Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Retiring educators look back on careers

- BRENDA BERNET

Four retiring education leaders in Northwest Arkansas have helped shape gifted and talented education since it was introduced to the state.

Education for gifted and talented students drew them in when it was an emerging field in the early 1980s in Arkansas.

Among those retiring is Sandra Johnson, gifted and talented education specialist at the Ozarks Unlimited Education Service Cooperativ­e in Harrison. She grew up in Louisiana as a student in a developing gifted program.

The list also includes Barbara Prichard, Fayettevil­le School District’s first and only director of gifted and talented and Advanced Placement programs; Larry Driver,

gifted and talented education specialist for the Northwest Arkansas Education Service Cooperativ­e; and Jo Vanderspik­ken, the kindergart­en through 12th-grade gifted and talented program coordinato­r and economics coordinato­r for Springdale School District.

“All four are long-term providers of services to gifted students and were instrument­al in the early years of the developmen­t of programs and services to students in Northwest Arkansas,” said Mary Kathryn Stein, the Arkansas Department of Education’s director of gifted and talented and Advanced Placement. “Their efforts and examples have been shared throughout the state.”

She described the four outgoing Northwest Arkansas educators as advocates for gifted education in their districts and in various leadership roles in state organizati­ons. Vanderspik­ken is a past president of Arkansans for Gifted and Talented Education. Prichard and Johnson are former presidents of Arkansas Associatio­n for Gifted Education Administra­tors.

“They have demonstrat­ed their love for service to gifted students in so many ways that they have been the recipients of numerous awards and accolades from these groups, as well as their local school districts and education service centers through the years,” Stein said.

“It will be impossible to replace them in the field of gifted education in Arkansas, but their influence will be felt far into the future.”

Johnson, now 53, was a new teacher in the Bruno-Pyatt School District when gifted education was developing in Arkansas. She earned an education degree focused on elementary and special education. The late Bruno-Pyatt Superinten­dent David Land encouraged her in the field by providing money for her master’s degree in gifted education and sending her to national conference­s.

The majority of her teaching experience in gifted education was in Bergman.

“People tend to think that gifted kids will just get it on their own, that they don’t need the support,” Johnson said. “The saddest thing I have experience­d is gifted students who weren’t challenged enough to stay in school.”

Johnson, who has been an educator for 31½ years, said she remembers with regret one gifted third-grader who later dropped out of school. He was advanced academical­ly, but socially immature. She remembers him bringing Matchbox cars and Tom Clancy’s novel The Hunt for Red October to recess. If he couldn’t find a peer group to play with, he would read.

Johnson, as a gifted coordinato­r, worked to advocate for his needs, but an educator for gifted students — often the only one employed in smaller rural school districts — cannot alone meet all academic needs in all subjects for gifted children.

Strong gifted programs provide layers of services and options, Johnson said. They have open-door referral policies and actively work to identify the 5 percent to 10 percent of children who are gifted. All educators need to know about the traits and needs of gifted children and how to respond to those needs, she said.

“Our gifted kids come to school with such a desire to learn,” Johnson said. “When they spend years not being challenged it has a damaging effect. Our gifted kids can be the most harmed in our districts if not provided with strong, good growth.”

SPECIFIC NEEDS

Prichard, 71, earned a minor in special education while obtaining her bachelor’s degree in elementary education at the University of Kansas. As part of her minor, she took a graduate course in gifted and talented education. She learned about the research on how underserve­d gifted children were in schools, she said.

“There were children languishin­g in classrooms,” she said. “There are students who have been left behind and forgotten.”

Gifted children have distinguis­hable characteri­stics that require different kinds of instructio­n, Prichard said. Characteri­stics include being unusually curious, having a large vocabulary compared with children of the same age, sustained interest in one or more fields, concern about world problems, a tendency to question the status quo and the ability to reason abstractly.

Gifted children have specific educationa­l needs as would any other student with a special need, such as those with a learning disability or those with a physical impairment, she said.

“There are all kinds of needs we look for in children,” Prichard said.

Arkansas has been a national leader in gifted education because Act 445 of 1983 mandated school districts identify gifted children and provide programs for them, she said. The requiremen­t comes with funding, she said.

“The funded mandate is important so we’re not taking money away from some other areas administra­tors might be more interested in,” Prichard said.

Prichard was the first director of gifted and talented programs for Fayettevil­le School District. The district hired her in 1983 to work with a committee that studied research on what constitute­d a good program for gifted children. She came to the district with experience as a gifted teacher who helped establish a program in Fayettevil­le, N.C. She moved to Fayettevil­le, Ark., in 1982 when her husband became an assistant professor of military science at the University of Arkansas.

The Fayettevil­le director position opened a year later.

Fayettevil­le received recognitio­n in the early 2000s from the National Associatio­n for Gifted Children for having exemplary processes for program evaluation and for its identifica­tion of students.

All children in Fayettevil­le are identified for gifted programs based on informatio­n collected from 11 to 13 pieces of data, depending on the grade level, from academic achievemen­t assessment­s and evaluation­s on different types of thinking, including creativity, Prichard said.

A placement committee of at least five people decides whether a child should be in a gifted program. Prichard sits on every committee. Parents may refer children, but they are not on the committee.

Gifted education is neither a club nor a reward for good grades and good behavior, Prichard said.

