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Chicago Gifted Community Center

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Welcome to our blog.   Please note that this page is open to the public, so any comments made by members will be visible to the general public also.  At this time, only members can make comments to the posts. 


  • September 01, 2013 5:49 PM | Deleted user

    Amanda Vogel is the Vice President of Nurturing Wisdom Tutoring and the director of Nurturing Wisdom Academy, a private school in Hinsdale. She has a Master’s degree in special education and over twelve years of experience in teaching, writing curriculum, and supporting educators. She developed Nurturing Wisdom’s extensive executive functioning curriculum for both their tutoring and school programs.


     

    Dean's Story


     

    Let me share with you a story about a gifted child I know named Dean whose story might be familiar to some of you. At three, Dean could correctly identify every Thomas the Tank character that ever appeared on the show.  At four, he figured out how to read on his own and by five, his obsession with presidents meant he could soon tell you the name, birthday, and interesting facts about every president.  At seven, he was memorizing all of the chemical elements for fun. Dean has always had a voracious appetite for reading, enjoys reading the same books over and over again, and could tell you detailed facts about everything he has ever read. 


    Now that Dean is eleven, it's puzzling to his parents that he can't keep up at school.  HIs papers are a mess, riddled with dog-ears.  He brought home three missing assignment slips just last week.  He usually aces quizzes and tests, but when he doesn't get an "A," he's more likely to get a "D."  While he completes homework in record time, it’s a mystery as to how his teacher can decipher his illegible work.  His mom is struggling to understand, “Why is my bright child struggling at school?”  The answer can be found in his executive functioning skills. 


    What exactly is executive functioning?


    When we think of traditional learning, we think of taking in facts and developing skills. These are both examples of input.  In Dean's case, his strength is input.  In fact, his father has often described his mind as a “steel trap.”  Executive functioning (“EF”) skills are an opposite set of skills: they include everything that has to do with acting on knowledge, or output. This means that “EF” includes organizing papers, writing down assignments, taking notes, studying, and even writing with structure. It’s the output that Dean struggles with. Information goes in his mind very easily and thoroughly, and he has no trouble understanding what he’s learning. When he tries to share that information or get through a homework list, however, the work product comes out very scattered.


    Is this common in gifted children?


    Not all gifted children struggle with executive functioning, but gifted children are often more likely to encounter these struggles than other students.  Why?  For starters, gifted children like Dean find learning and school to initially be very easy, sometimes even boring.  When it comes to developing executive functioning skills, though, there really is a downside to school being “too easy.” If you are able to easily understand your lessons, memorize the key details, and recall them later, there is no need to develop a set of study skills.


    Justin, a former student of mine who is now in high school, found this out the hard way. He breezed through elementary school and middle school. He consistently earned A’s without ever studying.  That also meant that Justin was not practicing these skills.  Even though his developing brain was primed and ready to learn these types of skills, he wasn’t getting opportunities to learn, practice, hone, and master studying. When he transitioned to high school and encountered a rigorous American history course, he had no idea how to approach that class. He floundered for the first time in his academic career.


    This phenomenon isn’t limited to studying either.  If Susie can memorize all of her assignments throughout grade school and never needs to write them down, she never has the opportunity to learn and practice assignment management.  If Alex can fly through his homework each night in twenty minutes, he doesn’t have to learn to prioritize and organize his time.  If Cheryl memorizes the details of a lecture right as she hears it, she’s not likely to learn good note-taking skills for when the lectures become much more advanced later on.  Having a talent for taking in information can actually hamper the development of these output skills.


    Don't wait for disaster


    Every executive functioning skill can be broken down, taught, practiced, and mastered.  The key is to learn these skills before they are critically needed for success in a tough class.  If your child is going to be taking a heavy course load in the future, make sure that executive functioning skills are being learned early.  The middle school years (grades five to eight) offer the ideal window for this.  Even if your child doesn’t “need” to write everything down or study for his or her current classes, a tutor or teacher can help get these habits firmly established and set the stage for the future.  At a minimum, every child should learn to organize school papers/ materials, track and prioritize assignments, take notes on a textbook, study effectively (not just “look over” material), and write responses and paragraphs with structure.  These skills are just as important as learning to solve equations or punctuate a sentence!


