Deadline Approaching for the Jack Kent Cooke Young Scholars Program!
Forwarding from the NAGC: The Cooke Young Scholars Program application will close on April 30. This five-year, pre-college scholarship for high-achieving 7th graders with financial need provides funding for academic and extracurricular activities, personalized educational advising, and the opportunity to join a community of motivated peers. To be eligible, applicants must Currently be in 7th grade and/or entering 8th grade in the fall of 2025. Have earned all or mostly As in core academic subjects since beginning of 6th grade. Currently attend middle school in the U.S. and plan to attend high school in the U.S. Demonstrate unmet financial need with a family adjusted gross income of $95,000 or less. Learn more and apply: https://www.jkcf.org/our-scholarships/young-scholars-program/how-to-apply/ Margaret
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Town Hall with Representative Neron Saturday, April 11.
Friends: Representative Courtney Neron, chair of the House Education Committee will be holding a Constituent Coffee Hour at Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge, 19255 SE Pacific HIghway on April 11th at 10:30 am. Representative Neron serves Wilsonville, including the Charbonneau Distric???t in Clackamas County; King City, Sherwood, and Tigard/Bull Mountain in Washington County; ??Parrett Mountain in Yamhill County. https://www.instagram.com/p/DH4OLJjRKl0/
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Report from Salem for our TAG community
Friends: This is a follow up on our status this session: OATAG¡¯s bills The Governor¡¯s education ¡°accountability¡± bills State budget hearings THREE TAG BILLS: TWO STILL ALIVE SB 934 allows anyone who knows a student to refer them for TAG assessment. The Oregon Education Association (OEA) expressed concerns that parents might repeatedly refer their children for fresh assessments if dissatisfied with the results. While we believe this scenario is unlikely, we agreed to an amendment removing the last eight words of the bill. Our administrative rules will still require Districts to screen students, and parents retain the right to appeal identification decisions. SB 933 is a complex bill designed to provide more coherent information about TAG and better achievement data for all students. It requires the Oregon Department of Education to create a report card that provides information on TAG programs. It also seeks to restore reports on student learning gains, which it discontinued during COVID. Previous reports were difficult to interpret and, unfortunately, incorporated the assumption that high-achieving students make smaller gains. While the Department has promised an improved reporting system, we have yet to see a draft. The Coalition of Oregon School Administrators (COSA) and the Oregon School Board Association (OSBA) opposed this bill, arguing that the reporting requirements are too burdensome. Senator Taylor¡¯s office and OATAG worked on amendments to streamline the reporting while maintaining the bill¡¯s integrity. On March 5, both bills passed the Senate Education Committee. SB 933 was referred to the Joint Ways and Means Committee; SB 934 passed the Senate Chamber on a vote of 27 to 1 and is still waiting for its public hearing in the House Education Committee. Representative Courtney Neron, the chair of that committee, sets the hearing schedule. House Bill 3420 would have been a game-changer for gifted education in Oregon but Representative Neron did not schedule a hearing in theHouse Education Committee by the deadline needed to keep bills alive. We are looking for other ways to find funding. THE GOVERNOR¡¯S BILLS Governor Kotek sponsored two bills on ¡°accountability¡± for school districts. They are HB 2009 and SB 141. The bills were filed as ¡°placeholders¡± and were subsequently gutted and stuffed with new language. As of this week, the relevant language is in the ¡°dash 2¡± amendments. As they seem to be identical, here is a link to the House version: https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Measures/ProposedAmendments/HB2009 I expect that both these bills will pass their respective committees and one of them will then be considered by the Education Subcommittee of the Joint Ways and Means Committee as there is a fiscal impact statement attached. Although we strongly support increasing accountability, these bills are flawed. Both versions of the Governor¡¯s bills rely on the ¡°focal groups¡±, called out in the Student Success Act which omits TAG students, leaving districts unaccountable for ensuring that all students are learning. Here is the list of ¡°groups¡± that are included in the bill From Senate Bill 141 -2 (the version with the current amendment) ¡°(11) ¡®Student group¡¯ means the following student groups: ¡°(a) Economically disadvantaged students, as determined based on rules adopted by the State Board of Education; ¡°(b) Students from racial or ethnic groups that have historically experienced academic disparities, as determined under rules adopted by the State Board of Education; ¡°(c) Students with disabilities; ¡°(d) Students who are English language learners; ¡°(e) Students who are foster children, as defined in ORS 30.297; ¡°(f) Students who are homeless, as determined under rules adopted by the State Board of Education; and ¡°(g) Any other student groups that have historically experienced academic disparities, as determined by the State Board of Education by rule. Note that the State Board of Education has the power to add additional groups to this list. We are asking them to do just that, and to rescind their declar
