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The Myth of Testing for Giftedness
Kim Moldofsky and her two sons, now ages 12 and 10, hiking in the Grand Canyon. The Chicago-area mom is resigned to the fact that there is no educational "Utopia." Photo courtesy of Kim Moldofsky.
The Chicago-area mom of two tween boys brought that same sense of intensity to her quest to find the best possible school for her sons, both of whom are gifted.
"My older son was tested -- given both IQ and achievement tests -- by his public school when he was in kindergarten," Moldofsky recalls. "It was an unprecedented move at the time. We later pursued private testing ... which he had as a first-grader."
The kind of testing Moldofsky calls "unprecedented" is decidedly no longer so. In fact, some parents are going so far as to engage their preschoolers in the kind of intense preparation once reserved for high-school students taking college entrance exams.
Private firms such as Aristotle's Circle, a New York City outfit that aims to "carefully match parents to experts with current insight and inside knowledge of admissions, education and child development," cater to parents anxious to get the best possible education for their child -- gifted or otherwise.
Supply and Demand
Simple economics are driving the use of assessment tests to evaluate younger and younger children for specialized programs and elite private schools in cities where the public system is floundering. So says Dr. Gillian Dowley McNamee, professor of child development and director of teacher education at Erikson Institute, a graduate school of child development in Chicago.
"There are so few good programs, and there is a lot of competition," she tells ParentDish.
The schools need a way to sort children who apply, but testing kids as young as age 4 for gifted, accelerated or magnet programs is a misguided way to do so, she says.
"The whole enterprise of testing kids under the age of 8 is riddled with problems," McNamee says. "They are so volatile (intellectually) that you can't reliably identify their potential."
Not only is the testing misguided, she asserts, it can be potentially harmful. Children who do well on an assessment test, such as the Otis-Lennon School Ability Test or the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI-III), may, in fact, not perform as well in school as their test scores predict. In that case, McNamee says, parents -- and schools -- run the risk of setting these students up for an academic lifetime of failure and frustration.
Steven Roy Goodman, a Washington, D.C.-based educational consultant and author of "College Admissions Together: It Takes A Family," says he sees families at the end of their journey, when the child is preparing for college. However, he finds that the academic philosophy of his clients has been cemented well before they arrive on his doorstep.
Goodman specializes in Ivy League placements, and says all the parents he sees want their children to be happy. What varies, he tells ParentDish, are their definitions of happiness.
"Is happiness defined as a ticket to Harvard or Cornell?" he says. "Or is happiness defined as something like sitting with your family and being happy, even if your child didn't learn something specific that day?"
McNamee says there has been a definite cultural shift in the way parents approach the education of their children. The world economy and a preoccupation with studying for the "A," contribute to the frenzy for assessment through testing alone. It satisfies the craving for a simple yes-or-no answer to the very complicated question of a child's potential for success.
New Standards
Up until very recently, it was considered developmentally appropriate to begin serious reading instruction in the second grade. Now, however, kindergartners who once went to school to learn their ABCs are way behind if they aren't already reading simple words when the school year begins. Even a child's pencil grip can be enough to force parents into decision-making mode: Will she be able to work with her peers or will her pencil grip frustrate her and put her at risk of failing?
And for that matter, can you fail kindergarten?
Not everyone agrees that making kindergarten into the new first grade is an appropriate response. Early learners need a certain level of creative play in their school day, according to the Alliance for Childhood. An organization comprised of childhood development and educational experts, the group's March 2009 publication, "Crisis in the Kindergarten: A New Report on the Disappearance of Play," lays out the dangers of eliminating play in early elementary school.
The report asserts that the current state of early education is precarious, indeed: "Kindergartners are now under great pressure to meet inappropriate expectations, including academic standards that until recently were reserved for first grade. At the same time, they are being denied the benefits of play -- a major stress reliever."
How Did This Happen?
Those on the anti-testing bandwagon say school should not just be about filling a vessel with knowledge and then testing that vessel's integrity in order to achieve some kind of meritocracy. The knowledge must be contextual, it must be imparted in an environment of peers.