    Executive functioning needs also provide another reason for you to work with your teachers and school to ensure that your child is being adequately challenged.  “Too easy” is a problem that shouldn’t be taken lightly. Children who are not challenged enough miss out on an opportunity to practice critical executive functioning skills.  They are also more likely to become risk-adverse and not tackle challenges that are out of their comfort zone.  When kids are regularly challenged with work that pushes their intellectual limits, without putting them in a constant state of frustration, a lot of development can happen: both in terms of input and output! 

     

    Posted retroactively on March 13, 2015. 

  • July 19, 2013 9:32 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)
    As many might have heard, Fermilab's Muon g-2 team is in the midst of transporting a 50-foot-wide electromagnet from Long Island to the Chicago suburbs in one piece. The move began on June 22 at Brookhaven National Laboratory, and will conclude the week of July 22 at Fermilab.

    Fermilab is inviting the public to join in a final celebration at Fermilab on Friday, July 26 to welcome the ring home. Starting at 5:30 pm, families can have fun with hands-on exhibits in Wilson Hall, eat in the Fermilab cafeteria and talk with our scientists while waiting for the ring to make its way across the Fermilab site. When the ring arrives at Wilson Hall, everyone will go outside to greet it, and get a group photo with it before it rolls to its final destination.

     

    Check out the Fermilab web site for maps of the journey and detailed up-to-the-minute updates.

  • June 28, 2013 2:54 PM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    Today's Poetry Foundation newsletter contained a reminder of their free poetry camps. 

     

    July 15 - 7th and 8th graders

    July 11, 18, 25 (morning) - 9th and 10th graders

    July 11, 18, 25 (afternoon) - 11th and 12th graders

     

    See their web site for complete details.

     

  • June 13, 2013 8:51 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    From the MSI web site . . .

     

    Summer Brain Games is Back at the Museum of Science and Industry!

     

    We're gearing up for another fun summer of learning with Summer Brain Games! For the second year, MSI is offering up an exciting science-fused solution to help kids stay engaged during summer vacation.

     

    Summer Brain Games offers eight weeks of free and fun at-home science experiments designed to combat the "summer brain drain," when kids lose months of critical learning. The free online activity guide features weekly experiments exploring summer themes like gardening, sunlight and sprinklers, all easily done at home with kids of all ages (and a little adult supervision).

    The Summer Brain Games online kit will offer other engaging tidbits about the science to be found around you all summer—and year—long. Learn about optics by creating a pinhole viewer, watch plants grow without soil, build a weather station and much more.

     

    Register to Get in the Game

     

    Registernow to be a part of MSI’s Summer Brain Games. When activities kick off in June, you’ll receive a voucher good for a FREE general admission ticket to MSI this summer. We'll send you weekly emails (starting the week of June 17) with tips on each experiment and additional ways to play with science. And, each week, one lucky winner will receive a household membership to MSI to experience a whole YEAR of science.

     

    We’ll also invite you to share your Summer Brain Games experiences for a chance to win a family tech package including a notebook computer, iPad and digital camera!

  • June 08, 2013 6:52 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    Kid's in Grades 1 - 6 can earn a free book from Barnes and Noble this summer. 

     

    Here Is How:

    Step 1. Read any 8 books and record them in the Reading Journal (PDF).
     
    Step 2. Bring the completed Reading Journal to your local B&N store. Find a Store.

    Step 3. Choose a FREE BOOK from our selection on the Reading Journal list at the store or on the Reading Journal... Enjoy reading!
     
    See the website for complete details. 
  • May 24, 2013 9:22 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    Today's "Fermilab Today" email newsletter featured an article on it's new playground.  Here is an excerpt:

     

    It's one thing for kids to try to envision particles zipping around underground when learning about the science at Fermilab. It's another thing entirely for them to pretend to be particles charging along an accelerator path, revealing new physics as they fly by.

     

    This week the Fermilab Education Office celebrated the completion of its new Run Like A Proton accelerator path for middle- and high-school-age visitors to the laboratory.

    Located at the Lederman Science Center, the path is an aboveground, scaled-down version of the routes a particle can take through Fermilab's accelerator complex. While running along the path, kids can act like they are the particles of the lab's physics program zipping through underground tunnels.

     

    "Kids have different modes of learning," said Spencer Pasero of Fermilab's Education Office. "They can learn about the work of the lab with our indoor exhibits, but now they can also learn about it through our new outdoor playground."