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Ways and Means budget hearing in Warm Springs
Friends: The Joint Ways and Means committee is holding hearings on the state budget. The next hearing is TOMORROW, Friday Please plan to attend and comment on the need for TAG funding and education funding Warm Springs | Friday, April 4 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Old Warm Springs Elementary School 1112 Wasco Street, Warm Springs, OR 97761 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-04-04-17-00/Agenda Margaret
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OATAG parent social
Friends: Don¡¯t forget to register for the parent social April 12th. https://www.oatag.org/social_event.html#!event-register/2025/4/12/nurturing-gifted-children-parent-social
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Town Hall with Representative Neron
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Friends: Please plan to attend the Town Hall with Representative Courtney Neron and Representative Hai Pham, Friday, March 28, 10:30 AM, at the Springs at Sherwood. Register here and ask her to schedule SB 934 and HB 3420: Or at least ask her if she will support categorical state TAG funding. More information and registration here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe2dpw1BxYGCNiQ0WJai3QRrORVVt0vAMDRDmEb7RZ0EjeQeg/viewform Margaret
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Representative April Dobson town hall Saturday morning
Friends: Representative Dobson serves on the House Education committee. Her district includes Happy Valley, Clackamas, and a small portion of outer southeastern Portland If you go, please ask her to support TAG funding (HB 3420) and Senate Bill 933. RSVP here to join Representative Annessa Hartman and Rep April Dobson for a joint town hall on Saturday, March 22nd from 10:30 - 12:00 PM! The event will be held in the Krumm Room on the South Campus of the Sabin-Schellenberg Professional Technical Center. If you have any questions or would like to request event accommodations, please contact Rep.AprilDobson@... Who: You and Rep. Annessa Hartman and Rep. April Dobson What: Mid-Session Town Hall Where: Krumm Room, South Campus of Sabin-Schellenberg Professional Tech Center When: 10:30 - 12 PM Capitol Phone: 503-986-1439 Capitol Address: 900 Court St. NE, H-488, Salem, Oregon 97301 Email: Rep.AprilDobson@... Website: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/dobson
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SB 944-1
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Friends: I am very pleased to announce that SB 944, which permits anyone to refer a student for TAG screening, passed the Senate Chamber this morning. It does not have any fiscal impact statement so it will be sent next to the House Education Committee. The chair of that committee is Courtney Neron. Senate Bill 943, which collects and reports student data which also passed the Senate Education committee is going to the Education Subcommittee of the Joint Ways and Means Committee instead of the Senate Chamber because it had a large (I think excessive) fiscal impact statement. Senator Kathleen Taylor, the chief sponsor of the bill, representing southeast Portland, the City of Milwaukie, and Oak Grove, gave a heartfelt introduction and defense of the bill on the Senate floor. Senator Chris Gorsek, who represents Gresham, Fairview, Troutdale and Wood Village also spoke in favor. Senator Janeen Sollman, who represents Forest Grove, Cornelius, Hillsboro, and Rock Creek, was the lone vote against. You can see the testimony and vote here: https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/mediaplayer?clientID=4879615486&eventID=2025031212&stopStreamAt=4107 This bill would not have been scheduled or passed without support from Senator Lew Frederick, the Chair of the Senate Education Committee. Meanwhile, HB 3420 (1% for TAG) is still waiting for its first hearing in the House Education Committee. This would be an excellent time to contact Representative Neron and ask her to schedule both SB 944 AND HB 3420. It is urgent that she schedule HB 3420 or it will automatically die. She represents Wilsonville, including the Charbonneau Distric???t in Clackamas County; King City, Sherwood, and Tigard/Bull Mountain in Washington County; ??Parrett Mountain in Yamhill County. You CAN make the difference. Representative Courtney Neron Capitol Phone: 503-986-1426 Email: Rep.CourtneyNeron@... Please thank Senators Taylor, Gorsek, and Lew Frederick for supporting SB 944 and SB 943. It¡¯s nice to have good news to share! Margaret
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Why did the Governor forget our kids?
