The Highly Gifted Magnet (HGM) is part of the
Los Angeles Unified School District's Gifted and Talented program, designed for students of extraordinary intelligence who have unique intellectual, social and emotional abilities not nurtured by normal Gifted programs. The purpose is to cluster students of similar capabilities and needs with teachers who can challenge them with greater academic and intellectual rigor while meeting their social and emotional needs. These relatively small programs are housed on larger campuses. In a ''
Los Angeles Times
The ''Los Angeles Times'' (abbreviated as ''LA Times'') is a daily newspaper that started publishing in Los Angeles in 1881. Based in the LA-adjacent suburb of El Segundo since 2018, it is the sixth-largest newspaper by circulation in the ...
'' review that separated Magnet test scores from their host schools, HGMs consistently had the highest standardized test scores of all LAUSD schools.
Purposes of clustering
Despite their high scores, highly gifted children are especially vulnerable to so-called
risks of giftedness, such as social isolation, de-motivation, low self-esteem, and deliberate underachievement. Research has shown that highly gifted children are different not only because of higher IQ scores, but that there are cognitive differences in the ways that they think, learn, and relate to others. HGM schools bring together specialized teachers and compatible peers to give these children the challenge and support they need to develop to their maximum potential.
Eligibility
Eligibility to most HGMs is restricted to students who test at least in the 99.5th percentile on an
intellectual giftedness
Intellectual giftedness is an intellectual ability significantly higher than average. It is a characteristic of children, variously defined, that motivates differences in school programming. It is thought to persist as a trait into adult life, wit ...
assessment conducted by an
LAUSD
Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) is a public school district in Los Angeles, California, United States. It is the largest public school system in California in terms of number of students and the 2nd largest public school district i ...
psychologist (equivalent to IQ of 140+). Priority is given to students with 99.9%, officially "Highly Gifted" by LAUSD definition (IQ 145+). If there are openings remaining, students with 99.5%-99.8% (considered "Highly Gifted Applicable") can be admitted. Priority within the HG-Applicable group is not based on IQ score but rather on Magnet points. IQ testing and eligibility is determined by the LAUSD's GATE (Gifted and Talented) office. Parents may request an IQ test by contacting the GATE Coordinator at their LAUSD school, but would need to justify why they believe their children may be ''highly'' gifted, above normal levels of giftedness that can be identified by the OLSAT test (see next paragraph).
Beginning in 2011, all LAUSD second graders were given the
OLSAT, an "ability test" (not IQ test) which may qualify students for regular Gifted/High ''Ability'' programs but NOT for Highly ''Gifted'' programs. If parents believe the OLSAT does not adequately reflect their child's intellectual capacity or that they need the higher challenge and social clustering of a Highly Gifted program, they can still request an IQ/intellectual assessment by contacting the GATE Coordinator at their school.
Students must be currently enrolled in a LAUSD school to be eligible for LAUSD-administered testing. Students in LAUSD-affiliated charter schools are also eligible for testing but the school needs to pay LAUSD $75 per test because the school already received funds that would normally be allocated to LAUSD's GATE program. In all cases, families will need to justify why they believe their children may be ''highly'' gifted, above normal levels of giftedness that can be identified by the OLSAT test (see above paragraph).
Admission
Admission is usually through onlin
eCHOICESMagnet applications, which are open around October–November for admission the following September. Students must already have been tested and officially identified as eligible for their application to go through. Eligible students might also enroll during the school year if the HGM has openings. To do this, parents must contact the Magnet Coordinator at the HGM school.
Because these are unusual programs in their curriculum, pedagogy and community, HGM schools highly recommend touring their classes before applying.
School bus transportation is available for students who live a certain distance from campus. Many students commute from great distances to attend HGM schools.
Participating schools
Elementary:
San Jose HGM Mission Hills
Eagle Rock HGM Eagle Rock
Middle School:
Portola HGM Tarzana
High School:
North Hollywood HGM North Hollywood
Notable alumni
*
Andrei Cherny '93 (author, politician)
[Andrei's Story](_blank)
''Andrei Cherny for State Assembly''. 2001.
*
Lenora Claire (media personality)
*
Jonah Lehrer (author)
[Students' Summer Project: Building a Habitat Home](_blank)
''Los Angeles Times''. June 7, 1998.
*
Stephen Stromberg (Journalist)
*
Morgan Webb '96 (TV personality)
*
Lauren Woodland '95 (Emmy Award nominated actress)
*
Ernestine Fu
Ernestine Fu is an American venture capital investor and author.
Education
Fu graduated with her B.S., M.S., MBA, and Ph.D. from Stanford University.
Career
Fu started her investment career at Alsop Louie Partners in 2011. She closed her f ...
'09 (venture capitalist)
[Names You Need to Know: Ernestine Fu](_blank)
''Forbes''. 2011.
*
Michael Elowitz
Michael B. Elowitz is a biologist and professor of Biology, Bioengineering, and Applied Physics at the California Institute of Technology, and investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. In 2007 he was the recipient of the Genius gran ...
'85 (synthetic biologist)
References
External links
LAUSD Gifted/Talented Program
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Los Angeles Unified School District
High schools in the San Fernando Valley
High schools in Los Angeles
Public elementary schools in California
Public middle schools in California
Special schools in the United States
Magnet schools in California
Gifted education
High-IQ societies
Public high schools in California