who are you to judge me?
you're doing just that here, so why shouldn't anyone else?
Actually you started this - and Odeon went well past the normal lines in his post...
Normal lines? What normal lines?
I don't see any aspect of this argument that hasn't been done a dozen times already on here.
I think the answer to the rates-of-learning problem isn't to focus only on the gifted kids, any more than it is to focus on the poor students or attempt to force everyone to conform to some lowest-common-denominator "average".
Really, a lot of the problem lies with the erroneous idea that all students are created equal - and that they must be told they are, even when there is blatant evidence that they are not.
Once people can get that through their heads - that some people are better at some things than others, and that that's
okay - not hideously scarring to anyone's self-esteem - then the idea could be introduced that every student deserves the same amount of attention. Not the same coursework, not the same standards for grading, but the same amount of attention to their learning. Gifted kids are generally quite capable of reaching to the moon if they're just given a push in the right direction. Pointing them to some advanced material that actually challenges them, and then sending them off to investigate it on their own, would be far more help than most schools today offer. Then there would be plenty of time left to sit down with the weaker students and help them through the work they were struggling with.
And if anyone wants to question that dealing forthrightly with students' differing abilities wouldn't be detrimental to their self-esteem, I'd suggest that people of any level of ability are happiest when they're working in their flow zone (the sweet spot between too boring and too stressful). So gearing each student's work towards that place, to let them face challenges of their own level, and overcome them, and learn success, would do much more for their self-esteem than trying to force-fit them into the sugar-coated fallacy that everyone's abilities are equal.
I know the main problem with this is that nobody has the energy to treat kids that individually. All the force-fitting does save time and money. But I think the system could be much better than it is, if there were just a movement towards meritocracy to counterbalance the whole never-be-anything-but-positive self-esteem movement of the 1980's.