"The question needs to be, how do we use our talents and gifts to benefit the greater group?" McNamee says. "That is what gets missed when you look at 'giftedness.' And let's be honest -- we're only going to get a Mozart once every 300 years."
McNamee pins part of the blame on the now-notorious federal policy of "No Child Left Behind," which, she says, took a perfectly good instrument -- the standardized test -- and made it the only tool in a teacher's assessment toolbox.
"What we know about development has not changed in at least 15 years," she says. "And I do think it is unfortunate, what happened under 'No Child Left Behind.' It was a great idea to make sure no one was left behind, but what we did was attach funding decisions to test results, and this is how we came to this idea of a one-shot test as the decision maker."
She uses a medical metaphor, comparing the assessment test to aspirin. Both have their place, but neither one can be used as a universal panacea.
"No Utopia"
Eager to provide opportunities for their kids, parents are simply playing the game as the rules dictate. Kim Moldofsky's boys, now 11 and 9, are classified as highly gifted and consistently test above their grade levels without any kind of pushing or prodding from their parents, though she still has moments of doubt.
"My approach to educating my highly-gifted boys?" Moldofsky asks. "It often feels all wrong. My older boy has been to three schools so far, and unlike Goldilocks for whom the third time was a charm, nothing has the right fit. We're not going to pursue a fourth because he's slow to transition and, by now, I've learned enough to know there is no Utopia."
That, right there, might just be the rub. There is no perfect school, no ideal teacher -- and no flawless instrument with which to predict a child's future.
If we keep obsessing about performance and measurement, treating kindergarten like academic boot camp, we risk harming the very children we're trying so hard to protect, McNamee says.
"We are pulling the trigger on our own children, right in front of our own eyes," she says.
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ReaderComments (Page 5 of 10)
5-16-2010 @ 7:23PM
Lillie said...I'm often asked what grade (or school) my 4 year old is in. When I respond that he isn't in school, I'm met with astonishment because he is very intelligent. He's been described as "talking to a 30 year old in a 4 year old's body". His father and I have read to him since birth and have always spoke to him in adult, never baby voices. We have simply invested our time and energy in him. BUT, he is NOT gifted. He is simply a well balanced, intelligent, happy, outgoing child. I think what most view as bright is the fact that he is very outgoing and not shy at all. He is bold and outspoken. He will voice his opinion on anything and everything from trucks and toys to the universe and God. Simply because this is the way we have raised him.
Let children be children! Our son is just as happy playing in his sandbox with his toys and trucks or on his swingset as he is playing a video game! He loves books and has had some read to him so much that he recognizes certain words in them!
Yes, I have taught him to count to 20 and to write his name and his address and telephone number and everything that a 4 year old should know. He is my 3rd child... this isn't my first ballgame! But, I'm also astute enough to realize that he will have years and years of education ahead of him and at this point in his life, he needs to concentrate on nothing more than being four years old. And, learning to get along well with others and being fun and sweet and kind is lots more important at that age than numbers and letters!
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5-16-2010 @ 7:24PM
Karen said...How sad that so many parents need the ego boost of knowing what a genius their gene pool produced, which is the real motivation behind most of this. I was singled out as gifted in a grade school unequipped to deal with giftedness, tested out as an extremely high IQ, and found to have an amazing knack for reading, writing, and all of the usual left-brained skills, which are conducive to most academic skills. So the teachers dumped extra homework on me, and singled me out as the model of what all the other kids should try to be like; the other kids beat me up for being what they saw as a little suckup; and my parents gave me endless crap about why couldn't I get straight A's if I was such a genius, but if I did, it was why did I waste so much time with my nose stuck in a book instead of helping out around the house like a normal kid? How do you spell living hell, folks? I've since come to firmly believe that ALL kids are gifted at SOMETHING, What the parents really need to do is stop patting themselves on the back for producing such a little genius because they may be gifted at TEST TAKING, which is a skill in itself, and my single biggest area of actual giftedness, and use that same energy to figure out where their particular child's strengths, weaknesses and interests lie, then work to help them become the best whatever that they can be. Incidentally, I've used my flair for test-taking to help a few friends with test anxiety, who could do or fix anything, but clammed up at any kind of tests. Several of those friends are now certified mechanics, etc. And while I technically hold official certification as a brake mechanic, trust me, you do not EVER want me to fix your brakes! :-)
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5-16-2010 @ 7:27PM
originlcin said...When I was in public school in the 70's, the class had reading groups and math groups. We were divided up according to demonstrated ability, not some test score as far as I know. Nowadays, the kids are all mixed together and taught the same thing which means the upper third is bored and the lower third is confused. The tests also don't take into consideration a child's maturity and willingness to work up to their ability level - which is a more telling predictor of college and workplace success IMHO.
