1. Should I accelerate my child?

2. Will my accelerated child fit in socially and have friends?

3. When is the best time for my child to skip a grade?

4. How important are the age and school grade of siblings when considering acceleration?

5. My child is actively involved in sports and extracurricular activities. How will acceleration affect participation in these activities?

6. Who is involved in the acceleration decision making process?

7. What if whole-grade acceleration is not recommended?

8. What reasons am I likely to hear (from the teacher, the principal, or other parents) for why I shouldn’t accelerate my child?

9. What are my rights to request acceleration?

10. What might happen if we keep students who appear ready for acceleration at their current grade level?

11. Are there support groups for parents and children who participate in various forms of acceleration?

The answers to Questions 3-7, 10, & 11 have been adapted from the Iowa Acceleration Scale Manual (2nd Edition), by Assouline, Colangelo, Lupkowski-Shoplik, Lipscomb, & Forstadt (2003). The Iowa Acceleration Scale is available through Great Potential Press.


1. Should I accelerate my child?

Research indicates that acceleration is a social and academic success story; in many cases, it is the right intervention for students whose needs are not met in age-grouped classrooms.

The more relevant question might be "what form of acceleration is most appropriate for my child?" For many people, acceleration is synonymous with grade skipping, although grade skipping is just one form of acceleration. Early entrance to kindergarten or 1st grade, dual enrollment in high school and college, and subject matter acceleration are different forms of acceleration that may work for some students.

Choosing an accelerative intervention requires careful consideration of many factors, and the type of acceleration that works well with one child may not work well with another. The support of family and friends, the student’s level of academic and social-emotional development, the student’s age and physical development, and the beliefs of local school personnel are all factors to consider. For example, students who skip grades need emotional maturity as well as academic ability in order to succeed. With single-subject acceleration, however, the more important criterion is academic ability, and social-emotional maturity may be less of a concern.

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2. Will my accelerated child fit in socially and have friends?

Parents and caregivers are deeply concerned about their child’s social and emotional health and want to ensure that their child has membership in a peer group. Many intellectually advanced children have experienced the social isolation that comes not from having a true intellectual peer in the same grade. Acceleration can benefit some children socially because it allows them to socialize with older peers who are more likely to share interests and are closer to the intellectual level of the accelerated child. For some children, acceleration may finally provide the opportunity to make a friend. The social fit of the child is a larger issue for grade skipping than for forms of acceleration that keep the child in the grade-level classroom (such as subject matter acceleration).

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3. When is the best time for my child to skip a grade?

Two separate time periods need to be considered before deciding to grade-skip:

  • The best time during one specific academic year.
  • The best time within the total K-8 span of the student’s academic career.
Clinical experience suggests that the younger the student is when accelerated, the easier the adjustment. Thus, for example, one might consider acceleration when a student has completed preschool and could be accelerated to first grade, skipping kindergarten. For early decisions like this, it is important that a student has experienced a structured classroom, has interacted with peers, and has learned to share adult attention with other children.

Although some educators worry that a child’s motor skills in the early grades may not equal those of children in higher grades, these concerns should usually be viewed as minor, since easy accommodation can be made for lags in motor skills until such time as the accelerated child can catch up. For example, a child whose scissor-cutting skills aren’t as advanced as his or her classmates could be given some assistance with cutting, such as a special pair of scissors or allowed extra time to complete cutting activities. A second example is to provide a child with a larger pencil to compensate for difficulty grasping a standard-sized pencil.

One advantage to waiting for acceleration until after a student has started school is that more information will have been accumulated about his or her learning and behavior patterns. But earlier decisions have the advantage of allowing the child to experience a minimum amount of social disruption and to have more time for developing bonds of friendship and mutual interests before the complications of the adolescent years emerge.

Additionally, if intervention for underachievement is not carried out by the end of the upper-elementary grades, it may be more difficult to do so in later years. It is important to remember, however, that each child is different, and there have been successful instances of acceleration in middle school and high school.

The years just before a move to another building, especially between elementary school and junior high or middle school, are difficult times for acceleration. These are considered “transition years.” For example, if the school district’s elementary schools end at 4th grade, and middle school is for 5th-8th graders, the common sense approach would suggest having the potential accelerant skip 4th grade and go straight into 5th grade. This seems sensible, because then the accelerated student is one of many new students in a new school, and it is less likely that he or she will “stand out” in the class. While common sense dictates that it is best for a student to skip grades before moving into a new building, clinical data from the Belin-Blank Center indicate otherwise.

