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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, with various consequences studied in longitudinal studies of giftedness over the last century. These consequences sometimes include stigmatizing and social exclusion [1] [2] [3] [4]. There is no generally agreed definition of giftedness for either children or adults, but most school placement decisions and most longitudinal studies over the course of individual lives have followed people with IQs in the top 2.5 percent of the population—that is, IQs above 130. Definitions of giftedness also vary across cultures.

The various definitions of intellectual giftedness include either general high ability or specific abilities. For example, by some definitions, an intellectually gifted person may have a striking talent for mathematics without equally strong language skills. In particular, the relationship between artistic ability or musical ability and the high academic ability usually associated with high IQ scores is still being explored, with some authors referring to all of those forms of high ability as "giftedness", while other authors distinguish "giftedness" from "talent". There is still much controversy and much research on the topic of how adult performance unfolds from trait differences in childhood, and what educational and other supports best help the development of adult giftedness.

Identification edit

Overview edit

The identification of giftedness first emerged after the development of IQ tests for school placement.[5][6][7] It has since become an important issue for schools, as the instruction of gifted students often presents special challenges. During the twentieth century, gifted children were often classified via IQ tests; other identification procedures have been proposed but are only used in a minority of cases in most public schools in the English-speaking world.[8][9][10] Developing useful identification procedures for students who could benefit from a more challenging school curriculum is an ongoing problem in school administration.[11][12]

Because of the key role that gifted education programs in schools play in the identification of gifted individuals, both children and adults, it is worthwhile to examine how schools define the term "gifted".

Definitions edit

Since Lewis Terman in 1916, psychometricians and psychologists have sometimes equated giftedness with high IQ. Later researchers (e.g., Raymond Cattell, J. P. Guilford, and Louis Leon Thurstone) have argued that intellect cannot be expressed in such a unitary manner, and have suggested more multifaceted approaches to intelligence.

Research conducted in the 1980s and 1990s has provided data that supports notions of multiple components to intelligence. This is particularly evident in the reexamination of "giftedness" by Sternberg and Davidson in their collection of articles Conceptions of Giftedness (1986; second edition 2005). The many different conceptions of giftedness presented, although distinct, are interrelated in several ways. Most of the investigators define giftedness in terms of multiple qualities, not all of which are intellectual. IQ scores are often viewed as inadequate measures of giftedness.[13] Motivation, high self-concept, and creativity are key qualities in many of these broadened conceptions of giftedness.

Joseph Renzulli's (1978) "three ring" definition of giftedness is one frequently mentioned conceptualization of giftedness. Renzulli's definition, which defines gifted behaviors rather than gifted individuals, is composed of three components as follows: Gifted behavior consists of behaviors that reflect an interaction among three basic clusters of human traits—above average ability, high levels of task commitment, and high levels of creativity.[14] Individuals capable of developing gifted behavior are those possessing or capable of developing this composite set of traits and applying them to any potentially valuable area of human performance. Persons who manifest or are capable of developing an interaction among the three clusters require a wide variety of educational opportunities and services that are not ordinarily provided through regular instructional programs.

In Identifying Gifted Children: A Practical Guide, Susan K. Johnsen explains that gifted children all exhibit the potential for high performance in the areas included in the United States' federal definition of gifted and talented students:[15]

There is a federal government statutory definition of gifted and talented students in the United States.

The term "gifted and talented" when used in respect to students, children, or youth means students, children, or youth who give evidence of high-performance capability in areas such as intellectual, creative, artistic, or leadership capacity, or in specific academic fields, and who require services or activities not ordinarily provided by the school in order to fully develop such capabilities." (The Improving America’s Schools Act of 1994, P.L. 103–382, Title XIV, p. 388)

This definition has been adopted partially or completely by the majority of the individual states in the United States (which have the main responsibility for education policy as compared to the federal government). Most states have a definition similar to that used in the State of Texas:

"gifted and talented student" means a child or youth who performs at or shows the potential for performing at a remarkably high level of accomplishment when compared to others of the same age, experience, or environment, and who

  • exhibits high-performance capability in an intellectual, creative, or artistic area;
  • possesses an unusual capacity for leadership; or
  • excels in a specific academic field." (74th legislature of the State of Texas, Chapter 29, Subchapter D, Section 29.121)

The major characteristics of these definitions are (a) the diversity of areas in which performance may be exhibited (e.g., intellectual, creativity, artistic, leadership, academically), (b) the comparison with other groups (e.g., those in general education classrooms or of the same age, experience, or environment), and (c) the use of terms that imply a need for development of the gift (e.g., capability and potential).

