High Ability Update
Jackson Elementary
April 6, 2023
Understanding CogAT
While there are two pathways into High Ability (CogAT and/or NWEA), some parents may have a tendency to worry when their child does not do as well on CogAT as they'd like. CogAT is an aptitude test which shows the potential of being identified as high ability. Below are sample questions from each of the three sections of CogAT to help you better understand what students are being asked. These questions are not taught at school, nor are they something you need to supplement at home. It's simply not a test you study for. These reasoning abilities start developing at birth and continue through early adulthood. Since it is a developmental skill, the student's age percentile is used for comparison to students of the same age.
WHAT CAN ONE DO TO SUPPORT A CHILD'S SUCCESS?
COGAT SCORES WERE SENT HOME BEFORE BREAK
High Ability Summer School
Travel With Us To Ancient Egypt
This integrated summer school program provides students with a time traveling adventure complete with reading, writing, projects, presentations, and enrichment activities to dig deeper into essential skills. The program is developed and facilitated by Duneland's high ability staff. This year's focus: Ancient Egyptian Adventures.
- High Ability Summer School is available for students currently identified as high ability in grades 1-4.
- At least 15 students must be enrolled for the course to be held.
- June 6 - June 29, 2023 (15 days), with no school on Fridays.
- Location: Chesterton Middle School
- Format: In Person
- Student Day: 8:00 - 11:50 a.m.
- Limited transportation will be available.
- No meals provided.
First Grade Language Arts
First Grade Math
Second Grade Language Arts
Journaling with the students about Edward's miraculous journey has allowed the students to express their private thoughts/opinions while getting in some writing practice. We have a couple students that are not capitalizing people's names, so I made notes in their journals where needed. Students could benefit from more practice on their writing stamina. Maybe you'd like to encourage your student to journal outside of school. Travel journals, summer journals, and diaries are all nice ways for your students to write more and for you to discuss their writing skills with them. We also worked on a crossword puzzle that tested our comprehension and retention of the book. We took a final vote on which book the students prefer. Three students prefer The Tale of Despereaux, and four students prefer The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. I gave the students a bookmark that lists several Katie DiCamillo books. The students were discussing which of her books they have read and are interested in reading. If your student is not interested in reading at home independently or with you, maybe their love of Katie DiCamillo books is something you could use to prompt them to read more. Coming next week: Jeopardy!