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5-17-2010 @ 4:12PM
momma bear said...I have taught kindergarten, first and second grades for a long time.
PLEASE let the children be children!!! Pick one activity for after school once a week. Make sure they have time to play in the mud and on the swing set!!! Imaginations are being crushed by too many structured activities. Children have no time to just BE. Listen, please!!!
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5-16-2010 @ 7:38PM
eljefe3126 said...At the end of 2nd grade, I was given a standardized IQ test by a licensed psychologist. It seemed very clear to me that I was being evaluated for skipping a grade, although that was never mentioned. Neither was the term, "IQ test". It seemed obvious to me that I should skip a grade, as I was much brighter than other children I knew who had skipped a grade.
I was very disappointed to learn that I was advanced not to the 4th grade the following year, but the 3rd. How could I have possibly failed? All the questions seemed so easy to me, except for a very few at the end of the test.
The years went by. I was extremely bored at school, and largely educated myself on my own. As a result, I had an excellent knowledge base, but was severely deficient in many academic skills.
In high school, I took the ASVAB for the armed services, the PSAT, the SAT, and the ACT (it was advisable to take both the SAT and ACT, since some colleges accepted one but not the other). My scores were excellent. I got a perfect score on the ASVAB, and was offered literally any job that the military had for an enlistee. I was a national merit scholar semifinalist. The only reason I wasn't a finalist was because I didn't complete the application process for the schools that offered me national merit scholarships...they weren't "full rides", and I was able to parlay my high SAT score into a non-national merit scholarship that was a "full ride".
When I turned 18, I was legally an adult, and even though I was still a senior in high school, I asked for and was granted permission to see my school file. (My "permanent record", lol.)
I was surprised to see the report that the psychologist wrote up for the Stanford-Binet test he gave me in the 2nd grade. Although I felt the subjective portion of his assessment was a little generous, the numbers spoke for themselves. I scored a little higher than some estimates that I've seen for Albert Einstein's IQ. (FWIW, I think the lower estimates are a little too low, but that Einstein was hardly the uber-genius of his reputation. I've read Newton's original papers, and they impress me more.) The report recommended against skipping me a grade, because I'd be equally bored with 4th grade...or 5th...or 6th. And he recommended against skipping me to the 7th grade, because that would "stunt my social development". As if I had ever socialized with ANYONE as my equal all the way up to 18! All my friends were either older or younger than me, save one...all either "little kids" or "big kids".
The skills deficit that I'd built up through 12 years of public school bit me big time in college. I nearly flunked out of an "easy" state college, and not by partying, either. When I finally figured out how to "do" college, I ended up with a 3.885 out of 4.0 GPA in a very challenging major. However, because of my "startup" years, I had just below a 3.0 GPA overall. I've since gone on to an advanced degree and some professional success. But even though I work in a place that is supposed to be populated by "the brightest and the best" (it isn't), I really have no peers. I cringe whenever I see someone who clearly doesn't understand what they are doing or the needs of our business getting promoted up the chain...and I've seen it happen several times. I'm the "nerd" that many people don't take seriously because I have "crazy ideas". Funny, I've made several predictions about what would happen in our business over the last several years, and I'm batting 1.000 on all of them. But I'm just the "crazy" guy.
