Talented And Gifted
Resources
General Information
General Information
ACCORDING TO OREGON LAW:
Talented and Gifted Education is “needs-based” instructional programming for which a student should be identified to receive services.
This population of students demonstrates exceptional performance when compared to applicable development or learning progressions with consideration given for variations in student’s opportunities to learn and to culturally relevant indicators of ability.
- Oregon TAG Law
PLEASE NOTE, TAG TESTING IS ONLY FOR STUDENTS CURRENTLY ENROLLED IN BEAVERTON SCHOOL DISTRICT SCHOOLS.
THE BEAVERTON SCHOOL DISTRICT DOES NOT ACCEPT PRIVATE TESTING.
As of Spring of 2023, the Oregon Department of Education requires every district to have a district TAG Plan. This is the Beaverton School District TAG Plan 2023.
Currently, because of a transition of personnel, a lot of the links do not work. If you need specific information, use the tag@beaverton.k12.or.us email address to ask.
If you think your child is gifted, or want to learn more about it,
check out the resources for parents on the ODE's TAG page,
the Oregon Association for Talented and Gifted
and the National Association for Gifted Children.
Here is a link to the BSD's Parent Information Sheet (english) for parents of newly identified TAG students.
You Know Your Child is Gifted When......Book by Judy Galbraith, M.A.
Bright Child vs. Gifted Learner

Referrals and Building TAG Facilitators
To refer Beaverton School District Students for TAG Evaluation, please fill out this google form. (The form is the same at this link or the button above.)
The submissions that include anecdotal evidence will be flagged for the building where the student attends.
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There is one or two people at each BSD school who have the role of TAG Facilitator. These people should be your first points of contact for TAG questions.
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Testing
Our primary, nationally-normed Cognitive instrument is the Naglieri General Ability Tests (the NGAT).
Students are universally tested--in their regular classrooms during classroom time--with one of the three NGATs in late elementary.
- 3rd graders are given the NGAT--Nonverbal
- 4th graders are given the NGAT--Verbal
- 5th graders are given the NGAT--Quantitative
Any score from these tests are perceived as quantitative data that is part of the TAG identification process.
For more details, please read through BSD TAG Identification.
Comparing NGAT and CogAT