Since the late 90s, the development of the brain of people with high IQ scores has been shown to be different to that of people with average IQ scores. A longitudinal study over 6 years has shown that high-IQ children have a thinner cerebral cortex when young, which then grows quickly and becomes significantly thicker than the other children's by the time they became teenagers.[16]

Identification methods edit

IQ scores can vary for the same person, so a person does not always belong to the same IQ score range each time the person is tested. (IQ score table data and pupil pseudonyms adapted from description of KABC-II norming study cited in Kaufman 2009.[17])
Pupil KABC-II WISC-III WJ-III
Asher 90 95 111
Brianna 125 110 105
Colin 100 93 101
Danica 116 127 118
Elpha 93 105 93
Fritz 106 105 105
Georgi 95 100 90
Hector 112 113 103
Imelda 104 96 97
Jose 101 99 86
Keoku 81 78 75
Leo 116 124 102

In psychology, identification of giftedness is usually based on IQ scores. The threshold of IQ = 130 is defined by statistical rarity. By convention, the 5% of scores who fall more than two standard deviations from the mean (or more accurately 1.96) are considered atypical.[18] In the case of intelligence, these 5% are partitioned to both sides of the range of scores, and include the 2.5% who score more than two standard deviations below the mean and the 2.5% who score more than two standard deviations above the mean.[19][20] Because the average of IQ is 100 and its standard deviation is 15, this rule places the threshold for intellectual disability at IQ = 70, and the symmetrical threshold for giftedness at IQ = 130 (rounded).[21][22][23] This arbitrary threshold is used by most psychologists[24] in most countries.[25]

While IQ testing has the advantage of providing a standardised basis for the diagnosis of giftedness, psychologists are expected to interpret IQ scores in the context of all available information: standardized intelligence tests ignore actual achievement and can fail to detect giftedness. For example, a specific learning disorder such as dyslexia or dyspraxia can easily decrease scores on intelligence tests and hide true intellectual ability.

In educational settings, many schools in the US use a variety of assessments of students' capability and potential when identifying gifted children.[15] These may include portfolios of student work, classroom observations, achievement tests, and IQ test scores. Most educational professionals accept that no single criterion can be used in isolation to accurately identify a gifted child.

One of the criteria used in identification may be an IQ test score. Until the late 1960s, when "giftedness" was defined solely based on an IQ score, a school district simply set an arbitrary score (usually in the 130 range) and a student either did or did not "make the cut". This method is still used by many school districts because it is simple and objective. Although a high IQ score is not the sole indicator of giftedness, usually if a student has a very high IQ, that is a significant indicator of high academic potential.[26] Because of this consideration, if a student scores highly on an IQ test, but performs at an average or below-average level academically, school officials may think that this issue warrants further investigation as an example of underachievement.[27] However, scholars of educational testing point out that a test-taker's scores on any two tests may vary, so a lower score on an achievement test than on an IQ test neither necessarily indicates that the test-taker is underachieving nor necessarily that the school curriculum is under-challenging.[28]

IQ classification varies from one publisher to another. IQ tests have poor reliability for determining test-takers' rank order at higher IQ levels,[29] and are perhaps only effective at determining whether a student is gifted rather than distinguishing among levels of giftedness. The Wechsler test manuals have standard score ceilings of 160. However, higher ceilings, including scores into the exceptionally and profoundly gifted range, exist for the WISC-IV [30] and WISC-V,[31] which were specifically normed on large samples of gifted children. Today, the Wechsler child and adult IQ tests are by far the most commonly used IQ tests in hospitals, schools, and private psychological practice.[32][33] Older versions of the Stanford-Binet test, now obsolete, and the Cattell IQ test purport to yield IQ scores of 180 or higher, but those scores are not comparable to scores on currently normed tests. The Stanford-Binet Third Revision (Form L-M) yields consistently higher numerical scores for the same test-taker than scores obtained on current tests. This has prompted some authors on identification of gifted children to promote the Stanford-Binet form L-M, which has long been obsolete,[34] as the only test with a sufficient ceiling to identify the exceptionally and profoundly gifted, despite the Stanford-Binet L-M never having been normed on a representative national sample.[35] Because the instrument is outdated, current results derived from the Stanford-Binet L-M generate inflated and inaccurate scores.[36] The IQ assessment of younger children remains debated.

While many people believe giftedness is a strictly quantitative difference, measurable by IQ tests, some authors on the "experience of being" have described giftedness as a fundamentally different way of perceiving the world, which in turn affects every experience had by the gifted individual. This view is doubted by some scholars who have closely studied gifted children longitudinally.[37]

Across cultures edit

Characteristics and attributes associated with giftedness varies across cultures. While intelligence is extremely important in Western and some other cultures, such an emphasis is not consistent throughout the world. For example, in Japan, there is more of a value placed on an individual's motivation and diligence. When Japanese students are given a task, they attribute success to factors like effort, whereas American students tend to attribute success to ability. Similarly, when Japanese students fail, they refer the failure to lack of effort. On the other hand, American students believe failure is due to a lack of ability.[38] There are conceptions in rural Kenya that identify four types of intelligence: initiative (paro), knowledge and skills (rieko), respect (luoro), and comprehension of how to handle real-life problems (winjo).[39] Chan cites the Chinese belief that aspects of giftedness are innate, but that people can become gifted through industriousness, perseverance, and learning.[38] Not all who are intellectually gifted display every noticeable characteristic.

There are many reasons gifted students who have various backgrounds are not as successful at Western intelligence/achievement tests:[39]

  • Not used to answering questions just for the purpose of showing knowledge – they must use their knowledge to respond to authentic problems.
  • May perform poorly on paper-and-pencil tasks in an artificial lab setting.
  • May perform poorly on a culturally biased test, especially if not their own.
  • Have test anxiety or suffer from stereotype threat.

