Armorel School District 
K-3 C.U.B.S. Enrichment  
4-6 Gifted and Talented Pull-outs
Secondary Gifted and Talented
Advanced Placement Courses
  • General Information
    • Program Brochure
    • Characteristics
    • Common Myths in Gifted Education
    • You know Your Child is Gifted When
    • Scope and Sequence
    • About Me!
    • AGATE
  • 4-6 Gifted and Talented
    • Inventions of the future h -6th
    • Getting Out the Vote
    • Mask from Around the World
    • Chess Corner
    • Chess Match 2013
    • DAR 2015 >
      • DAR 2017 >
        • DAR 2018
        • DAR 2019 Winners
      • DAR 2019
      • Quiz Bowl >
        • Quiz Bowl 2013 2014
        • Quiz Bowl 2014-2015
      • Quiz Bowl 17 18
      • Quiz Bowl 2019
      • Garden
  • C.U.B.S. K-3rd
    • C.U.B.S. Enrichment K-3rd
    • Welcome
    • Volancoes
    • 2nd Grade Tessellattions
    • 2nd Christmas Legos
    • 3rd Christmas Challenge
    • Our Types of Cotton
    • Northeast Arkansas Cotton
    • Ms. T and Ms. Saundra
  • Advanced Placement
    • Secondary
    • Explore AP
    • Differentiation Form
    • AP Parent Information
  • Projects
  • Contact Mrs. Harms
  • Quiz Bowl

C.U.B.S. Enrichment
Creative Unique Brainstorming Students

KINDERGARTEN-THIRD GRADE PROGRAM

Students in Kindergarten thur Third Grade participate in a weekly thirty minute whole-group enrichment class planned and taught by the program coordinator.  The emphasis is on creative/critical thinking and affective growth and providing meaningful insight into each child’s potential.  Activities follow the program scope and sequence for K/3 and build upon previously learned skills.  Each learning experience focuses on:

1.        fluent thinking –the ability to think of a large number of ideas.  The intent is to build a large store of information for children to draw upon later on.

2.        flexible thinking –teaches children to shift their thoughts to different categories.  Kids find themselves being more original because they have taken a detour in their thinking.  The results are ideas that are more clever, uncommon, and inventive.

3.        elaborative thinking –the ability to enrich an idea or product by adding details –it is somewhat like taking an ordinary tree and adding ornaments.  This helps children be more descriptive leaving very little to the imagination.

4.        curiosity –a strong desire to know something.  Most children are FULL of this already; however we often tire of their “whys?” Children will learn to test out and to confirm guesses about the unfamiliar or unknown.

5.        willingness to take a calculated risk –this encourages a child to predict.  This also encourages children to set goals in anticipation of success and to consider the chance of failure.  It helps them develop a tolerance for insecurity so common in every day living.

6.        preference for complexity –a willingness to accept a challenge.  We want children to dig into knotty problems.  Challenges in school and in life may be in the form of complicated ideas, difficult problems, or complex tasks –kids need an “I can” attitude
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