Contrary to the opinion that it is wise to accelerate over a transition year, research gathered by the Belin-Blank Center over the past decade suggests that this may not be the best time. A move to the next level generally involves a change in the way the school day schedule and extracurricular activities are organized. School personnel often use trips to the new building and other processes to prepare students for the upcoming move. Today, schools don’t just have one spring “move-up day” in which students can go to visit their new buildings. Instead, homework expectations and student responsibilities are introduced and taught throughout the transition year so that, by the end of the transition year, the students have experienced some of the things they will be expected to do in the next grade level. It may be better to accelerate during the year previous to the transition year so that the student can participate fully in these transition year activities.

Sometimes, though, circumstances require the acceleration to take place during a transition year. The involvement of administration at both schools, along with current and receiving teachers, is critical in cases where grade skipping involves a building change. In such instances, it will be important to provide students with experiences that allow a preview and observation of classes in the new setting.

The best-case scenario will be to implement whole-grade acceleration at the start of an academic year, following an assessment and planning process that has occurred the previous spring. An alternative is to do the entire process—i.e., assess, plan, and accelerate—at the very beginning of a school year, such that the student is in the new grade placement prior to the winter break. This approach allows the student to take advantage of the customary review material in the curriculum that is typically covered after the winter break.

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4. How important are the age and school grade of siblings when considering acceleration?

An important rule of thumb in acceleration is that a student not be skipped into the same grade as an older sibling. Such a move will introduce the accelerated child into the social and academic territory of the older sibling. Even if a school offers more than one class at the given grade level or if the accelerated student could be moved to another school, acceleration into the same grade as an older sibling is not recommended.

Students who are not accelerated due to a sibling’s age or grade still need to be challenged, however. Alternative methods for increasing their academic challenge must be identified and implemented. One method that can be used is to pair the student with a mentor who works professionally in a field that is related to the student’s academic interest areas. Other ways to increase challenge can be found in books such as Re-Forming Gifted Education: Matching the Program to the Child (Rogers, 2002) and include participation in regional or national competitions based upon individual or group projects, through programs such as Destination Imagination™, Knowledgemaster, Invention Convention™, Math Olympiad, and Future Problem Solving. The key is to find ways to provide meaning, usefulness, and structure, and thereby motivation, to a student’s extended learning.

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5. My child is actively involved in sports and extracurricular activities. How will acceleration affect participation in these activities?

Some students who are considered for acceleration are very involved in competitive group sports such as football, basketball, track, or soccer, and they may want to continue their involvement. Unfortunately, it is rare that being a year younger is an advantage in sports. Acceleration may place some students, either at the time of the decision or later, at a competitive disadvantage in their particular sport. Parents and students should be made aware of this and should be encouraged to discuss any concerns that they may have. Building or district administrators or coaches can be useful sources of information about issues such as athletic eligibility.

There are some situations in which a student being involved in and dedicated to athletics is enough reason to decide against acceleration. If a student athlete who is ready for greater academic challenge is not accelerated, then alternative programs, such as mentoring or acceleration in specific subject areas, should be considered.

Students who skip a grade while in elementary school may move to a new grade and classroom, yet still play with their age-mates at recess or participate in other activities, such as Scouts, 4-H, or music. Thus, the student finds different yet appropriate peers with the different settings he or she encounters. Scout leaders and officials of other extracurricular organizations can provide information for how the student should be placed.

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6. Who is involved in the acceleration decision making process?

The question about whether or not to accelerate initially may be raised by the parents, who often accurately notice the mismatch between their child’s intellectual level and the level of schoolwork. The mismatch may become apparent when their child complains of being bored at school or exhibits behaviors in the classroom that are not typical of the child in other settings (for example, a gifted student may seem distractible at school but not at home).

Educators often fear that parents of gifted children push their talented children too hard. While such cases certainly exist, they appear to be uncommon. Parents of gifted students are generally appropriately and effectively involved with their children. Parents who initiate requests for consideration of curriculum changes for their children should be viewed by school personnel as advocating for them, and their requests and views should be given serious consideration. These parents usually know their children’s strengths and skills quite well.

Parents or guardians are in the best position to see the scope and breadth of their children’s interests and activities, particularly those that are demonstrated outside of school. As unique sources of information and insight about a student, they are irreplaceable contributors to a decision about acceleration. Often, parents are the only adults who are in a position to seek formal testing by a private psychologist, to provide objective information that can ultimately be very useful in the decision-making process.

Parents continue to play an important role in the child’s life once the decision to accelerate has been made. In the beginning, they should talk frequently with the child about the experience of being accelerated because there will be many adjustments the child must make. Acceleration may pose novel challenges both socially and academically, and the child may be in need of greater parental support during this time. The new academic situation may be the first time the child has experienced serious academic challenge. The child’s parents can model positive behaviors and discuss coping skills for dealing with these challenges and frustrations.