Many traits that demonstrate intellectual giftedness are identified across a multitude of cultures, such as:[39]

  • Displaying advanced reasoning and creative thinking, generating ideas beyond the norm
  • Resourceful and adaptable
  • Strongly motivated to understand the world
  • Well developed vocabulary in native language
  • Learns concepts quickly, and builds/develops these concepts
  • Strong sense of justice and morality
  • Displays leadership skills in various ways, such as persuasion, taking initiative, and leading by example
  • Comprehending and using humor beyond their age

Developmental theory edit

Gifted children may develop asynchronously: their minds are often ahead of their physical growth, and specific cognitive and emotional functions are often developed differently (or to differing extents) at different stages of development. One frequently cited example of asynchronicity in early cognitive development is Albert Einstein, who was delayed in speech, but whose later fluency and accomplishments belied this initial delay. Psychologist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker theorized that, rather than viewing Einstein's (and other famously gifted late-talking individuals) adult accomplishments as existing distinct from, or in spite of, his early language deficits, and rather than viewing Einstein's lingual delay itself as a "disorder", it may be that Einstein's genius and his delay in speaking were developmentally intrinsic to one another.[40]

It has been said that gifted children may advance more quickly through stages established by post-Freudian developmentalists such as Jean Piaget.[41] Gifted individuals also experience the world differently, resulting in certain social and emotional issues.

Francoy Gagne's (2000) Differentiated Model of Giftedness and Talent (DMGT) is a developmental theory that distinguishes giftedness from talent, offering explanation on how outstanding natural abilities (gifts) develop into specific expert skills (talents).[42] According to DMGT theory, "one cannot become talented without first being gifted, or almost so".[43] There are six components that can interact in countless and unique ways that foster the process of moving from having natural abilities (giftedness) to systematically developed skills.

These components consist of the gift (G) itself, chance (C), environmental catalyst (EC), intrapersonal catalyst (IC), learning/practice (LP) and the outcome of talent (T).[43][citation needed] It is important to know that (C), (IC), and (EC) can facilitate but can also hinder the learning and training of becoming talented. The learning/practice is the moderator. It is through the interactions, both environmental and intrapersonal that influence the process of learning and practice along with/without chance that natural abilities are transformed into talents.

Multiple intelligences theory edit

Multiple intelligences has been associated with giftedness or overachievement of some developmental areas (Colangelo, 2003).[44] Multiple intelligences has been described as an attitude towards learning, instead of techniques or strategies (Cason, 2001).[45]

Howard Gardner proposed in Frames of Mind (Gardner 1983/1994) that intellectual giftedness may be present in areas other than the typical intellectual realm. The concept of Multiple Intelligences (MI) makes the field aware of additional potential strengths and proposes a variety of curricular methods. Gardner argued that there are eight intelligences, or different areas in which people assimilate or learn about the world around them: interpersonal, intrapersonal, bodily-kinesthetic, linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, naturalistic, and spatial-visual.[46]

The most common criticism of Gardner's MI theory is "the belief by scholars that each of the seven multiple intelligences is a cognitive style rather than a stand-alone construct". Others consider the theory not to be sufficiently empirical.[46] This perspective has also been criticized on the grounds that it is ad hoc: that Gardner is not expanding the definition of the word "intelligence", but rather denies the existence of intelligence as traditionally understood, and instead uses the word "intelligence" where other people have traditionally used words like "ability" and "aptitude".

Identification of gifted students with MI is a challenge since there is no simple test to determine the giftedness of MI. Assessing by observation is potentially most accurate, but potentially highly subjective. MI theory can be applied to not only gifted students, but it can be a lens through which all students can be assessed. This more global perspective may lead to more child-centered instruction and meet the needs of a greater number of children (Colangelo, 2003).[44]

Savantism edit

Savants are individuals who perform exceptionally in a single field of learning. More often, the terms savant and savantism describe people with a competence level in a single field of learning well beyond what is considered normal, even among the gifted community. Such individuals are alternatively termed idiot savants ─ a term that has been mentioned as early as the eighteenth century.[47] Autistic savantism refers to the exceptional abilities occasionally exhibited by people with autism or other pervasive developmental disorders. These abilities often come with below-age-level functioning in most, if not all areas of skilled performance.[48] The term was introduced in a 1978 article in Psychology Today describing this condition. It is also proposed that there are savants with normal or superior IQ such as those with Asperger syndrome, who demonstrate special abilities involving numbers, mathematics, mechanical, and spatial skills.[49]

Gifted minority students in the United States edit

The majority of students enrolled in gifted programs are White; Black and Hispanic students constitute a smaller proportion than their enrollment in school.[50] For example, statistics from 1993 indicate that in the U.S., Black students represented 16.2% of public school students, but only constituted 8.4% of students enrolled in gifted education programs. Similarly, while Hispanic students represented 9% of public school students, these students only represented 4.7% of those identified as gifted.[51] However, Asian students make up only 3.6% of the student body, yet constitute 14% in the gifted programs. Poor students are also underrepresented in gifted programs, even more than Black and Hispanic students are.[52]

