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The Gifted Education Centre
To Go Beyond the Known
 
     
 
  ABOUT US > IN THE NEWS
 

As New Zealand's leading authority on giftedness in school children we are often featured in newspaper, radio and television articles. Below is some of the coverage we have received recently.

If you wish to arrange an interview or a quotation please contact head office here. Please do NOT contact individual schools.

Auckland preschool for gifted children proving popular

(Campbell Live, TV3 Tue, 23 Sep 2008. Click here to see video.)

Anyone with children has probably wondered at least once whether their little ones might be gifted.

That is certainly the case in Auckland anyway, where a unique programme for gifted pre-schoolers has attracted such demand, it is now gearing up to go nationwide.

'Small Poppies' was set up more than a year ago off the back of inquiries from parents who wanted extra help.

Today, three-to-six-year-olds head along for a morning a week.

Caleb is a four-year-old Kiwi kid who loves to play, and one of a handful of pre-schoolers that comes to Small Poppies, a learning centre for gifted children and their parents.

Once a week, these bright sparks come together for a bit of brain stimulation.

Internationally, to be gifted is to be in the top five percent. Genetics plays a big part.

At Small Poppies, they take the top 10 percent, as assessed by Sue Breen.

Parents pay $250 for each eight-week block, and say it is money well spent.

Ms Breen says identifying and providing for gifted kids at an early age is important, but in small doses.

And for the record, there is plenty of time here for kids to be kids.

Gifted pre-schoolers program could soon be running in Wellington

(Newstalk ZB Wellington news, 12th September 2008)

Story 1

A programme for gifted pre-schoolers which has been successful in Auckland could soon be up and running in Wellington.

Kathy Williams from the Gifted Education Centre says they already run programmes for primary and intermediate-aged children at Wilton School and Tairangi School in Porirua, but they've had a lot of enquiries from Wellington parents about their Small Poppies programme for children under 5.

She says they get a lot of calls from parents who suspect their child is gifted because they might have an exceptional memory, pick things up quickly, ask unexpected questions or reach developmental milestones earlier.

And she says, most parents are right.

Of all the children they assess, there would be less than 5 percent who aren't gifted.

She says that's because parents generally know if their child is exceptional.

Kathy Williams says they're hoping to have the Small Poppies programme up and running in Wellington within a year.

Story 2

The people who run programmes for gifted Wellington children say most parents who suspect their child is gifted, are right.

The Gifted Education Centre, which runs programmes at Wilton School and Tairangi School in Porirua, is now looking to extend its service to pre-schoolers here, because of requests from local parents.

Kathy Williams from the centre says while most of us consider our children to be exceptional, more than 95 percent of the children they assess to see if they're gifted, actually are.

She says parents know, because they've seen unusual behaviour, like children who are very passionate about things, who're great hoarders and collectors and know incredible detail about things like butterflies and dinosaurs.

Kathy Williams says they're hoping to have their Small Poppies programme up and running in Wellington within a year.

Toddling up to new levels of learning

(Christchurch Press, 10th September 2008. Click here to see article.)

Two-year-olds discussing insect proboscises and three-year-olds comparing notes on the surface tension of bubbles it is just another day at the Gifted Education Centre.

The Auckland-based programme for toddlers says a funding boost will allow it to open centres across the country next year.

Christchurch toddlers who got a taste of the programme at an introductory session in July will be able to join the classes from January.

"I thought it would be a little bit tricky to be introducing some of those science concepts to kids so young," Christchurch mother Megan Reynolds said.

Reynolds has two gifted girls, Emma, eight, and Kate, six. Her youngest child, Hugh, four, is believed to be another gifted child, so Reynolds put him on the Christchurch trial.

"My little lad at the moment is learning all about hydrogen bonds and about water and that it has hydrogen and oxygen and they're bonded together," Reynolds said. "He's all into it."

Emma was reading at three.

"It means that you can have such a great adult conversation with your kids and they get it," Reynolds said.

Gifted Education Centre director Kathy Williams said parents submitted children for the programme and they were interviewed through play, observation and discussion before being admitted.

Only a few missed out, but there had been a few incidents where parents disagreed with the decision "and they've been quite adamant".

"It's very hands-on. It's certainly investigative, experimental and experiential, but it's operating at a slightly different level. The language that is used is, for example, the correct language of hydraulics, in small doses," Williams said. "When they're working on insects, for example, the children will be using the words proboscis and thorax appropriately. They talk about surface tension when they're looking at bubbles."

Williams said the programme was not overkill. "They're thirsty for it; they just absolutely soak it in."

The $15,000 funding boost from the Sovereign Sunshine organisation will extend the programme to another 50 families across New Zealand.

There are currently 480 students throughout the country registered with the centre.