Friends: I did not expect to be writing this to you today. This week, two apparently inoffensive bills: HB 2009 and SB 141 were amended to strip out all the language in the existing bills and substitute amendments with language provided by the Governor. This is a bad way to develop legislation. Amendments don¡¯t appear in the normal ways to scan bills or review committee agendas¡ªthey don¡¯t exist until just before they are posted. You can be sure that the Governor did consult with lobbyists from some well-funded interest groups before these amendments were posted, but they represent end runs around the rest of us. Supposedly, both bills are intended to improve ¡°accountability¡± by school districts. The Governor thinks this will improve the appalling achievement results posted by both the state and the NAEP earlier this year. It will not. And it perpetuates the neglect of our TAG students. The bills say that the state must report ¡°metrics¡± for students in ¡°disaggregated groups.¡± The list of ¡°disaggregated groups¡± is taken straight from the Student Success Act (SSA) which provided funding for student groups experiencing ¡°academic disparities¡±. Despite repeated recommendations from the task force that originated it, the SSA did not include gifted and/or high-achieving students in the list, but it did say that the State Board could designate other groups When we asked that TAG students be included, staff then at the Department instead prodded the State School Board to declare that: ¡°Lack of access to programs for academically gifted and high-achieving students does not constitute facing academic disparities¡± This misguided declaration ensured that none of the huge chunk of new funding in the SSA would go to any group serving gifted OR high achieving students as such. Unfortunately, not only has this objectionable language survived, the list of ¡°groups¡± from the SSA is copied in other state reports and studies, with the effect that TAG students are routinely left out. OATAG and TAG families are also systematically passed over when the Department commissions ¡°public engagement¡± with ¡°stakeholder groups¡± concerning various initiatives and proposed new rules. They are ignored in state reports including the report of the Quality Education Commission. This same list is now reproduced in the list of groups that the Governor thinks should be represented by ¡°disaggregated¡± reports on student achievement. The bill also just tweaks the ¡°metrics¡± that will be used for district accountability by adding ¡°eighth grade math proficiency.¡± This set of measurements will not provide meaningful information about student learning. For the most part, it ratifies the undermining of state accountability systems that followed the Every Student Succeeds Act. We need student gains, disaggregated first by ability, to know whether high-achieving students from marginalized backgrounds are making appropriate progress. This focus on a single measure of ¡°proficiency¡± conceals the progress of very low-achieving students. Moreover, research has shown that the highest-achieving students make the lowest learning gains. Because they are already far above grade level, even when they spend years learning nothing new, they are still ¡°proficient.¡± Previous ¡°growth¡± reports were incomprehensible and incorporated the expectation that high achieving students would make lower learning gains. Student progress reports should be produced with public involvement, should produce actionable information, and should be in a form that the public can easily understand. SB 933, which has passed the Senate Education Committee and is waiting for a hearing in the Senate Chamber, is a much better alternative. The Department of Education has attached an excessive ¡°fiscal impact¡± (cost) to the bill, which means it would next be sent to the Joint Ways and Means Committee. SB 141-1 and HB 2009-1 also require appointment of an unknown ¡°entity¡± to review the Division 22 standards. In the past, similar bills have enabled covert efforts to abolish the 3 rules that enact our TAG mandate ¡ªidentific
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who represents us in Salem?