Lack of equity and access in programs for the gifted has been acknowledged since the early twentieth century. In the 1920s, research by Lillian Steele Proctor pointed to systemic racism as a contributor to the relative invisibility of gifted African American youth.[53] In their 2004 study, "Addressing the Achievement Gap Between Minority and Nonminority Children by Increasing Access to Gifted Programs" Olszewski-Kubilius et al. write that minority students are "less likely to be nominated by teachers as potential candidates for gifted programs and, if nominated, are less likely to be selected for the program, particularly when such traditional measures as I.Q. and achievement tests are used for identification."[54]

This underrepresentation of such students in gifted programs is attributed to a multiplicity of factors including cultural bias of testing procedures, selective referrals and educator bias, and reliance on deficit-based paradigms.[55] To address the inequities in assessment procedures, researchers suggest the use of multiple tests and alternative methods of testing, such as performance-based assessment measures, oral-expressiveness measures as well as non-verbal ability assessments (such as Naglieri Nonverbal Abilities Tests (NNAT) or Raven's Matrix Analogies Tests).[56]

According to 2013-2014 data collected by the Office of Civil Rights of the Department of Education, White students have more opportunities and exposure to attending schools that offer gifted and talented education programs (GATE) than racial and ethnic minority students, specifically Black and Latino students. Data collected by the Office of Civil Rights department of the Department of Education also reveal that racial/ethnic minority students are underrepresented in gifted and talented education programs. Forty-nine percent of all students enrolled in schools that offer GATE programs are White. Whereas 42% of all students enrolled in schools that offer GATE programs are Latino and Black. Thus revealing that white people have more opportunities to be a part of a school that offers GATE programs. The issue is within these GATE programs 29% of the students are Latino and Black and 57% are White (U.S. Department of Education, 2016).[57][58]

Weinstein's (2002) suggests that some teachers recommend racial minority students – with the exception of Asian students – to special education and remedial classes more often than gifted and talented classes due to teacher expectancy biases placed on racial minority students. Teachers' expectations of their students' academic performance influence how students perceive themselves. If a teacher expects more success academically from specific students, those students are prone to displaying behavior and work ethic that will set them apart from others in a positive light. Whereas if a teacher only expects the bare minimum from his or her students, those students will merely do what is expected of them (Weinstein, 2002).[59]

Racial minority students who are perceived as being disadvantaged from their peers in regards to socioeconomic status tend to have less supportive relations with their teachers (Fitzpatrick, 2015).[60] Due to this lack of support, teachers do not expect these disadvantaged students to go above and beyond, therefore they are often overlooked when it is time for gifted and talented education program nominations. Research suggests that teacher expectancy bias can also be diminish by matching the racial demographics of students to that of teachers. Gershenson and colleagues (2016) found that non-Black teachers held low expectations of their black students specifically in relation to black male students and math. Whereas, Black teachers held high expectations to black male students in regards to math. This finding suggests that racial diversity in our educators is a positive step toward diminishing teacher expectancy bias.[61]

Weinstein and colleagues (1991)[62] aimed to change the low expectations attached to racial minority students of an urban high school that placed many Black and Latino students in remedial programs rather than college preparatory or honor classes. The study aimed to prepare these racial minority students for college-level academic work while attending high school. With positive teacher attitudes toward students and greater teacher self-efficacy, the students who were once on track to being recommended for remedial classes were performing at advanced academic levels after 2 years of intervention. They were also more heavily involved in leadership roles at their high school. This study supports the claim that teacher expectancy contributes to how a student sees him or herself in regards to achievements (Weinstein et al., 1991).[62]

Gifted students of color experience success when multicultural content is incorporated in the curriculum and furthermore when the curriculum itself is designed to be culturally and linguistically compatible.[50] A culturally diverse curriculum and instruction encourages gifted minority students to experience a sense of belonging and validation as scholars.[63] Furthermore, the educator's role in this process is significant as Lee et al. argue that "[t]eacher awareness and understanding of students' racial and cultural differences and their ability to incorporate multicultural perspectives into curricular content and instructional techniques may counter gifted minority students' discomfort in being one of the few minority students in gifted programs."[63]

Twice-exceptional edit

The term twice-exceptional was coined by James J. Gallagher to denote students who are both gifted and have disabilities.[64][65] In other words, twice-exceptional students are those who have two special needs. For instance, they might have gifted learning needs and a learning disability. Or, they may be a gifted learner and have a developmental disability, such as autism spectrum disorder.