Questions specific to Transition year 2025-26
- How can parents indicate their preferences for having their child tested with the CogAT in the 2025-26 school year?
- My child was previously identified as TAG. Does this assessment transition change my child's identification?
- My child took the CogAT during the 2024-25 school year. Can I request that they take it during the 2025-26 school year?
- Can I request that my student be given the CogAT AND the NGAT?
- My student scored high on the NGAT section that they took in class. When do they take the other sections?
- What date will my child take the section of the NGAT?
- Can I request that my student take a section of the NGAT in an earlier year than the district has scheduled?
- How can I prepare my child to be successful on the NGAT?
- What if my student is in 4th or 5th grade? Can they take the NGAT-nonverbal?
How can parents indicate their preferences for having their child tested with the CogAT in the 2025-26 school year?
Parents should have received information on how to request the CogAT in the earliest building- or principal-newsletters. If you did not, here is the link to the google form to opt your child out of the NGAT test for their age in order to request that your child be given the CogAT.
My child was previously identified as TAG. Does this assessment transition change my child's identification?
My child took the CogAT during the 2024-25 school year. Can I request that they take it during the 2025-26 school year?
Can I request that my student be given the CogAT AND the NGAT?
No. If you are asking us to give your student the CogAT (in the 2025-26 school year), then they will be given another task when their class takes the NGAT. By opting for the CogAT, you are opting them out of that specific NGAT test.
The CogAT test is the "full battery," meaning that it tests them on Verbal, Quantitative and Nonverbal skills. No further testing would be appropriate this year.
My student scored high on the NGAT section that they took in class. When do they take the other sections?
Each of the NGAT sections (Nonverbal, Verbal and Quantitative) all get their own valid score that can be used individually to support TAG identification.
According to the schedule, we will be testing students every year with a different section of the test, as a universal evaluative tool.
- 3rd graders will take the NGAT-Nonverbal in their classroom
- 4th graders will take the NGAT-Verbal in their classroom
- 5th graders will take the NGAT-Quantitative in their classroom
Every effort is made to test students who are absent on the day that their class is tested.
What date will my child take the section of the NGAT?
Can I request that my student take a section of the NGAT in an earlier year than the district has scheduled?
How can I prepare my child to be successful on the NGAT?
This information comes from the NGAT main website.
Some commercial test prep guides can inhibit student performance when taking tests since students who have been previously exposed to test items sometimes feel overly confident during the actual testing period. Having familiarity with the test items, students are more likely to rush through the test without taking the time to carefully consider what each item is asking. This familiarity greatly increases the likelihood of test error, and despite good intentions by parents, is often disadvantageous to students.
The overall goal of an ability test is to test students’ true intellectual ability, not their learned knowledge. Therefore, we discourage the use of prepared materials to practice test content.
Here are some tips to set up your child for success when taking an ability test:
- Explain that it is important for the student to look at the questions carefully. Even though the tests have time limits, students should take time to look at each question and all of the possible answers.
- Explain that the questions will increase in difficulty throughout the test.
- Have your child, especially young children, practice sitting still and attending to a task for twenty to thirty minutes at a time. Most often these tests are administered on a computer or tablet so practicing a task using technology can be helpful.
- Remind your child that while there are several choices, only one answer is correct. Some students may believe that there is more than one correct answer but, there is truly one best answer.
- Teach your child how to work through the process of elimination, as these tests involve multiple-choice questions.
- Make sure your child is physically comfortable and can advocate for themselves if they are not. Some things to think about: seating in the classroom, i.e., visual and auditory capabilities.
What if my student is in 4th or 5th grade? Can they take the NGAT-nonverbal?
Not universally. These students, who were in 3rd grade during school years 2023-24 or 2024-25, were given the CogAT as a universal screener in 3rd grade. And their CogAT score--if they took the full 9 subtests--counts as a qualifying score toward their Summa identification.
When a student who is currently in 4th or 5th grade (in school year 2025-26) is in 5th grade, if they are TAG identified and have one qualifying score, then they will be offered the NGAT-nonverbal.
Please note, TAG testing is only for students currently enrolled in Beaverton School District schools.
THE BEAVERTON SCHOOL DISTRICT DOES NOT ACCEPT PRIVATE TESTING.
Summa
Note: Summa is not an acronym, so it does not need to be written in all capital letters.
Summa is a BSD-created program, designed for a subset of TAG-identified 6th, 7th and 8th grade students. Summa is intended to provide a differentiated, challenging experience aligned to grade level learning targets that meets the cognitive, emotional, and social needs of eligible students.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Where is the Summa program located?
- What are the class sizes for Summa?
- What are the hours for the Summa program?
- Is the Summa program completely separate from the standard middle school?
- Is there a Summa curriculum?
- Are teachers trained in differentiation strategies to meet student needs?
- What are the homework expectations for students in the Summa program?
- How does Summa impact high school classes?
- When can I expect to be notified of my child's eligibility?
- How does Summa eligibility impact Option School opportunities?
- How can non-BSD enrolled students find out about their eligibility for Summa?
Where is the Summa program located?
- For eligible students from Cedar Park, Five Oaks and Meadow Park
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Elementary Feeders: Barnes, Beaver Acres, Bethany, Elmonica, McKinley, Oak Hills (west of Bethany Blvd), Ridgewood, Rock Creek, West TV, William Walker
- For eligible students from Stoller
- Elementary Feeders: Jacob Wismer, Sato, Springville
- For eligible students from Conestoga, Highland Park, Mountain View and Whitford
- Elementary Feeders: Aloha Huber Park, Chehalem, Cooper Mountain, Errol Hassell, Fir Grove, Greenway, Hazeldale, Hiteon, Kinnaman, McKay, Montclair, Nancy Ryles, Raleigh Hills, Raleigh Park, Scholls Heights, Sexton Mountain, Vose
- For eligible students from Tumwater
- Elementary Feeders: Bonny Slope, Cedar Mill, Findley, Oak Hills (east of Bethany Blvd), Terra Linda
Note: Students are enrolled in the specific school designated by their physical address. If you want to attend a different school's Summa program, you would have to be eligible for and work through the standard transferring process for any BSD student.
What are the class sizes for Summa?
What are the hours for the Summa program?
Is the Summa program completely separate from the standard middle school?
Is there a Summa curriculum?
No. Specific learning targets are established for all BSD courses by grade level, Summa classes follow these same learning targets. Summa is intended to provide a differentiated, challenging experience aligned to grade level learning targets that meets the cognitive, emotional, and social needs of eligible students.
Are teachers trained in differentiation strategies to meet student needs?
What are the homework expectations for students in the Summa program?
How does Summa impact high school classes?
There is no Summa program in high school.
Summa is a BSD-created program, designed for a subset of TAG-identified 6th, 7th and 8th grade students. Summa is intended to provide a differentiated, challenging experience aligned to grade level learning targets that meets the cognitive, emotional, and social needs of eligible students.
When can I expect to be notified of my child's eligibility?
How does Summa eligibility impact Option School opportunities?
Summa-eligible 5th graders are not asked to commit to Summa program before the Option School lottery. Like all students, Summa-eligible students may apply for one Learning Option. After the Option Schools decisions have been communicated, parents and students will need to make their choice between an Option School or Summa.
Students can confirm or commit to Summa and remain on an Option School waitlist. If they are offered a spot at an option school, that's when they have to decide between Summa and the Option school spot.
Summa eligibility remains valid until a student's 8th grade year starts. If students have turned down their spot in Summa, but change their mind for the next year, parents should contact the registrar at the building of the specific Summa program in the spring in order to reclaim a Summa spot for the fall.
How can non-BSD enrolled students find out about their eligibility for Summa?
Summa Eligibility for Fall 2026