Find out who represents you The links below will take you to contact information for legislators: Senate Education Committee House Education Committee Education Subcommittee of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means Joint Committee on Ways and Means Senate members and leaders: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/senate/Pages/SenatorsDemocrats.aspx House members and leaders: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/house Education Committees for 2025 Senate Committee On Education Chair Senator Lew Frederick Vice-Chair Senator Suzanne Weber Member Senator Sara Gelser Blouin Member Senator Noah Robinson Member Senator Janeen Sollman House committee on Education Chair Representative Courtney Neron Vice-Chair Representative April Dobson Vice-Chair Representative Emily McIntire Member Representative Darin Harbick Member Representative Zach Hudson Member Representative Hoa Nguyen Member Representative Ricki Ruiz Member Representative Boomer Wright Joint Subcommittee on Ways and Means: Education subcommittee Co-Chair Senator Janeen Sollman Co-Chair Representative Ricki Ruiz Member Senator Lew Frederick Member Senator Suzanne Weber Member Representative Susan McLain Member Representative Hoa Nguyen Member Representative Boomer Wright Member Representative Dwayne Yunker Joint Committe on Ways and Means Co-Chair Senator Kate Lieber Co-Chair Representative Tawna Sanchez Co-Vice Chair Senator Fred Girod Co-Vice Chair Representative David Gomberg Co-Vice Chair Representative Greg Smith Member Senator Dick Anderson Member Senator Daniel Bonham Member Senator Anthony Broadman Member Senator Wlnsvey Campos Member Senator Lew Frederick Member Senator Mike McLane Member Senator David Brock Smith Member Senator Janeen Sollman Member Senator Aaron Woods Member Representative Ben Bowman Member Representative Vikki Breese-Iverson Member Representative Jami Cate Member Representative Christine Drazan Member Representative Paul Evans Member Representative Emerson Levy Member Representative Mark Owens Member Representative Ricki Ruiz Member Representative Andrea Valderrama
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FW: Join Us for the Nurturing Gifted Children: Parent Social!
Join Us for the Nurturing Gifted Children: Parent Social! From: Oregon Association for Talented And Gifted <President@...> Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2025 10:30 AM To: Margaret DeLacy <margaretdelacy@...> Subject: Join Us for the Nurturing Gifted Children: Parent Social! View this email in your browser A Note From Our President ? Join Us for the Nurturing Gifted Children: Parent Social! Dear OATAG Members, I¡¯m excited to invite you to our upcoming event, Nurturing Gifted Children: Parent Social, happening on Saturday, April 12th, from 4-6 PM at Syndicate Wine Bar in Beaverton. Hosted by Gifted Coaching NW and proudly sponsored by OATAG, this gathering offers a valuable opportunity to connect with other parents who understand the unique joys and challenges of raising gifted children. Why Attend? ? Build Connections: Meet like-minded parents who ¡°get it¡± and understand your journey. ? Gain Insights: Discover practical strategies for supporting your child¡¯s educational and emotional needs. ? Feel Empowered: Walk away with ideas, resources, and a renewed sense of confidence in your parenting. Parenting a gifted child can sometimes feel isolating ¡ª but you¡¯re not alone. This event is designed to foster meaningful conversations, shared insights, and lasting connections. ? Register here I¡¯ve also made available a Poster with event details ¡ª please feel free to share it with any parents who may benefit. I would love to see you there! ? Poster If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to reach out. Warmly, Candice Guertin-Carey, MA Gifted Coaching NW candice@... You are receiving this email because you are on our OATAG Member Information List. OATAG provides information at no cost to support Oregon students, educators and families. Your OATAG membership is essential for this to continue Join OATAG Copyright ? 2025 Oregon Association for Talented And Gifted, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you signed up for OATAG Newsletters at our web site. Our mailing address is: Oregon Association for Talented And Gifted P.O. Box 1703 Beaverton, OR 97075 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ??
