Personally, as a gifted education student, I think that, yes, some children of equal intelligence are being rejected from the gifted education program. I say this because certain children that i know score very well on State Tests, but then, if i may use a metaphore, "Crash and burn," on the other tests. This could be because they are very nervous while taking further tests, and rush through it...I don't know a whole lot on that part, but still...There has to be a lot of variables to consider. Hope that i helped! =D
Hans G. Jellen has written: 'Handbook for differential education of the gifted' -- subject(s): Curricula, Curriculum enrichment, Curriculum planning, Education, Elective system, Gifted children, High schools
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.
Pros: Bilingual Based on meritocracy regardless of race, language or religion Cons: Only concentrates on the gifted/smart people, those less smart get neglected Teaches people to ace exams, but does not teach people creativity or character building Stressful Hope that helped :)
Highly unlikely - unless you happen to be especially gifted - and your qualification(a) would benefit the sponsor company in some way after you graduate ! Higher education is optional - not mandatory, which is why it's not funded by the education system.
the system in which people take their education from gurus is called gurukal system.
Education is important to all nations. 'Educated people, healthy nation with prosperity'. Romania is good in basic education system, but it needs to concentrate on its 'quality' of the education system.
Canada's point system favours people with education and people with work experience.
The education system.
The Greek education system has undergone remarkable transformation since 1990 with more people completing upper secondary education.
People desipised those who were educated from the public education system during this time. They thought that public education was for the poor and was looked down upon.
The Dutch land grant system was a government program that gifted land to individual people. These land gifts were usually in return for services to the government. Land grants were also used as incentives for people to develop unused land.
In "Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story," the antagonist is Ben Carson's childhood environment and personal struggles, particularly poverty, racism, and a lack of support and resources. These challenges serve as obstacles for Ben Carson to overcome in his journey to become a successful neurosurgeon.