     

    Click here to read more.

     

  • May 17, 2013 11:35 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    News from the Chicagoland M.U.N. Club!

     

    This summer, we are offering a fun and educational three-day Model UN program for students entering the 6th, 7th and 8th grades. Participants will learn about the history of the United Nations and modern international relations, build skills in public speaking, negotiations, and collaborative writing, and finally take part in an exciting simulation of the United Nations Security Council.  The program will take place from June 6 - 8 (Thursday 3:30pm-6:30pm, Friday 9:30am-3:30pm, and Saturday 9:30am-1:00pm) at the Ethical Humanist Society of Chicago (7574 N. Lincoln Ave., Skokie, IL, 60657). The cost will be $45 per individual student. E-mail Katieborg23@gmail.com to receive registration forms. 

     

    For those unfamiliar with Model United Nations: Model UN conferences simulate the deliberations of United Nations committees and other multilateral organizations. Students role-play diplomats and regional leaders, and are tasked with discussing and developing solutions to international issues. The goal of MUN is to increase interest in international affairs and improve problem-solving skills,

    while promoting tolerance, perspective, and compassion in a real-world context.

    We are an independent, student-led, high-school Model United Nations club dedicated to the advancement of political science education in the middle school and high school community in the Chicago area.  We have been active since 2009, and recently applied for and received 501c3 status. We participate in several Model UN conferences each year, and our members have been honored to win many awards.

    We have taught middle-school Model UN courses for homeschoolers as part of the HSGS Co-op and AJCW Collective Workshops, and we also put on the Northern Illinois Model United Nations Conference (NIMUN), the largest active Model UN conference for middle school students in the Midwest. Over 90 students attended our second annual conference last year, and we are looking forward NIMUN III on November 15th, 2013. We have four committees and room for over 100 students. It promises to be an exciting and memorable experience for all those involved. Learn more about NIMUN here:  www.nimunweb.com.

  • May 07, 2013 9:29 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    The SENG (Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted) e-mail update today contains the following information on honoring educators.

     

     

    The SENG Honor Roll recognizes educators who make a difference in the life of a gifted child or adult.

     

    For a nomination fee of $50, the SENG Honor Roll allows you to honor a special teacher in your life while helping to support SENG's mission and programs.

    Educators nominated to The SENG Honor Roll receive the following:

    • letter of honor
    • permanent listing on the SENG website  
    • listing in the annual 2013 SENG Conference Program Book (for nominations received no later than May 31)
    • Josh Waitzkin's book: The Art of Learning, courtesy of the JW Foundation
    • (while supplies last)
    • 12-month subscription to the 2E Twice-Exceptional Newsletter, courtesy of
    • Glen Ellyn Media

    The nominee's school district or academic institution receives a certificate for formal presentation to the educator. Both the educator and the district/academic institution will receive information about SENG and about the SENG Honor Roll achievement.

    **Nominate an Educator Now**

  • April 24, 2013 7:11 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)

    11th or 12th graders for the 2013/2014 school year can apply for a chance to attend a FREE
    Samsung Mobile App Academy
    in summer 2013. All attendees will receive a Samsung Galaxy Note™ 10.1 tablet and a chance to win up to $20,000 in scholarships. The Chicago Academy will take place on July 17 & 18 at UIC. The eligibility requirements are:

     
    • Did not attend a summer 2012 App Academy (formerly known as Boot Camp)
    • *Must be an 11th or 12th grader during the 2013–2014 school year
    • Have taken or be enrolled in two or more AP and/or Honors science, technology, engineering, and/or mathematics classes
    • Have a GPA of 3.0 or higher
    • Live within a 60-mile radius of an App Academy city (transportation not provided)
    • Provide fully completed application form online or submitted by fax
    • Spots in the App Academy will be determined by random lottery for students who meet eligibility requirements

    Here are the details: http://www.scholastic.com/samsungacademy/

  • March 24, 2013 7:59 AM | Linda Zanieski (Administrator)
    Looking for something to do during Spring Break?  The Institute for Educational Advancement features A Blog About Gifted Youth.  The December 2012 post presents their five favorite podcasts for gifted kids including topics ranging from science to words to inventions.

About cgcc

The Chicago Gifted Community Center (CGCC) is a member-driven 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created by parents to support the intellectual and emotional growth of gifted children and their families. 

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