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Ways and Means community budget meetings
Friends: Mark your calendars and plan to turn up! And ask them to support categorical TAG funding. Our experience has been that increasing state school funding alone does not necessarily result in increased TAG funding. Just remember that the key to success really is just showing up and using your voice. JOINT COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS The Joint Committee on Ways and Means will tour the state for six public hearings to hear directly from Oregonians regarding the 2025-2027 budget SALEM, Ore. ¨C Today, the co-chairs of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means announced the dates and locations of the 2025 community budget hearings and are encouraging Oregonians to sign up to testify about which projects and programs the state should prioritize this budget cycle. Members of the committee and legislative leadership will attend six public hearings across the state over the next two months as the upcoming 2025-2027 biennial state budget begins to take shape. Individuals interested in testifying before the committee should sign up in advance for the hearing they plan to attend. This year will be the first time since at least 2005 a community budget hearing has occurred on tribal lands when the committee visits Warm Springs on April 4. The April 16 public hearing will prioritize virtual testimony so everyone in the state has an opportunity to testify on their budget priorities. In the days before the first community budget hearing on March 22, the co-chairs will release their budget framework, which will outline the state's budgetary outlook and what resources might be available to use. Legislators are constitutionally required to pass a balanced budget every two years. ASL and Spanish language interpretation will be available at the public hearing. Habr¨¢ interpretaci¨®n de ASL y espa?ol en la audiencia p¨²blica. To access links to a livestream or recordings of legislative meetings: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement/Pages/Legislative-Video.aspx PLEASE NOTE ? Testimony may be limited to 2-3 minutes. ? Those attending this community hearing in person will be given preference to present public comment by pre-registering to testify. ? The public hearing scheduled on April 16th at the State Capitol in Salem will prioritize remote public testimony for those who wish to participate by video link or phone. ? Written comment may be submitted online up to 48 hours after the meeting start time. The dates and locations of the community budget hearings are: Gresham | Saturday, March 22 (10:00am ¨C 12:00pm) Mt. Hood Community College, College Theater 26000 S.E. Stark Street, Gresham, OR 97030 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-03-22-10-00/Agenda Astoria | Friday, March 28 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Liberty Theatre Astoria 1203 Commercial Street, Astoria, OR 97103 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-03-28-17-00/Agenda Warm Springs | Friday, April 4 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Old Warm Springs Elementary School 1112 Wasco Street, Warm Springs, OR 97761 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-04-04-17-00/Agenda La Grande | Friday, April 11 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Eastern Oregon University, Hoke Union Building #339 1 University Boulevard, La Grande, OR 97850 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-04-11-17-00/Agenda Salem, Statewide Virtual Testimony Prioritized | Wednesday, April 16 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Oregon State Capitol Building, Hearing Room F 900 Court St NE, Salem, OR 97301 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/JWM/2025-04-16-17-00/Agenda Klamath Falls | Friday, April 25 (5:00pm ¨C 7:00pm) Klamath Community College, Building 4 Commons 7390 South 6th Street, Klamath Falls, OR 97603 Members of the public can register to testify here https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R
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SENG Webinars in March
Friends, Supporting Emotional Needs of the The Gifted (SENG) is offering two webinars in March. On March 18th at 4pm Pacific Time the topic is: Transforming Your Relationship with Your Child: How to Move from Conflict to Connection. The presenters are Dr. Chase & Mitra Cummins. They are Introspective Coaches who support parents of neurodiverse and neurotypical kids on effective communcation skills. On March 25th at 4pm Pacific Time the topic is: Building Brain Capital and 21st Century Skills with Creativity. The presenter is Genein Letford, M.Ed. an award winning educator and author. For more information see the SENG website https://www.sengifted.org/. SENG has a new registration and membership system. Discounts are available at some membership levels.