Ultimately, recommendations about acceleration should be based on a psycho-educational assessment from a licensed psychologist, evidence of academic accomplishment (achievement) well in advance of age- and grade- peers, likelihood of continued accomplishment, and discussions with your child’s teacher, principal, or other school administrators. A gifted student may also want a voice in the decision.

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7. What if whole-grade acceleration is not recommended?

Students may be academically ready for accelerated curriculum, but may not be ready to move to the next grade level for any number of reasons—slower developing emotional skills or a sibling in the would-be accelerated grade. In some cases, the academically gifted student may have another exceptionality, such as a learning disability, that is so severe that whole-grade acceleration is not recommended.

If whole-grade acceleration is not recommended, it is generally the case that some sort of curricular modification is necessary. This modification may take many forms, including single-subject acceleration, attendance at special enrichment/acceleration classes, finding a mentor, encouraging an independent study project, involvement in Destination Imagination™ or other program, independent reading, a book discussion group, group or individual counseling, bibliotherapy, etc.

If a student is not accelerated, it may be because he or she has expressed hesitation or reservations about the grade skip. The student’s opinion is very important to the process, and the student should be aware of this, regardless of the decision that is made. If the student will not skip a grade because of the decision of the team of psychologists, parents, and teachers, the student should understand that the decision that was made (whether to single-subject accelerate, provide a mentor, or to keep things as they are) is what the team thinks is best for the student at the time. Older students may need to talk more about the decision with a respected adult than younger students. Members of the team will need to discuss with the student any other options that are available and be prepared to answer the student’s questions about alternatives to whole-grade acceleration.

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8. What reasons am I likely to hear (from the teacher, the principal, or other parents) for why I shouldn’t accelerate my child?

In 2004, The John Templeton Foundation sponsored a report titled A Nation Deceived: How Schools Hold Back America's Brightest Students (Colangelo, Assouline, & Gross, 2004). This report highlighted the disparity between the research on acceleration and educational beliefs and practices that often run contrary to the research. Volume I of A Nation Deceived, presents (and dispels) some of the prevailing reasons given for the why acceleration isn’t accepted in America’s schools. As a parent, you might hear one or more of these reasons from school officials and educators or other parents for why you shouldn’t accelerate your child. Below we reprint these 12 reasons from pages 6-9 of A Nation Deceived.

Reason #1: Teachers lack familiarity with acceleration. Educators in most schools are unfamiliar with the research evidence on acceleration’s benefits.

Response: A primary goal of this report is to eliminate this barrier. This comprehensive two-volume report brings together extensive research on acceleration, and the report is available to all schools at no cost.

Reason #2: Confidence about acceleration isn’t running high. K–12 educators may know about acceleration as an intervention, but they don’t feel confident in using this option.

Response: We respect that all educators make decisions that they believe are in the best interest of their students. The overwhelming evidence about the many academic and social advantages of acceleration should make educators confident enough to consider acceleration.

Reason #3: Acceleration runs counter to personal beliefs. When personal beliefs conflict with research evidence, personal beliefs win out almost every time.

Response: This report invites introspection and dialogue between educators and parents, asking them to reevaluate their beliefs concerning acceleration.

Reason #4: Age trumps everything else. For many educators, age—not readiness—has become the primary determinant for grade placement.

Response: The notion that age equates to grade is out of tune with what we know about individual differences. Research reveals that gifted students are more academically and emotionally advanced than their typical age-mates. Therefore, it makes more sense to think about readiness, rather than age, as the main determinant for grade placement.

Reason #5: Safe is better than sorry. Most teachers see non-acceleration as the safer option—they feel that doing nothing is not harmful.

Response: Doing nothing is not the same as "do no harm." Choosing not to accelerate is itself an intervention. The evidence indicates that when children’s academic and social needs are not met, the result is boredom and disengagement from school.

Reason #6: Acceleration is not taught in Colleges of Education. These organizations, which train teachers, do not prepare teachers and administrators to make decisions about acceleration.

Response: Abundant research material is available, yet professors in Colleges of Education do not present it to future teachers. This report will help inform them. We know that faculty respect research and we hope that they will infuse this information into their course content.

Reason #7: It’s bad to push kids. Teachers and parents see acceleration as hurrying children through childhood.

Response: Acceleration is allowing a student to move at an appropriate pace. By worrying about hurrying, a chance is missed to match the enthusiastic, passionate, bright child who has the ability to move ahead with the right curriculum. They ignore the bright student’s rage to learn.