Summa Eligibility for Fall 2027

Summa Eligibility for Fall 2028

FAQs specific to the Transition year 2025-26
- Why did you change to using the NGAT from the CogAT?
- My student has a very high CogAT score. Will that score be part of what is considered in their Summa eligibility when they get to 5th grade?
- Will all upper elementary Students take the NGAT tests?
- Can I request that my student take both the CogAT AND the NGAT?
- If I request that my student take the CogAT, will my student be given the full CogAT? (all 9 subtests)
- What if because of the timing of the transition, my child does not have the opportunity to take all three NGATs?
- How can I prepare my student to be successful on the NGAT?
Why did you change to using the NGAT from the CogAT?
My student has a very high CogAT score. Will that score be part of what is considered in their Summa eligibility when they get to 5th grade?
After school year 2025-26, we will no longer administer the CogAT.
For students who would enter Summa after the Fall of 2027, CogAT scores will no longer be a valid part of Summa eligibility.
[CogAT scores given in our district or another public school district may still be used as quantitative evidence in the body of evidence needed for a TAG identification.]
As it states on the eligibility charts, students looking to enter Summa in the Fall of 2026 are the last students who could meet Summa requirements with a single CogAT score in the 99th percentile. Students looking to enter Summa in the Fall of 2027 are the last students for whom a CogAT score in the 97th, 98th or 99th percentile can be used as fulfilling part of the eligibility requirements.
Will all upper elementary Students take the NGAT tests?
Yes. These tests will be given in class by their classroom teacher. All students will take them.
We will test all upper elementary students with a section of the NGAT.
However, if you request that we administer the CogAT to your child, you are opting them out of the NGAT section for this year and they will not take the NGAT. If you opt them out of the NGAT, please note that you will not be able to request in the future they be given the section of the NGAT that you opted them out of.
Can I request that my student take both the CogAT AND the NGAT?
If I request that my student take the CogAT, will my student be given the full CogAT? (all 9 subtests)
What if because of the timing of the transition, my child does not have the opportunity to take all three NGATs?
We are very aware of the different concerns for opportunities for excelling for all of the grade levels.
If after the regular NGAT-Quantitative testing, a 5th grader is TAG identified and has one qualifying score, and that student has not had the opportunity to take the NGAT-nonverbal, the district will offer those specific students the chance to take that test. This will be true for current 4th graders when they are in 5th grade as well. After that point, we will reevaluate.
How can I prepare my student to be successful on the NGAT?
This information comes from the NGAT main website.
Some commercial test prep guides can inhibit student performance when taking tests since students who have been previously exposed to test items sometimes feel overly confident during the actual testing period. Having familiarity with the test items, students are more likely to rush through the test without taking the time to carefully consider what each item is asking. This familiarity greatly increases the likelihood of test error, and despite good intentions by parents, is often disadvantageous to students.
The overall goal of an ability test is to test students’ true intellectual ability, not their learned knowledge. Therefore, we discourage the use of prepared materials to practice test content.
Here are some tips to set up your child for success when taking an ability test:
- Explain that it is important for the student to look at the questions carefully. Even though the tests have time limits, students should take time to look at each question and all of the possible answers.
- Explain that the questions will increase in difficulty throughout the test.
- Have your child, especially young children, practice sitting still and attending to a task for twenty to thirty minutes at a time. Most often these tests are administered on a computer or tablet so practicing a task using technology can be helpful.
- Remind your child that while there are several choices, only one answer is correct. Some students may believe that there is more than one correct answer but, there is truly one best answer.
- Teach your child how to work through the process of elimination, as these tests involve multiple-choice questions.
- Make sure your child is physically comfortable and can advocate for themselves if they are not. Some things to think about: seating in the classroom, i.e., visual and auditory capabilities.