People have known about twice-exceptional students for thirty years; however, identification and program strategies remain ambiguous.[66] These students represent a unique challenge for the educational system. Teachers and educators will need to make special accommodations for their learning deficits (such as remediation), yet adapt the curriculum to meet their advanced learning needs (for instance, through acceleration or enrichment).[66] Twice-exceptional students are considered to be at risk because they are hidden within the general population of their educational environment, and often viewed as either underachievers or average learners.[66][67]

Early identification and intervention is critical; however, giftedness in the twice-exceptional population is often identified later than in the average population as it is masked by the disability. The disabilities may include auditory processing weaknesses, sensory-motor integration issues, visual perceptual difficulties, spatial disorientation, dyslexia, and attention deficits. Recognition of learning difficulties among the gifted is made extremely difficult by virtue of their ability to compensate. Among the signs that the student may be twice-exceptional are apparent inconsistencies between abilities and results, deficits in short-term memory and attention, and negative behaviors such as being sarcastic, negative, or aggressive.[68]

A child prodigy who demonstrates qualities to be twice-exceptional may encounter additional difficulties. With insight at a young age, it is possible for them to be constantly aware of the risk of failure. This can be detrimental to their emotional state and academic achievement. If a child comprehends a subject well, but due to a developmental disorder receives poor grades in a subject, the child may have difficulty understanding why there is little success in that subject.[69]

Social and emotional issues edit

Isolation edit

Social isolation is a common trait in gifted individuals,[70] especially those with no social network of gifted peers. In order to gain popularity, gifted children will often try to hide their abilities to win social approval. Strategies include underachievement (discussed below) and the use of less sophisticated vocabulary when among same-age peers than when among family members or other trusted individuals.[71]

Some believe that the isolation experienced by gifted individuals is not caused by giftedness itself, but by society's response to giftedness and to the rarity of peers. Plucker and Levy have noted that, "in this culture, there appears to be a great pressure for people to be 'normal' with a considerable stigma associated with giftedness or talent."[72] To counteract this problem, gifted education professionals recommend creating a peer group based on common interests and abilities. The earlier this occurs, the more effective it is likely to be in preventing isolation.[73][74] Since the mid-1940s, several high-IQ societies of varying levels of selectivity have been established to help gifted individuals find intellectual peers, the oldest ones being Mensa and Intertel, established in 1946 and 1966 respectively.[75][76]

Some research suggests that mathematically gifted adolescents might have deficiencies in social valuation & mentalization,[77] while gifted adolescents in general may struggle with social adaptive learning,[78] but these conclusions are not supported by a large literature.

Perfectionism edit

Perfectionism, while considered to have many positive aspects, can be another issue for gifted individuals. It is encouraged by the fact that gifted individuals tend to be easily successful in much of what they do.

Healthy perfectionism refers to having high standards, a desire to achieve, conscientiousness, or high levels of responsibility. It is likely to be a virtue rather than a problem, even if gifted children may have difficulty with healthy perfectionism because they set standards that would be appropriate to their mental age (the level at which they think), but they cannot always meet them because they are bound to a younger body, or the social environment is restrictive. In such cases, outsiders may call some behavior perfectionism, while for the gifted this may simply be their standard. It has been said that perfectionism "becomes desirable when it stimulates the healthy pursuit of excellence."[79]

Some believe that perfectionism can be unhealthy. Unhealthy perfectionism stems from equating one's worth as a human being to one's achievements, and the simultaneous belief that any work less than perfect is unacceptable and will lead to criticism. Because perfection in the majority of human activities is neither desirable, nor possible, this cognitive distortion creates self-doubt, performance anxiety, and ultimately procrastination.

Unhealthy perfectionism can be triggered or further exacerbated by parents, siblings, or classmates with good or ill intentions. Parents are usually proud and will extensively praise the gifted child. On the other hand, siblings, peers, and school bullies may generally become jealous or envious of the intellectual ease of the gifted child and tease him or her about any minor imperfection in his or her work, strength, clothes, appearance, or behavior. Either approach—positive reinforcement from parents or negative reactions from siblings and peers for minor flaws—may push gifted children into equating their worth amongst their peers to their own abilities; thus, any imperfection could be viewed as a serious defect in themselves. This unhealthy perfectionism can be further exaggerated when the child counters bullying with the same tactics (i.e., insulting the less exceptional abilities of others), thus creating further disdain in himself for low or even average performance.

There are many theories that try to explain the correlation between perfectionism and giftedness. Perfectionism can become a problem as it frustrates and inhibits achievements.

D. E. Hamachek identified six specific, overlapping types of behavior associated with perfectionism. They are:[80]

Underachievement edit

Underachievement is a significant issue for gifted learners. There is often a stark gap between the abilities of the gifted individual and their actual accomplishments. Many gifted students will perform extremely well on standardized or reasoning tests, only to fail a class exam. It is estimated that half of gifted children do not perform in school at a level that is up to their abilities. Studies of high school dropouts in the United States estimate that between 18% and 25% of gifted students fail to graduate.[81] This disparity can result from various factors, such as loss of interest in classes that are too easy or negative social consequences of being perceived as smart.[82] Underachievement can also result from emotional or psychological factors, including depression, anxiety, perfectionism, low self esteem, or self-sabotage.[83][84]

An often-overlooked contributor to underachievement is undiagnosed learning differences. A gifted individual is less likely to be diagnosed with a learning disorder than a non-gifted classmate, as the gifted child can more readily compensate for their paucities. This masking effect is dealt with by understanding that a difference of one standard deviation between scores constitutes a learning disability even if all of the scores are above average. Assessments may also fail to identify some gifted students entirely because their underachieving behaviours keep them from being recognized as exceptional.[85]

Some gifted children may not be aware that they are gifted. One apparently effective way to attempt to reverse underachievement in gifted children includes educating teachers to provide enrichment projects based on students' strengths and interests without attracting negative attention from peers. Other methods include matching the underachiever with an achieving role model, correcting skill deficiencies and ensuring that proper assessments are in place to identify all learning issues with underachieving students.[86]