And if this seems to ramble a bit, just look back at the whole thing. It's the story of what happens when someone either doesn't get tested, or gets tested and then the test results are ignored. From firsthand knowledge, bitter firsthand knowledge, I can tell you that it's very, very cruel. I have a daughter who is also quite gifted...I've never seen her IQ score, but it's pretty obvious to me from some of her other accomplishments (including accomplishments on standardized tests) that she's in the top 1% of the population. She goes to a school system that pretends to recognize that fact, but doesn't really follow through well. Fortunately, she has something that I didn't...a gifted parent who understands her special needs. As a result, she's much more academically skilled, much better socially adjusted, and yes, even more popular than I was when I was her age...and all this even though I'm pretty sure she's several IQ points behind me.
If you don't have a gifted kid, you have no right to complain about parents of gifted children who are just trying to give their children what they really need...and you probably have no clue what you're talking about, either. And yes, there are parents of gifted children who go overboard and do inappropriate things. And there are parents of children who are bright but not truly gifted who seem almost desperate to make all their accomplishments through their children...if only everyone else would just realize that their childen were as brilliant as their parents claim. They give a bad name to parents who really have gifted children who have legitimate needs that go beyond what the average kid is given. And you have no business judging astute parents of gifted children on the basis of the fools and pretenders.
Administered professionally and appropriately, a couple of psychological tests a year won't harm even a very young child, and can save both the child and the parents years of grief and heartache. Of course, tests are like any other tool...they can be used well for the good of all, or abused to cause misery. I hope the parents of the gifted and non-gifted alike choose wisely.
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5-16-2010 @ 7:48PM
Carrie said...As a director of a child care center for over a decade, I have found numerous parents that push their children into getting tested or wanting them to be with an older age group "because that's where they should be". It saddens me to see parents not allowing children to be children. I am a firm believer in the fact that every child develops at his/her own pace. In the preschool stage, social skills are critical. Many children are being pushed to start reading, addition/subtraction, etc, that they do not have the basic social and emotional skills to survive in school. Just because a child is tested and classified as "gifted", does it mean that they will lead a happy and productive life? Let kids be kids...
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5-16-2010 @ 8:05PM
redconvoy said...to Avice-how did you beat the LSAT? I scored 134 on that.
About the subject. Could we just let kids be kids. They only have 18 years to be children. They have the rest of their lives to be adults. I see too many parents these days overschedule their kids and expect them to be mini-adults. They don't even know what downtime is because from Monday through Sunday they are busy. If any parents out there are overscheduling your kids, you need to cut some of it out and let them breathe! If you disagree, ask your kids how they feel!
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5-16-2010 @ 8:32PM
LPStarChaser said...It is not that the child is tested, but what is being asked in the testing. There is the testing that tests current skills and abilities, those that test interests and curiosities, those that test emotions and "maturity" and those that test the child's ability to go beyond the abilities of the teachers to teach. All these question formats can be asked in the same testing series, dependent on who is asking, and the interpretation of the results.
Some children who are truly geniuses will never do well on these tests, because their skills are not necessarily on test taking, but maybe in imagining and graphic concepts. There are children who are not especially verbal, but are either visually or artistically keen on interpreting their world, and seeing new ideas. There are children who have incredible memories and interpretive skills, but cannot put their interpretation into a form that they can communicate to others. There are lessons to teach these children to help them further their futures.
Some children take a small amount of information, append it to the world they know and hear from the news and educational shows they are exposed to, and try to tell their elders what they see. This can disturb these teachers and counselors that the child is not developing where they think the child should be. A child like that can either be advanced, or knocked down continuously.Children who are above average in their education can be tamped down till the fire to learn is no more, the skill to integrate new information degrades by insult and boredom.
Look at the "prodigal geniuses" in the news. They are all shown to be the children of parents who themselves have accomplished "respectable" lives. Children of parents who are not so well-regarded are "labeled" - troublemaker, difficult, precocious, problem-child.