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Update on SB 933 & SB 934 - Next Steps and Support Needed
Friends: I¡¯m pleased to report that both Senate Bill 933 and Senate Bill 934 cleared their first hurdle this morning! Both bills were sponsored by Senator Kathleen Taylor, with significant support from her legislative aide, Alex Blosser, who worked diligently to guide them through the process. Senator Frederick acknowledged their efforts during the hearing. SB 933: Progress and Challenges Unfortunately, SB 933 received what I believe is an excessively large fiscal impact statement: Fiscal Impact Statement. This bill will now be sent to the Education Subcommittee of the Joint Ways and Means Committee, where it will need strong support to move forward. There is no way to appeal or revise a fiscal impact statement, so advocacy is crucial. The next step is to ask the co-chairs of the Ways and Means Committee to schedule a public hearing for the bill. Key Amendments and Votes The committee adopted the ¡°Dash 3¡± amendments, which were designed to remove difficult-to-obtain data requests, thereby reducing the time and cost of providing information. Voting in favor: Senator Frederick, Senator Gelser Blouin, and Senator Sollman Voting against: Senator Robinson (concerned about the scope of data collection, including racial data) Not present: Senator Weber During the discussion, Senators Frederick and Gelser Blouin responded to Senator Robinson that Black and Brown students continue to face disadvantages in our public school system. If racially disaggregated data did show these students are receiving TAG services at equitable rates and achieving similar learning gains, that would be great news. Current data shows disparities in both areas. For reference, here is the original bill: SB 933 Overview. Due to its length and extensive amendments, I want to highlight the most critical section: Key Provision ¨C Section (2)(O), Page 3: The Department must report annual achievement test score gains in mathematics and language arts for students who took the statewide summative assessments in both the previous and current school years. This data must be disaggregated by: Subject matter and grade Proficiency level Demographics (including gender identity, racial/ethnic identity, economic disadvantage, and eligibility for special education) This provision would greatly enhance our ability to track student progress across Oregon. If you have any questions about this section or others, please reach out to me. SB 934: Key Update The committee also adopted the ¡°Dash 1¡± amendment for SB 934, removing the requirement that districts must ¡°provide screenings as needed throughout the school year.¡± This change was made in response to OEA¡¯s opposition, which argued that parents might refer their children for screening over and over, and districts would then have to screen them multiple times a year. The TAG identification process and parents¡¯ appeal rights remain unchanged. Administrative rules ensuring that identification teams are trained and follow clear criteria will not be affected. Votes: In favor: Senator Frederick, Senator Gelser Blouin, Senator Richardson, and Senator Weber (who joined the committee later) Against: Senator Sollman SB 934 now moves to the Senate Chamber, where every senator present must vote. If it passes, it will proceed to the House Education Committee, where the entire process will repeat. The Road Ahead: HB 3420 The easiest part of the process is over¡ªthe hardest part is still ahead. We urgently need to request a public hearing for HB 3420, which would provide PERMANENT, CATEGORICAL funding for TAG programs and services. HB 3420 Overview: View Bill The most important committee at this stage is the House Education Committee, chaired by Representative Courtney Neron. Below is a list of key legislative committee members. Thank you for your continued support! Margaret SB 934: SECTION 1. ORS 343.407 is amended to read: 343.407. School districts shall identify talented and gifted [students] children enrolled in public schools under rules adopted by the State Board of Education. The rules must require school districts to: (1) Allow any
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Senate Bills work session 8 AM March 5
Friends: Senate Bills 933 and 934 are scheduled for a work session (vote) in the Senate Education Committee on Wednesday morning. No testimony is taken at work sessions. If you go to the committee's agenda, and click the little circle next to the date, you will also find a recording once the meeting is over. I think it leads to a livestream during the meeting, but I'm not sure. According to the agenda, neither bill currently has a subsequent referral to Ways and Means. Please thank Senator Frederick, the chair of the Education Committee, for scheduling these bills and Senator Taylor for sponsoring them. https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/2025R1/Committees/SED/2025-03-05-08-00/Agenda Margaret
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update on the legislative session