Depression edit

It has been thought in the past that there is a correlation between giftedness and depression.[citation needed] This is not an established research finding. As Reis and Renzulli mention,

With the exception of creatively gifted adolescents who are talented in writing or the visual arts, studies do not confirm that gifted individuals manifest significantly higher or lower rates or severity of depression than those for the general population. Gifted children's advanced cognitive abilities, social isolation, sensitivity, and uneven development may cause them to face some challenging social and emotional issues, but their problem-solving abilities, advanced social skills, moral reasoning, out-of-school interests, and satisfaction in achievement may help them to be more resilient.[82]

There is also no research that points to suicide attempt rates being higher in gifted adolescents than other adolescents.[87]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ {{https://www.sengifted.org/post/silverman-moralsensitivity
  2. ^ }{http://hj.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:807759/FULLTEXT02.pdf
  3. ^ {{https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/10510974.2013.851726
  4. ^ {{https://www.researchgate.net/publication/321756596_Children_Above_180_IQ_Stanford-Binet_A_Seventy-Five_Year_Follow-Up
  5. ^ Mackintosh, N. J. (2011). IQ and Human Intelligence (second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-19-958559-5. Retrieved 15 June 2014. The Binet scales, as they were known, formed the basis of modern IQ tests, just as mental age formed the basis for IQ scores. ... Although Galton was the first to try to measure individual differences in intelligence, it was Binet who appeared to have succeeded.
  6. ^ Urbina, Susana (2011). "Chapter 2: Tests of Intelligence". In Sternberg, Robert J.; Kaufman, Scott Barry (eds.). The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 20–38, 24–25. ISBN 9780521739115. The closest Binet came to defining intelligence was in an article he co-authored with Simon (1904) in which they equate intelligence with judgment or common sense, adding that 'to judge well, to comprehend well, to reason well' (p. 197) are the essential activities' of intelligence. Unlike Galton, Binet believed that intelligence consists of a complex set of abilities—such as attention, memory, and reasoning—that are fluid and shaped by environmental and cultural influences.
  7. ^ Pintner, Rudolph (1923). Intelligence Testing: Methods and Results. New York: Henry Holt. p. 196. Retrieved 14 July 2013. We do not mean to leave the impression that before the general use of mental tests no attention had ever been paid to children of remarkable ability. We find many references in literature to especially bright children, and the biographies of many great men bear record of their superior performances in childhood. Nevertheless, such references are scattered and leave the impression of something peculiar and very uncommon. Superior intelligence has certainly not been recognized as a vital educational problem. It is becoming to be so regarded today, because of the scientific study of such children by means of intelligence tests.
  8. ^ Davis, Gary A.; Rimm, Sylvia B.; Siegle, Del (April 2010). Education of the Gifted and Talented. Pearson Education, Limited. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-13-505607-3. In her article "The Case Against Formal Identification," Davidson (1986) expressed strong frustration with formal testing, rating, and nomination procedures, including the use of point systems and cutoffs. Davidson noted that a student with a tested IQ of 110 may show greater giftedness in the sense of originality and thought-provoking ideas and answers than a student with a tested IQ of 140—who will be selected for the program. Even creativity tests do not measure every aspect of a child's creativeness, noted Davidson; and peer, parent, and teacher nominations can be biased in favor of popular, English-speaking, middle-class students.
  9. ^ Callahan, Carolyn M.; Hertberg-Davis, Holly L. (21 August 2012). "Chapter 32: Heterogeneity among the Gifted". In Callahan, Carolyn M.; Hertberg-Davis, Holly L. (eds.). Fundamentals of Gifted Education: Considering Multiple Perspectives. Routledge. p. 330. ISBN 978-1-136-94643-1. While there are differences among subgroups of students identified as gifted, there are also differences among students in the general population whose talents are never addressed because we fail even to recognize that talent. Considerable attention has been directed at the under-representation of these students in programs for the gifted. Among the groups most often recognized as deserving of special attention for identification, talent development, and subsequent adjustments in curriculum are African American, Latino/Latina, and twice-exceptional learners.
  10. ^ McIntosh, David E.; Dixon, Felicia A.; Pierson, Eric E. (2012). "Chapter 25: Use of Intelligence Tests in the Identification of Giftedness". In Flanagan, Dawn P.; Harrison, Patti L. (eds.). Contemporary Intellectual Assessment: Theories, tests, and issues (Third ed.). New York: Guilford Press. pp. 623–42, 636. ISBN 978-1-60918-995-2. ERIC ED530599. The use of a single cognitive test composite score as the primary criterion for determining giftedness is highly common within schools. In the past, the WISC-R (Wechsler, 1974) and the fourth edition of the Stanford-Binet (SB-IV; Thorndike, Hagen, & Sattler, 1986) were the most commonly used cognitive measures in the schools (Coleman & Cross, 2005).
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  12. ^ McIntosh, David E.; Dixon, Felicia A.; Pierson, Eric E. (2012). "Chapter 25: Use of Intelligence Tests in the Identification of Giftedness". In Flanagan, Dawn P.; Harrison, Patti L. (eds.). Contemporary Intellectual Assessment: Theories, tests, and issues (Third ed.). New York: Guilford Press. pp. 623–42, 636. ISBN 978-1-60918-995-2. ERIC ED530599. Although many would consider screening to be the crucial point in the identification process, predictive validity must be established between the screening procedure and the intellectual measure(s) used to ensure the accuracy and utility of the identification process.
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External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of gifted at Wiktionary

