Virginia Regulatory Town Hall
Agency
Department of Education
 
Board
State Board of Education
 
chapter
Regulations Governing Educational Services for Gifted Students [8 VAC 20 ‑ 40]
Action Revision of regulations school divisions must meet in their gifted education programs, K - 12
Stage Proposed
Comment Period Ended on 9/26/2008
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9/26/08  8:35 am
Commenter: Kathryn Kuhn Malpass

New Gifted Regulations
 

The most valuable time spent is with our children. It is enough that local school divisions must continue to develop plans on a 5-year basis in order to have the opportunity to develop long-term goals, implement changes, and evaluate their success before updating the plan for another cycle.  Having plans developed on an annual basis does not allow time for this process in a manner that permits meaningful input from taxpayers, parents, and educators.  It is not sound educational practice.

Plans must continue to be submitted to the Department of Education for approval to ensure compliance to minimum requirements of identification and programming across the Commonwealth. The present system of peer review is not only an accountability measure, but a teaching and learning process for school division coordinators of gifted education. Removal of the review process will create discrepancies in gifted program services across the Commonwealth. Educators will lose a valuable learning process. Taxpayers will no longer be able to check with the Department to see if their local school division's plan for education of gifted students officially complies with the state regulations. 


Please reinstate the gifted funding section of the regulations governing gifted education which requires that funding administered by the DOE for the education of gifted students be used only to support those activities identified in the school division's plan as approved by the Board of Education (BOE).  This is necessary to ensure that standards and best practices for educating our most intellectually talented students can continue to be maintained, and that taxpayers’ money will not be frittered away on frivolous or unnecessary distractions.

 

Any changes to the regulations governing gifted programs that do not include these safeguards will compromise a fiscally responsible program that is proven successful in placing Virginia at the forefront of education in our country.  COming from a gifted program in MD I can say there is no comparison to the quality of gifted education provided by our school system in VA.  It is a superior program for meeting the needs of gifted children, and like the saying goes, if it isn't broke, don't fix it! 

 

 

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