Friends: This session we requested three bills: SB 933 and SB 934 which were sponsored in the Senate by Senator Kathleen Taylor and HB 3420, which was sponsored in the House by Representative Emily McIntire. SB 934 states that anyone who knows a student¡ªparents, teachers, or community members¡ªcan refer them for TAG assessment. While most districts already allow this, state law is unclear, and at least one district now requires teachers to submit the referrals. Research show conclusively that this barrier causes gifted students, particularly students from underrepresented backgrounds, to be overlooked. It¡¯s not surprising that the more hoops a family has to jump through, the more intimidating the process becomes for them. SB 934 would standardize best practices across the state and reduce unnecessary paperwork for teachers. After referral students would still be assessed for TAG services by a trained team. Some teachers who were interviewed about referring students by the Oregon Department of Education remarked that that early assessment is inappropriate or even that all students will ¡°level out¡± by third grade. In fact, early identification is important to prevent disengagement from school and to ensure that students in lower-income schools retain their initial competencies. I was astonished when the OEA objected to SB 934 , claiming that it would open the floodgates and a huge crowd of parents would rush to refer their children because, ¡°every parent thinks their child is gifted¡± (a claim contradicted by research). Moreover, they said, those parents would then KEEP referring the same children for assessment over and over again during a single school year. This scenario seems very unlikely to me. I don¡¯t know many parents who want to have their children tested over and over. Moreover, if they are unhappy with the results of the initial assessment, they already have the right to appeal. We have agreed to an amendment that removes 8 words from the end of section 3 which says districts must ¡°accept recommendations throughout the school year and ¡ provide screenings as needed throughout the school year.¡± Last I heard, the ODE is planning withdraw its opposition. SB 933 is a more challenging project because it is likely to have a significant fiscal impact statement. If it passes the Senate Education Committee, it would go to the Joint Ways and Means Education Subcommittee and then the full Joint Ways and Means committee. That¡¯s a lot of legislators to explain a complicated bill to. Constituent input would be very helpful, so if anyone wants to learn more, they are welcome to contact me. SB 933 calls the state Department of Education to create a report card compiling TAG information AND for the Department to report student learning gains broken down by ability on the OSAS, instead of reporting just scores. An achievement test score tells you (more or less) what a student has learned since the day they were born; an achievement test gain tells you what they have learned during one school year. If you want actionable information on ways to improve curriculum and instruction, you need data on gains. And it needs to be in a format that people can understand. SB 933 has been opposed by COSA and the OSBA. They assert that it places too big a burden on school districts because of all the extra reports. In fact, the Department of Education already has most of the data¡ªI am just asking them to compile it differently and/or report it differently. Right now, I ask them for some of this data every year, and then I compile it by hand despite my own ineptitude. Although this bill is identical to a bill from the 2023 session that included a small fiscal impact statement (1 data clerk), this time, the Department of Education contacted Sen. Taylor¡¯s office and said it would incur a very large fiscal impact. After that, Sen. Taylor¡¯s staff and I met with the staff at the Department to see if we could find out what was causing the problem. Sen. Taylor¡¯s staff and I have developed amendments that we hope will reduce the agitation at the Departmen
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Free webinar March 12 with Ideal4Gifted and Dell Siegle
Forwarding from Ideal4Gifted in Massachusetts The NRCGE is the nation¡¯s leading research institution for talented and gifted education. Note that the time is EST. It would be 4:00 Pacific. Margaret Join Dr. MaryGrace Stewart and Dr. Del Siegle Wednesday, March 12, 2025, at 7:00 pm ET "Understanding Underachievement in Advanced, Gifted, and 2E Children and Youth." Register today for IDEAL4Gifted's Free Insights Webinar! On March 12, 2025, Dr. Stewart will be joined by Dr. Del Siegle from the University of CT to discuss what underachievement is, why it happens, and what can be done to reverse it. Dr. Siegle is an expert in the underachievement of highly able students. He is the Director of the National Center for Research on Gifted Education and the Renzulli Center for Creativity, Gifted Education, and Talent Development IDEAL4Gifted Insights Free Webinar series is designed specifically for parents of homeschooling families and educators of advanced, gifted, highly-able, or 2E learners. Attendance is free, donations are encouraged, and registration is required. Register here: https://form.jotform.com/250526318676159
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fwd. WAETAG webinar on social-emotional learning