Reason #8: New friends are hard to make. Educators fear that children who are accelerated will not adjust well socially to the new class.

Response: Social adjustment in a school setting is a complicated issue. Some accelerated children do not adjust easily or immediately. Children who have felt out of place with students of their own age may need time to develop social confidence.

Although the evidence on social success in accelerated settings is not as clear-cut as the evidence on academic success, it is still much more positive than negative. Acceleration broadens the friendship group. Many gifted children gravitate to older children, so making friends becomes easier.

Reason #9: Individual kids are less important than equal opportunity for all. Individual differences have been sacrificed in the political battles and culture wars about schooling.

Response: When educators confuse equity with sameness, they want all students to have the same curriculum at the same time. This is a violation of equal opportunity.

When it comes to acceleration, the majority of children do not need it. In fact, it would be a disadvantage for them both academically and socially. But for the children who need it, acceleration is their best chance for an appropriate, challenging education.

We know a lot about assessing ability and creating programming tailored to accommodate individual differences. The cornerstone of education is the flexibility to recognize the needs of the individual child. This flexibility is sometimes lost, however, when political and cultural pressures homogenize the learning needs of individuals and we pretend that there are no meaningful learning differences.

Closing our eyes to children’s educational differences is neither democratic nor helpful. Every classroom teacher knows that children have distinct academic and social needs. Acceleration is a respectful recognition of individual differences as well as a means for addressing them.

Reason #10: It will upset other kids. Teachers sometimes fear that accelerating a child will diminish the self-esteem of other students.

Response: This is an important issue. Whatever we do in schools should be based on a respect and concern for all students. In fact, this level of sensitivity is one of the things that makes America special.

However, kids are used to seeing age-peers progress at different rates in many settings such as sports and music. In school, the idea of accelerating one or two children is not likely to negatively affect the class.

Reason #11: There will be gaps in the child’s knowledge. Teachers are concerned that accelerated students will have gaps in their understanding of concepts.

Response: We accelerate students because they are well ahead of their age-peers in their academic development and knowledge. Gifted students are swift learners and any gaps quickly disappear.

Reason #12: Disasters are memorable. Unsuccessful cases of acceleration exist, but the numbers have been exaggerated as have the reasons for lack of success.

Response: Good news doesn’t make the news. Bad news, on the other hand, sells papers and travels fast in communities. People will repeat stories or greatly exaggerate the situation about an unsuccessful acceleration, even without first-hand knowledge. Researchers acknowledge that acceleration is not perfect and some situations may be less than ideal, but such cases frequently stem from incomplete planning or negative attitudes.

We need to respect that even an intervention that is very positive is not fail-safe. A few poor decisions do not negate the importance of considering acceleration as an option. Excellent planning can minimize failures.

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9. What are my rights to request acceleration?

Gifted education policies vary by state. For example, some states allow early entrance to kindergarten and others don’t. You can find out your state’s policies through the following link at The Davidson Institute: http://www.geniusdenied.com/Policies/StatePolicy.aspx?NavID=6_0

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10. What might happen if we keep students who appear ready for acceleration at their current grade level?

It is a myth that not accelerating a student who is ready is a safe and harmless choice. Acceleration is a positive step for those students who are ready for the academic and social gains that it provides. It is also the case that “leaving well enough alone”—that is, deciding not to grade skip a student ready for acceleration—operates (or goes against) against the evidence. Potentially, failing to accelerate a student could have negative effects. There are indications that many students who remain in under-challenging environments will not fully utilize their considerable talents. Students who do not use their talents are not likely to have them developed to their fullest.

It is important to remember, too, that no educational placement decision is irrevocable. Sometimes situations warrant reconsideration. If the grade-skip is not working after two months, there is nothing wrong with allowing the student to go back to the previous grade and try other methods such as enrichment or single subject acceleration. Often, it helps the student and parents if they are assured that other alternatives exist if the whole-grade acceleration does not work out. An acceleration or grade-skip that “fails,” for whatever reason, does not appear to have lasting harmful effects to the student. Having a designated monitor who maintains good ongoing communication with the student, parents, and receiving teacher will go far toward preventing unsuccessful acceleration or at least toward recognizing problems at an early stage.

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11. Are there support groups for parents and children who participate in various forms of acceleration?

There are many websites that deal with issues of gifted children. A few popular sites developed by parents are:

http://www.gtworld.org
http://www.tagfam.org/
http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/

These sites provide listserv and other resources for a variety of issues and concerns common to gifted children and their families. The Hoagies’ site has a section dedicated to personal stories and research on acceleration.

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