America has for decades maintained a low view of the children of the workers and common. Intelligence that is recognized may be discovered by a lot of luck and given a little support. Thus are the "success stories", those whose intellect can be turned to another's profit. If they profit from their intellect, it is because their work is of value to others as much as themselves.
Testing must be broader and companies should be able to help guide children to the skills and interests these children carry today and tomorrow. As these children grow, they should be assessed for changes in interest, and changes in the skills they develop following their interest. The "Horatio Alger" stories can happen again if we are vigilant to those children whose intellect and interests are fostered and not tested and proven by the willingness to pay for the specialized testing to find these skills. Such testing must be universal and those having trouble with any subject helped to the basic competency necessary for society, and their talents made useful to society.
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5-16-2010 @ 8:33PM
Gabi said...In Montessori schools not only are average and advanced students taught together, but SEVERAL GRADES are taught together!!! No body is "dumbed down" and absolutely NO CHILD IS EVER BORED. The key is to have a LOW student-teacher RATIO and here's a stunner: Older children in higher grades and/or brighter or more advanced students of the same grade automatically HELP AND TEACH OTHERS, taking initiative and even responsibility of their peers; this not only allows them to excel (since teachers monitor EACH CHILD as an INDIVIDUAL), it gives them a wonderful sense of pride in their SELF-WORTH as well as in their goodness, kindness, and VALUE! But, this amazing and beautiful system begins in little ones as young as 2 who all play together in large areas (loll, or wherever they wqnt) with the 3+ year olds, helping the younger ones.
All of my daughters contemporaries READ by the age of 4 and LOLL her teacher that taught 1st, 2nd, 3rd grade (together, as they do in the WALDORF METHOD as well) was shocked that my daughter did not read when she began 2st grade. This, however, was a DELIBERATE decision on my part, to NOT TEACH HER TO READ BEFORE 6, as there is a distinct corrolary between early reading and LOSS OF IMAGINATION!!! (ref. The Magical Child)
RUDOLF STEINER (Austrian educator/philosopher) Schools also function this way, knowing that the PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT OF A CHILD SHOWS WHEN HE/SHE IS READY FOR SPECIFIC EDUCATION LEVELS. Markers such aws mental language development and physical ABILITY, COORDINATION, and even the rate at which TEETH grow are used to calculate EACH INDIVIDUAL CHILD'S READINESS.
Sure, it's easy to teach a baby to read... but at what "expense" to the child?
I will not set LIMITS upon my child and sure as hell will not be telling her that "life limites what we can do..." YIKES, that mother (above) has ROBBED HER CHILD OF EVERYTHING already. In a sense, she has KILLED the child since she has destroyed what the child can become when all potential is tapped. :-(
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5-16-2010 @ 9:14PM
gabi said...THANK YOU!!!
Yes, it's saddening to see mothers running around 7 days weekly forcing unnatural activities and then complaining that they have no time, they're exhausted. What's more, as the family grows older, NO ONE HAS TIME TO EAT TOGETHER (dinner) because of the "activities." Yikes.
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5-16-2010 @ 11:15PM
Imposter7 said...Does anyone else remember watching "Born Free" and "Old Yeller" in grade school?
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5-17-2010 @ 1:08AM
Gene said...As George Carlin said, "You children aren't that special!" Come on people get real... Every so often an Einstein or Stephen hawking comes along, but not often.
If there are so many friggen genus'es, why isn't there a cure for some kind of cancer, or diabetes, or something? What? No more Jonas Salk's out there?
An IQ test doesn't tell the whole story. Some people just don't test well. Its as simple as that. Some people are very "test oriented", but as my College Professor say's, "A College degree doesn't guarantee you anything." Everybody in America is a brain, or at least we'd like to think so, but the reality is, the majority of us are "AVERAGE."
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5-18-2010 @ 12:52PM
pamela johnson said...If some children are labeled "gifted and talented", what does that make the rest? My children have been placed in various gifted or accelerated classes that they simply did not excel in, and so struggled the whole year. It often seems arbitrary.