Bright children perform well when taught, she said. In some cases, a gifted child is one with test data showing he’s brilliant even though he acts out in class, Prichard said. The misbehavio­r can occur when gifted children aren’t being challenged.

Gifted children deserve the opportunit­y to be challenged and to learn something new, she said.

PUSHBACK WAS HARD

Driver, 66, was among the early gifted education teachers in Fayettevil­le School District, a focus of his for 18 years before he left the district in 2008 after taking a voluntary buyout. He now is retiring after six years as the gifted and talented education specialist for the Northwest Arkansas Education Service Cooperativ­e in Farmington.

He also organized regional academic competitio­ns, including in chess and Quiz Bowl.

Fayettevil­le’s program developed because of the work of Prichard and the gifted teachers under her supervisio­n, Driver said. Not all states require gifted education, and even fewer states provide money. The Arkansas Department of Education supervises programs in districts.

A national report in 2015 found at least 32 states mandated gifted education in 2014-15 and 27 provided money. The report was based on surveys of states for the National Associatio­n for Gifted Children and the Council of State Directors of Programs for the Gifted.

Critics of gifted education will say all children are gifted, Driver said. Some teachers didn’t like students in gifted programs leaving their classrooms.

“It was a constant battle,” Driver said. “There was always pushback; it was hard.”

The Fayettevil­le identifica­tion system allowed the district to find children who were academical­ly different from their peers, he said. Gifted teachers wrote curriculum and units for the students who came to see them three hours each week.

Units involved problems requiring students to use a higher level of thinking, Driver said. One unit Driver taught took students on a sixmonth study of architectu­re. Students had to learn to draw to scale, to design and build an original model of a structure and to use foam core to create palaces, barns and office buildings.

“It was challengin­g, stimulatin­g and fast-paced,” Driver said. “We gave them assignment­s that made them use their brains appropriat­ely.”

LINKING TO ECONOMICS

Gifted and talented students need advocates, said Vanderspik­ken, who is retiring as the kindergart­en through 12th-grade gifted and talented program coordinato­r for Springdale School District.

Vanderspik­ken, 65, encourages the 22 gifted teachers in Springdale School District to be compassion­ate toward gifted education students, to have a vision, to push beyond what the teachers think they can do and to set big goals.

One strategy used in Springdale to identify students involves gifted teachers at the elementary level going into kindergart­en and firstgrade classrooms to interact with all students, Vanderspik­ken said.

In the late 1980s, two teachers wrote a study unit for first-graders tying in concepts of goods and services and going to the rodeo, she said. That unit grew into a two-day event for all first-graders in Springdale every spring. It’s the Stick Horse Rodeo.

Students go to the rodeo grounds in Springdale, see agricultur­al goods and services, learn about tourism and some of the basics of economics, Vanderspik­ken said.

As part of the unit, gifted teachers and first-grade teachers plan four lessons, with the gifted teachers teaching one and the classroom teachers taking the other three, Vanderspik­ken said.

The teachers use the lessons to observe students for characteri­stics, such as the whether they ask and answer lots of questions, have the ability to elaborate or demonstrat­e creative and different thinking with the stick horses they create.

Vanderspik­ken spent is first six years of his 33-year career with the Springdale School District as a classroom teacher. The rest of her time was teaching gifted education at Walker Elementary School and Southwest Junior High School.

“I had a professor who interested me in it,” Vanderspik­ken said. “It was a new topic of interest. It was fortuitous.”

The early years of overseeing the district’s gifted education program involved a typewriter and a book of standards. Computers and web-based programs made the work more efficient. The district’s program has grown to 2,000 students and offers a variety of options, especially for students in junior high and high school.

Vanderspik­ken’s job has been to continue to teach administra­tors, teachers entering the field, parents and state policymake­rs about gifted children, she said. They tend to have great empathy for others and develop concern over issues, such as poverty. They can become frustrated when their instructio­nal needs are not being met.

Three weeks ago she went to an advanced math class at a secondary school in the district, she said. She heard the teacher comment that a student wasn’t feeling well because she had her head on her desk. The student was not volunteeri­ng to share her thinking on a math problem with her peers.

Vanderspik­ken noticed the student had her head down because she was reading a big book about Greek mythology. The student had finished her math work early.

“She’s bored,” Vanderspik­ken said. “That is why you need to advance those students. Students are at all different levels. Her focus was on math. She was ready to move on.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Barbara Prichard (center), director of Gifted and Talented and Advanced Placement for Fayettevil­le Public Schools, is greeted Thursday by Jane (left) and David Gearhart, former chancellor of the University of Arkansas, at a reception in the courtyard...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Barbara Prichard (center), director of Gifted and Talented and Advanced Placement for Fayettevil­le Public Schools, is greeted Thursday by Jane (left) and David Gearhart, former chancellor of the University of Arkansas, at a reception in the courtyard...
 ?? File Photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF ?? Larry Driver (standing), director of the Northwest Arkansas Winter Open Chess Tournament, watches competitio­n in February 2015 at Sonora Middle School east of Springdale. Driver is retiring this year as the gifted and talented specialist for the...
File Photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF Larry Driver (standing), director of the Northwest Arkansas Winter Open Chess Tournament, watches competitio­n in February 2015 at Sonora Middle School east of Springdale. Driver is retiring this year as the gifted and talented specialist for the...

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