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    How to coach and support your GEP child?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved GEP
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    • J Offline
      Just relax
      last edited by

      It is important to emphasize reading books, to your child. GEP requires a lot of project work and there is an ERP list which contains many books which the children are to read. Get the ERP list early, start looking for books on the list and get your child to read over the school holidays. As your child will only get the list in P4 it may be good to ask GEP parents of the current P4 GEP to let you have a copy of the list to start borrowing or buying the books. For the other subjects let your child find his/her own pace first to se how well they cope before deciding how to help.

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      • F Offline
        Fun fun
        last edited by

        My ds will be in p6 GEP next year, he is the happy go lucky type. Always do project last minute. I asked him recently how he find he GEP programme. He said good, he gets to learn interesting stuff, he makes more friends than in mainstream. So don’t worry, let your child have this experience. The homework is also beyond us parents but the kid seems to be able to handle them.

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        • 6 Offline
          678Yess
          last edited by

          Just relax:
          It is important to emphasize reading books, to your child. GEP requires a lot of project work and there is an ERP list which contains many books which the children are to read. Get the ERP list early, start looking for books on the list and get your child to read over the school holidays. As your child will only get the list in P4 it may be good to ask GEP parents of the current P4 GEP to let you have a copy of the list to start borrowing or buying the books. For the other subjects let your child find his/her own pace first to se how well they cope before deciding how to help.

          Can you help us to post the ERP list here?
          How about maths, does doing maths olympiad help?

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          • 6 Offline
            678Yess
            last edited by

            Just relax:
            It is important to emphasize reading books, to your child. GEP requires a lot of project work and there is an ERP list which contains many books which the children are to read. Get the ERP list early, start looking for books on the list and get your child to read over the school holidays. As your child will only get the list in P4 it may be good to ask GEP parents of the current P4 GEP to let you have a copy of the list to start borrowing or buying the books. For the other subjects let your child find his/her own pace first to se how well they cope before deciding how to help.

            Can you help us to post the ERP list here?
            How about maths, does doing maths olympiad help?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • J Offline
              Just relax
              last edited by

              yusim_lim:
              Just relax:

              It is important to emphasize reading books, to your child. GEP requires a lot of project work and there is an ERP list which contains many books which the children are to read. Get the ERP list early, start looking for books on the list and get your child to read over the school holidays. As your child will only get the list in P4 it may be good to ask GEP parents of the current P4 GEP to let you have a copy of the list to start borrowing or buying the books. For the other subjects let your child find his/her own pace first to se how well they cope before deciding how to help.


              Can you help us to post the ERP list here?
              How about maths, does doing maths olympiad help?


              I will check if I have the list. Hopefully other GE parents will be able to help as well. I understand that the list usually does not change very much each year. Anyway there are so many books on the list that it is not possible to read every book!

              Maths Olympiad and Science Olympiad are for the children with the real interest in the subjects as it is very challenging. Children do this if they feel it can help with the DSA at P6 or actually want to challenge themselves.

              But note GE students who want to go to IP or IB schools via DSA must apply via the GEP DSA only and for that you have to do well in GE from P4 - P6 >80% for 4 subjects to avoid the GAT or HAST but all GE students will still be interviewed even if exempted from GAT or HAST.

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              • D Offline
                dagong99
                last edited by

                Just relax:

                But note GE students who want to go to IP or IB schools via DSA must apply via the GEP DSA only and for that you have to do well in GE from P4 - P6 >80% for 4 subjects to avoid the GAT or HAST but all GE students will
                still be interviewed even if exempted from GAT or HAST.
                Do you mean must be > 80% in all subjects to avoid GAT ? :scratchhead: How about if your results are 'skewed' towards Science & Maths where they can be in the 90+% range but both languages < 80% and overall > 80% ? πŸ˜“

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                • K Offline
                  keroppi
                  last edited by

                  dagong99:
                  Do you mean must be > 80% in all subjects to avoid GAT ? :scratchhead: How about if your results are 'skewed' towards Science & Maths where they can be in the 90+% range but both languages < 80% and overall > 80% ? πŸ˜“

                  It's OK, not all subjects must be >80%. I doubt many can get >80% for HMT. As long as overall > 80% can already. Will be exempted from all GAT test.

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                  • K Offline
                    keroppi
                    last edited by

                    Fun fun:
                    My ds will be in p6 GEP next year, he is the happy go lucky type. Always do project last minute. I asked him recently how he find he GEP programme. He said good, he gets to learn interesting stuff, he makes more friends than in mainstream. So don't worry, let your child have this experience. The homework is also beyond us parents but the kid seems to be able to handle them.

                    Agree. There's no need to coach them, leave that to the GEP teachers. Support is OK esp if your kid is the disorganised type, maybe teach them how to organise and manage time. Sit back and watch how they grow & mature during these 3 years.