intellectual, giftedness, gifted, redirects, here, other, uses, gifted, disambiguation, intellectual, ability, significantly, higher, than, average, characteristic, children, variously, defined, that, motivates, differences, school, programming, thought, persi. Gifted redirects here For other uses see Gifted disambiguation 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 with various consequences studied in longitudinal studies of giftedness over the last century These consequences sometimes include stigmatizing and social exclusion 1 2 3 4 There is no generally agreed definition of giftedness for either children or adults but most school placement decisions and most longitudinal studies over the course of individual lives have followed people with IQs in the top 2 5 percent of the population that is IQs above 130 Definitions of giftedness also vary across cultures The various definitions of intellectual giftedness include either general high ability or specific abilities For example by some definitions an intellectually gifted person may have a striking talent for mathematics without equally strong language skills In particular the relationship between artistic ability or musical ability and the high academic ability usually associated with high IQ scores is still being explored with some authors referring to all of those forms of high ability as giftedness while other authors distinguish giftedness from talent There is still much controversy and much research on the topic of how adult performance unfolds from trait differences in childhood and what educational and other supports best help the development of adult giftedness Contents 1 Identification 1 1 Overview 1 2 Definitions 1 3 Identification methods 1 4 Across cultures 2 Developmental theory 3 Multiple intelligences theory 4 Savantism 5 Gifted minority students in the United States 6 Twice exceptional 7 Social and emotional issues 7 1 Isolation 7 2 Perfectionism 7 3 Underachievement 7 4 Depression 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksIdentification editOverview edit The identification of giftedness first emerged after the development of IQ tests for school placement 5 6 7 It has since become an important issue for schools as the instruction of gifted students often presents special challenges During the twentieth century gifted children were often classified via IQ tests other identification procedures have been proposed but are only used in a minority of cases in most public schools in the English speaking world 8 9 10 Developing useful identification procedures for students who could benefit from a more challenging school curriculum is an ongoing problem in school administration 11 12 Because of the key role that gifted education programs in schools play in the identification of gifted individuals both children and adults it is worthwhile to examine how schools define the term gifted Definitions edit Since Lewis Terman in 1916 psychometricians and psychologists have sometimes equated giftedness with high IQ Later researchers e g Raymond Cattell J P Guilford and Louis Leon Thurstone have argued that intellect cannot be expressed in such a unitary manner and have suggested more multifaceted approaches to intelligence Research conducted in the 1980s and 1990s has provided data that supports notions of multiple components to intelligence This is particularly evident in the reexamination of giftedness by Sternberg and Davidson in their collection of articles Conceptions of Giftedness 1986 second edition 2005 The many different conceptions of giftedness presented although distinct are interrelated in several ways Most of the investigators define giftedness in terms of multiple qualities not all of which are intellectual IQ scores are often viewed as inadequate measures of giftedness 13 Motivation high self concept and creativity are key qualities in many of these broadened conceptions of giftedness Joseph Renzulli s 1978 three ring definition of giftedness is one frequently mentioned conceptualization of giftedness Renzulli s definition which defines gifted behaviors rather than gifted individuals is composed of three components as follows Gifted behavior consists of behaviors that reflect an interaction among three basic clusters of human traits above average ability high levels of task commitment and high levels of creativity 14 Individuals capable of developing gifted behavior are those possessing or capable of developing this composite set of traits and applying them to any potentially valuable area of human performance Persons who manifest or are capable of developing an interaction among the three clusters require a wide variety of educational opportunities and services that are not ordinarily provided through regular instructional programs In Identifying Gifted Children A Practical Guide Susan K Johnsen explains that gifted children all exhibit the potential for high performance in the areas included in the United States federal definition of gifted and talented students 15 There is a federal government statutory definition of gifted and talented students in the United States The term gifted and talented when used in respect to students children or youth means students children or youth who give evidence of high performance capability in areas such as intellectual creative artistic or leadership capacity or in specific academic fields and who require services or activities not ordinarily provided by the school in order to fully develop such capabilities The Improving America s Schools Act of 1994 P L 103 382 Title XIV p 388 This definition has been adopted partially or completely by the majority of the individual states in the United States which have the main responsibility for education policy as compared to the federal government Most states have a definition similar to that used in the State of Texas gifted and talented student means a child or youth who performs at or shows the potential for performing at a remarkably high level of accomplishment when compared to others of the same age experience or environment and whoexhibits high performance capability in an intellectual creative or artistic area possesses an unusual capacity for leadership or excels in a specific academic field 74th legislature of the State of Texas Chapter 29 Subchapter D Section 29 121 The major characteristics of these definitions are a the diversity of areas in which performance may be exhibited e g intellectual creativity artistic leadership academically b the comparison with other groups e g those in general education classrooms or of the same age experience or environment and c the use of terms that imply a need for development