It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun
Examples:
My son tried the gifted program of their school.
My son is a member of the Gifted Program Society.
No.
Yes. It should be--- Federal Work- Study Program.
As in being innately skilled at something? Gifted at. "Justine is gifted at languages, but not sports." Conversely, though, you would say that someone has a gift for something. "Lucas has a gift for public speaking." If you can, try to use the word without 'for' or 'at'. She is a gifted athlete, or he is a gifted speaker. Sometimes, 'gifted in' sounds best.
G.A.T.E. stands for Gifted and Talented Education. G.A.T.E. is a program that you can find in elementary and sometimes middle school. It is designed is for those children who have something special, such as being a little more creative than average. Program members get to go on educational field trips, and to participate in puzzles, arts, projects and more.
the tone of gifted hands was calm
The way a person capitalizes doctoral is "Doctoral." Doctoral is a program of study that a person takes in order to become a doctor and it does not always have to be a doctor of medicine.
The gifted program is what I am in. It lets children who have a different way of thinking have no limit and to think free. The gifted program also has advantages, in my gifted program we take Latin.
The Gifted Program was created on 2005-09-06.
University of Connecticut is by far the top program in GT.
Yes, the title of a TV program is typically capitalized.
just be like... mom dad... i would like to be in the schools gifted program... any thoughts i think it would be good gor me.. i hope you understand..
Yes. It should be--- Federal Work- Study Program.
they really don't tell you, either you're gifted or not, the (average) I.Q. of a gifted student going from grade 4 to grade 5 gifted would be (about) 98, which is above average. Gifted kids work at their own pace, which is nice. :) i know, i'm gifted too.
3.0 to 4.0. Preferably closer to 4.0
Yes.
Rebecca Levenspiel has written: 'Starting a program for gifted students' -- subject(s): Gifted children, Education, Case studies
I believe that answer is NO. I have 2 daughters in the same grade...same mother and father, same household, etc. One is in the Gifted and Talented Program, and one is not. The one who is in the program is in no way smarter, better educated, more focused, more goal oriented, etc. than the one who is not in the program. If anything, it's the other way around. It depends on the quality of the gifted program and the individual temperament of the student. The education system does not challenge average students enough, and has continually failed gifted students as well. There aren't enough norms to develop gifted education standards, but this doesn't excuse the problems for students within 2 standard deviations of the mean.
Ordinarily, it would be the Mechanical Engineering program.