|
Board of Directors
Members of the Baywood Learning Center Board have many years of involvement
with education, gifted children and business. Below is a list of biographies for each:
Grace Neufeld, Founder, Board President
Grace Neufeld
has been working in the nonprofit sector since 2001. She has been very involved
in community organizing and is currently Executive Director of a 501 (c) (3) public charity organization she founded. Ms. Neufeld serves on the Board of MEPS, is a former member of the Oakland Alameda
Home-school Learners and Family Village Home-school group and 4H. Ms. Neufeld
is married and has one daughter. The Neufeld family lives in Oakland.
Anne Beneventi, Vice President
Anne Beneventi trained for many years with a leading authority on gifted children, Annemarie Roeper.
As a practitioner at Roeper Consultation Service, she evaluated children for giftedness, and in 2002 was certified as a Master
Practitioner of Qualitative Assessment for Giftedness. Previously, she worked at Bay Area Gifted and Creative, a program for
families. Ms. Beneventi taught at Nueva School for the Gifted and was their drama
specialist. She was also the Director of Nueva’s summer program. As an educator, she co-founded Kaumeya International School in Alexandria, Egypt, and Roeper West School
for the gifted in Berkeley. She currently has a private practice consulting with
families of gifted children and conducting teacher training.
Susan Taite, Treasurer and Secretary
Susan Taite is a real estate broker and entrepreneur who operated a private home school for her
two children who are both now in college. Ms. Taite has an interest in education
and continues to support education and opportunities for youth. Susan lives in
Oakland with her family and runs a new produce store in Oakland called Taite Estate Farm and Produce.
Joan Wenters, Ph.D., Board Member
Dr. Wenters is a clinical psychologist who specializes in developmental and behavioral pediatrics
at Children’s Hospital in Oakland California. She specializes in the assessment,
diagnosis and treatment of ADHD, learning disabilities and other learning-related problems in children and adults. Dr. Wenters
overcame her own dyslexia to complete medical school and is dedicated to helping children who face similar struggles in school. Dr. Wenters also has a private practice in Albany, California.
John Yokela, Educator, Board Member
John Yokela has a California Lifetime Teaching Credential. He has been a tutor, a teacher and an
administrator in private schools for 20 years. Mr. Yokela has been trained in the Slingerland teacher-training program at
the Stellar Academy for Dyslexics. He holds a BA in Economics from UC Berkeley
and 85 units in special education from UC East Bay/Hayward. Prior to his career in education Mr. Yokela was in the insurance
business.
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
Personal Statement from the Founder
I pulled my daughter from
a very good public school after a series of headaches and stomach aches culminated in what appeared to be
a nervous break down. The school told me she had a nonspecific learning disability. I spent two years trying to
get her a diagnosis so I could know how to help her. One day I had the opportunity to speak with the renowned Dr. Linda
Silverman. I told her that my daughter had a learning disability and I was trying to find out what it was. After I described
it to her, Dr. Silverman told me that it sounded like my daughter was just gifted and probably did not have a learning disability.
She urged me to have her tested for IQ and check her vision at a special eye clinic. After much research and testing
we discovered her "problem" was that she is highly gifted and had a visual tracking problem.
As I have come to discover,
much of the gifted population is too sensitive for regular school, whether public or private. They are not liked by teachers
and are generally shunned by their peers. They are subjected to intense bullying, and inappropriate teaching styles, and they
are profoundly ill equipped to bear the stress of either.
I am on a mission to help
these children and their parents. I often get calls from parents who are in tears;
their children are in pain and they don't know how to get help. I hear from parents who have put their children on medications,
or into therapy - one child was suicidal at the age of 11! Almost all of this grief was caused by inappropriate educational
environments.
There is an appalling lack of awareness about gifted children's needs. Like most people, I once
held the mistaken belief that being gifted simply meant an ability to excel in school and get good grades. Now I realize,
being gifted is so much more complex. While it does mean an individual possesses a high degree of cognitive
ability, this does not necessarily translate into doing well at school. The "gift"
of high cognitive ability is almost always paired with OEs (overexcitabilities), intensities, and sensory integration issues.
The more highly gifted a child is, the more likely they will have these issues. Some gifted children have additional problems
such as hypotonia, vision problems, dyslexia and dysgraphia to name a few.
Teachers often mistakenly place bright,
compliant students into slots that should be filled by gifted children for which GATE programs are intended. Because of the
wide spread misconception of the true characteristics of high IQ, many low-income and minority gifted children are never properly
identified.
So basically, what we have is an unrecognized population of highly vulnerable,
special needs children who desperately need help, yet are woefully under served and are at risk of developing serious emotional
problems. Paradoxically, this high potential population may very well hold the answers to the most difficult problems the
world faces today.
The parents of these high maintenance kids have few support systems, yet the need to download
is great. One minute you are joyful about their extraordinary abilities and the next moment you are feeling sad and
helpless because they have no friends or because you realize they are too sensitive and vulnerable to go to summer camp, or
you can't even find socks they will wear. You are tired and stressed all the time, because frequently these children need
less sleep than you and their vulnerabilities, intensities and demands for learning keep you in a state of constant vigilance
and searching endlessly for appropriate educational opportunities. No one seems to sympathize with your angst unless they
also have such a child. After all, isn’t your child “gifted”?
While learning seems
to come naturally to gifted children in easy leaps and great bounds, they are in equal degrees exceedingly
difficult to teach. What I mean is, that as long as they are pursuing their own intellectual interest, they will
excel quickly and be self directed and motivated. However, directing a gifted child to learn something in which
they themselves have perceived no value is an impossible task, like the old saying "You can lead a horse to water, but
you can't make it drink!"
Forcing gifted children to spend their time doing anything that is
not, in their opinion, interesting or of value, usually backfires with unpleasant and unintended side effects
such as refusal to do the work, sudden stomache aches or headaches, complete loss of interest in learning, a battle of
wills, or even an emotional breakdown. Recovery from this trauma is slow and the time lost is indeed unfortunate.
And what have we truly gained if we have lost the trust and enthusiasm of the child?
Gifted children have their own agenda. You will get much farther
with them by understanding their agenda, supporting it, becoming their partner and easing the other things
you think are important around it. I have seen this work wonders. That is a "win, win" scenario. At Baywood
Learning Center we nurture and value the strengths of each child. At Baywood Learning Center, we take the time to learn
each child's agenda and work with teachers and parents to achieve a blending of goals that secures a buy-in from the child,
the parent and the educational advisors.
Baywood Learning Center
is a nonprofit, public charity, nondenominational education center. Our goals include:
- Building public awareness of gifted children
as an at-risk population
- Providing a Center where parents can find
resources and information
- Providing clinicians who understand and recognize
gifted issues, for testing and counseling purposes
- Providing a place where parents can build
community and find support
- Offering a variety of flexible educational
options that include homeschooling support, a la carte classes, part time and full time enrollment.
- Monthly Parent Support Groups, facilitated
by an educational consultant for families with gifted children
- Talks and seminars
- Social events for children and youth
- Training for teachers on identifying gifted
students
- Training on best methods to teach gifted
students (for teachers and homeschool parents)
We look forward to serving the needs of your family.
|
 |
|
|
|