues in Washington are:

– Full funding of Highly Capable Programs in the 2011 – 2013 biennial budget.

– Full implementation of the education reforms promised in ESHB 2261 beginning in September 2011.  Under ESHB 2261, highly capable program services will become a mandated part of basic education. This places them within the protections of basic education regarding funding, and it is vital that implementation proceed as scheduled. The Governor’s budget proposes to not fund a program which will be protected as part of basic education unless the Legislature follows her request to suspend implementation to some unspecified future date.

– Highly Capable Programs are an essential part of securing Washington’s economic future. This is a high-tech state and gifted programs are the place where STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) talents are best nurtured. Funding highly capable programming is an investment in our state’s future.

This is just the first step in our campaign for highly capable programming.  You can stay current with the latest activities of the Washington Coalition for Gifted Education at our website, http://wcge.wordpress.com or by becoming a fan on Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/wagifted.

Thank you for your continuing advocacy for our Highly Capable Learners!