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                    • J Offline
                      JAR
                      last edited by

                      yusim_lim:
                      Just relax:

                      It is important to emphasize reading books, to your child. GEP requires a lot of project work and there is an ERP list which contains many books which the children are to read. Get the ERP list early, start looking for books on the list and get your child to read over the school holidays. As your child will only get the list in P4 it may be good to ask GEP parents of the current P4 GEP to let you have a copy of the list to start borrowing or buying the books. For the other subjects let your child find his/her own pace first to se how well they cope before deciding how to help.


                      Can you help us to post the ERP list here?
                      How about maths, does doing maths olympiad help?

                      My colleague who has a boy in Taonan GEP P4 this year pass me this list he received last year from Taonan. Unsure if the list will be the same this year and across GEP schools. He told me it is quite impossible to finish reading all the books as some of the books are old classic which are Out of Print and some only appeal to girls or boys.


                      GIFTED EDUCATION PROGRAMME
                      EXTENSIVE READING PROGRAM
                      PRIMARY 4: LIST A - NOVELS

                      1. Joan Aiken, ls Underqround
                      2. Joan Aiken, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase
                      3. Allan Ahlberg, The Better Brown Stories
                      4. Natalie Babbitt, Eyes of ihe Amaryllis
                      5. Nina Bawden, A Handful of Thieves
                      6. Nina Bawden, Granny the Paq
                      7. Sandra Belton, From Miss lda's Porch #
                      8. Judy Blume, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing
                      9. Lucy M. Boston, The Sea Egg
                      10.Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden
                      11.Betty Byars, The Midnight Fox
                      12.Sylvia Cassedy, Behind the Attic Wall
                      13.Arthur Bowie Chrisman, Shen of the Sea #
                      14.Beverly Cleary, Dear Mr. Henshaw
                      15.Andrew Clements, Frindle
                      16.Elizabeth Coatsworth, The Cat Who Went To Heaven
                      17.Susan Cooper, The Dark is Rising
                      18.Julia Cunningham, Macaroon #
                      19.Karen Cushman, The Ballad of Lucy whipple
                      20.Roald Dahl, The BFG
                      21.Roald Dahl, Dannv. The Champion of the World
                      22.Penelope Farmer, A Castle of Bone #
                      23.Anne Fine, Step by Wicked Step
                      24.Gail Gauthier, A Year with Butch and Spike
                      25.Fred Gipson, Old Yeller
                      26.Elizabeth Goudge, The Little White Horse #
                      27.Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows
                      28.Joyce Hansen, The Gift-giver #
                      29.Russell Hoban, The Mouse and his Child
                      30.Norton Jester, The Phantom Tollbooth
                      31.Eric P. Kelly, The Trumpeter of krakow
                      32.Garry Kilworth, The Electric Kid
                      33.Norma Klein, Confessions of an Only Child! #
                      34.Elaine L. Konigsburg, Fathe/s Arcane Dauqhter #
                      35.E.L. Konigsburg, The View fiom Saturday
                      36.Robert Lawson, Rabbit Hill
                      37.Lois Lenski, Strawberry Girl
                      38.Lois Lowry, Anastasia Krupnick #
                      39.Lois Lowry, See You Around. Sam
                      40.George MacDonald, The Princess and the Goblin
                      41.Margaret Mahy, The door in the air and other stories
                      42.Anna Myers, Spotting the Leopard
                      43.Emily Neville, lt's Like This. Cat
                      44.Robed C. O' Brien, Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
                      45.'Ed\\ /ard Osmond, A Valley Grows Up
                      46.Katherine Paterson, Bridge to Terabithia
                      47.Gary Paulsen, Hatchet
                      48.K. M. Peyton, Poor Badger
                      49.Arthur Ransome, Pigeon Post
                      50.Judlth Benet R,chadson, First Came in Owl
                      51.Cynthia Rylant, The Van Gogh Cafe
                      52.Dodie Smih, The Hundred and One Dalmatians
                      53.Doris Buchanan Smith, A Taste of Blackberries
                      54.Johanna Spyri, Heidi
                      55.Todd Strasser, Help! I'm trapped in my teacher's body
                      56.Zilpha Keatley Synder, The Witches of Worm
                      57.Stephanie Tolan, Pride of the Peacock
                      58.Stephanie rolan, Sophie and the Sidewalk Man
                      59.Rachel Vail, Daring to be Abigail
                      60.Hendrik Willem van Loon, The Story of Mankind
                      61.Jean Webster, Daddy Long Legs
                      62.Maia Wojciechowska, Shadow of a Bull
                      63.Don L. Wulffson, Amazing True Stories #

                      # - these books are not avallable at the Nalional Library and its branches, and may not be easlly ar/8ilable.

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                      • porcupine12tradeP Offline
                        porcupine12trade
                        last edited by

                        I just saw the list but 2009 on this website, by level and alphabetical order.


                        http://p5resilientenglish2009.wikispaces.com/GEP+ERP+LISTS+P4-6

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