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5-21-2010 @ 6:32AM
clearhoads7 said...parents either deny there childrens ability or push them into what the parents want. i had to repeat 5 th grade even though my comprehenson level was at eight grade level they held me back a year because i was small for my age, they cant do that now but the schools system today is like prison and they charge child 8 year with adult crimes americas school suck and they teach children not to think old schools were better and the computer was the worst invention ever and is going to be the downfall of the world
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5-21-2010 @ 6:34AM
sunny said...Today's "parents" are rude, self-centered, immature idiots.
Your perfect little blonde-haired soccer kids are NOT geniuses.
They aren't going to find the cure for cancer, solve hunger or save the world.
And they aren't as cute or loveable as you think they are.
Not everyone adores them or thinks they are "special".
Get over it.
They are kids.
They ALL can't be astronauts, archaeologists or brain surgeons.
Some of them are going to be plumbers, garbage men or mechanics.
(And we NEED those guys too.)
My #1 rule?
If I hear someone calling thier kid "Buddy" (unless it's actually his name...) I run away screaming..
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5-21-2010 @ 6:55AM
Chaplain Winston said...Each of my four sisters and I are very gifted. Nursery school and Elementary School were my most enjoyable experience in secular education. The books, tests and play time were exceptional in stimulating creativity and the desire for education. However that changed when I entered the entirely different world of Junior and Senior High Schools. Education and tests did not compute. Learning became a gift that was passed on to certain ones. The grading system became political based on race and individual family wealth and status. It was a difficult environment to learn in. I was god in math but could not understand Algebra until a gifted teacher passed it to me. I watched as other students who showed their failed tests yet received A’s in classes were astounded. Yes it is spiritual. I asked he teacher why I received the obligatory “C” I would often received and she asked me to come to her office. I did not. In High School I was told I could graduate without studying.
I did not think I understood the materials anyway so I just attended classes and received the Obligatory “D” which was passing. I could not pass the tests. My dad had no comment. He looked at the high number of absences on my report card and knew I would be dead it was true. So much for justification of my low grades. They put me in college prep. There was a time when teachers were allowed to teach. I discovered I am mainly in input mode like a sponge absorbing water in need of a trigger to squeeze the water out after therough analysis: Thesis-Anti Thesis- Synthesis. In one class we took an IQ test and I scored 120. The teacher came to me in shock and I thought I must have done something wrong. I was asked to take a computer class in 1970 programming with the basic compiler language. I finally earned my first to “A’s” and found my nich. I was hired by BofA the Monday I graduate from High School, educated in computers across the nation 5 star by also Chevron, and finally found Bay Cities Bible College in Oakland whereby I could actually learn and excel in school. Like computers, Bible college is about truth statements. I can handle the truth. It is the lie that hurts me so much.
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5-21-2010 @ 6:53AM
laura said...JUST BECAUSE YOUR CHILD IS A BIT ABOVE NORMAL AT THE PRESCHOOL LEVEL DOES NOT MEAN THEY ARE "GIFTED" . GET OVER YOURSELF.
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5-21-2010 @ 6:54AM
Lori said...These stories always brings me back to a neighborhood child who was gifted. He was in college as a young teenager. - including summers. He never fit into his own age group. When it finally came time for the real deal ( a full scholarship to an ivy league college) he had a nervous breakdown and came home before December. He got a job at Taco Bell and was happy as a clam.
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5-21-2010 @ 7:01AM
j said...That is what this world has been doing for a very long time... it divides and labels, and then the "educated" liberals turn it around and call it racism.....comes in many forms. They wanted to test my child for gifted the last two days of school, right before summer vacation. I marched to the school and asked them about the timing.........when all kids have on their minds is .......SUMMER VACATION. The lack of deep reasoning and thinking in this country is what is going to be the final demise. People read articles that tickle their ears and thinking they are educated, never look at the opposite view. Even a good right winger will think it out...which is what I am...
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5-21-2010 @ 7:10AM
gloria said...Do you really think that the 'liberals' came up with testing for giftedness? Check your history..... concerned parent.