Friends: I am forwarding this issue of the WAETAG newsletter. Note that WAETAG webinars are free when they are aired, but after that they are only available for WAETAG members. HiCap is Washington¡¯s term for TAG: ¡°Highly Capable.¡± Margaret JOIN US FOR OUR FEBRUARY WEBINAR Social Emotional Needs and Strategies for HiCap and 2E Learners Guest speaker: Wendy Clark Gifted and twice-exceptional (2E) learners often face unique social-emotional challenges, from navigating friendships and building meaningful relationships to managing self-awareness and the pressures of high expectations. This webinar will explore key strategies to support these students, including fostering strong connections, helping them develop emotional resilience, and guiding them through common anxieties. Educators and caregivers will leave with practical tools to create a supportive environment that nurtures both the strengths and needs of gifted and 2E learners. Date: February 27, 2025 Time: 4:00-5:00 pm PST Location: Online Earn 1.5 clock hours available! Register Now OR CLICK HERE TO JOIN AT DATE AND TIME OF WEBINAR > Guest Speaker: Wendy Clark Wendy has been a classroom teacher for over 25 years, in the general classroom setting and in the area of Talented and Gifted. She currently works as the K-12 Highly Capable Coordinator for West Valley School District #208. During the summer months and after school, she also works as a gifted education consultant for districts throughout central Washington. Wendy has experienced first-hand many of the same challenges for this often overlooked population of students; as an identified student in elementary school, parent to two very differently gifted children, and teacher to so many. These connections fuel her desire to bring appropriate awareness and instruction to students across our stateas an advocate for the best education for every student. In addition to her Master¡¯s Degree and National Board Certification, she earned a Specialty Endorsement in Gifted Education through Whitworth University. She later had the honor of working as adjunct faculty member for Whitworth¡¯s Center for Gifted Education, supervising graduate students as they complete their field study and teaching online courses. WAETAG 2025 Annual Convention Call for Proposals now Open! Each year, we seek quality presentations that will provide practical value and inspiration to the educational community in attendance at our conference. We strongly encourage sessions that will apply to all types of service models, from the general education classroom setting to those in a self-contained classroom. We welcome first-time submissions! Selected speakers will receive a discounted convention registration. Submission deadline: May 31, 2025 Learn more about the call for proposal process > HiCap Coordinator Network Calling all HiCap Program Coordinators! Join us for this powerful series designed to support you in your coordinator role. Next Session: Best Practices for Leading Differentiation and Supporting Advanced Instruction Date: Tuesday, March 11, 2025 Time: 4:00-5:30 PM Pacific Location: Virtual Cost: Free Learn more and Register > Save the Date for our upcoming Spring Summits! Join us for a day of inspiration, collaboration, and growth at the WAETAG Spring Summit! This year¡¯s Summit features thought-provoking sessions designed to cater to every educator, making this summit a must-attend for all passionate about fostering gifted education. Eastern Washington Summit Date: Saturday, April 26, 2025 Time: 9:00 am-4:30 pm Location: Columbia Basin College, Pasco, WA Western Washington Summit Date: Saturday, May 3, 2026 Time: 9:00 am-4:30 pm Location: Open Windows School, Bellevue, WA More information coming soon!
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TSPC hearing next week
Friends: This informational hearing on the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission may be of interest to some of you. It will take place in the Joint Ways and Means Committee¡¯s Education Subcommittee. Margaret 900 Court Street NE, Room H-178, Salem, Oregon 9Phone: 503-986-1828 AGENDA Posted: FEB 21 09:31 AM WEDNESDAY Date: February 26, 2025 Time: 1:00 PM Room: H-174 Informational Meeting HB 5037 Teacher Standards and Practices Commission PLEASE NOTE To access links to a livestream or recordings of legislative meetings: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement/Pages/Legislative-V For information on Language Access Services/Para m¨¢s informaci¨®n sobreLing¨¹¨ªstico: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/lpro/Pages/language-access.aspx
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M3 Challenge for high school students
Forwarding this math competition from the Oregon Math Educator newsletter.MargaretEmpower Your Students: Participate in MathWorks Math Modeling Challenge The MathWorks Math Modeling Challenge (M3 Challenge) is a free online contest for students in grades 11 and 12 to use math and data to solve real-world problems. The M3 Challenge, hosted by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), presents teams of 3-5 students with an open-ended challenge over a 14-hour window between February 28 and March 3, 2025. Scholarships totaling $100,000+ will be awarded as students learn how math can address global issues, preparing them for future endeavors. Teamwork and creativity are rewarded, and free resources are available. SPARK Awards honor teams from Title 1 schools for excellence and creativity. Register for the 2025 Challenge before February 21, 2025.
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