of the gift e g capability and potential Since the late 90s the development of the brain of people with high IQ scores has been shown to be different to that of people with average IQ scores A longitudinal study over 6 years has shown that high IQ children have a thinner cerebral cortex when young which then grows quickly and becomes significantly thicker than the other children s by the time they became teenagers 16 Identification methods edit IQ scores can vary for the same person so a person does not always belong to the same IQ score range each time the person is tested IQ score table data and pupil pseudonyms adapted from description of KABC II norming study cited in Kaufman 2009 17 Pupil KABC II WISC III WJ IIIAsher 90 95 111Brianna 125 110 105Colin 100 93 101Danica 116 127 118Elpha 93 105 93Fritz 106 105 105Georgi 95 100 90Hector 112 113 103Imelda 104 96 97Jose 101 99 86Keoku 81 78 75Leo 116 124 102In psychology identification of giftedness is usually based on IQ scores The threshold of IQ 130 is defined by statistical rarity By convention the 5 of scores who fall more than two standard deviations from the mean or more accurately 1 96 are considered atypical 18 In the case of intelligence these 5 are partitioned to both sides of the range of scores and include the 2 5 who score more than two standard deviations below the mean and the 2 5 who score more than two standard deviations above the mean 19 20 Because the average of IQ is 100 and its standard deviation is 15 this rule places the threshold for intellectual disability at IQ 70 and the symmetrical threshold for giftedness at IQ 130 rounded 21 22 23 This arbitrary threshold is used by most psychologists 24 in most countries 25 While IQ testing has the advantage of providing a standardised basis for the diagnosis of giftedness psychologists are expected to interpret IQ scores in the context of all available information standardized intelligence tests ignore actual achievement and can fail to detect giftedness For example a specific learning disorder such as dyslexia or dyspraxia can easily decrease scores on intelligence tests and hide true intellectual ability In educational settings many schools in the US use a variety of assessments of students capability and potential when identifying gifted children 15 These may include portfolios of student work classroom observations achievement tests and IQ test scores Most educational professionals accept that no single criterion can be used in isolation to accurately identify a gifted child One of the criteria used in identification may be an IQ test score Until the late 1960s when giftedness was defined solely based on an IQ score a school district simply set an arbitrary score usually in the 130 range and a student either did or did not make the cut This method is still used by many school districts because it is simple and objective Although a high IQ score is not the sole indicator of giftedness usually if a student has a very high IQ that is a significant indicator of high academic potential 26 Because of this consideration if a student scores highly on an IQ test but performs at an average or below average level academically school officials may think that this issue warrants further investigation as an example of underachievement 27 However scholars of educational testing point out that a test taker s scores on any two tests may vary so a lower score on an achievement test than on an IQ test neither necessarily indicates that the test taker is underachieving nor necessarily that the school curriculum is under challenging 28 IQ classification varies from one publisher to another IQ tests have poor reliability for determining test takers rank order at higher IQ levels 29 and are perhaps only effective at determining whether a student is gifted rather than distinguishing among levels of giftedness The Wechsler test manuals have standard score ceilings of 160 However higher ceilings including scores into the exceptionally and profoundly gifted range exist for the WISC IV 30 and WISC V 31 which were specifically normed on large samples of gifted children Today the Wechsler child and adult IQ tests are by far the most commonly used IQ tests in hospitals schools and private psychological practice 32 33 Older versions of the Stanford Binet test now obsolete and the Cattell IQ test purport to yield IQ scores of 180 or higher but those scores are not comparable to scores on currently normed tests The Stanford Binet Third Revision Form L M yields consistently higher numerical scores for the same test taker than scores obtained on current tests This has prompted some authors on identification of gifted children to promote the Stanford Binet form L M which has long been obsolete 34 as the only test with a sufficient ceiling to identify the exceptionally and profoundly gifted despite the Stanford Binet L M never having been normed on a representative national sample 35 Because the instrument is outdated current results derived from the Stanford Binet L M generate inflated and inaccurate scores 36 The IQ assessment of younger children remains debated While many people believe giftedness is a strictly quantitative difference measurable by IQ tests some authors on the experience of being have described giftedness as a fundamentally different way of perceiving the world which in turn affects every experience had by the gifted individual This view is doubted by some scholars who have closely studied gifted children longitudinally 37 Across cultures edit Characteristics and attributes associated with giftedness varies across cultures While intelligence is extremely important in Western and some other cultures such an emphasis is not consistent throughout the world For example in Japan there is more of a value placed on an individual s motivation and diligence When Japanese students are given a task they attribute success to factors like effort whereas American students tend to attribute success to ability Similarly when Japanese students fail they refer the failure to lack of effort On the other hand American students believe failure is due to a lack of ability 38 There are conceptions in rural Kenya that identify four types of intelligence initiative paro knowledge and skills rieko respect luoro and comprehension of how to handle real life problems winjo 39 Chan cites the Chinese belief that aspects of giftedness are innate but that people can become gifted through industriousness perseverance and learning 38 Not all who are intellectually gifted display every noticeable characteristic There are many reasons gifted students who have various backgrounds are not as successful at Western intelligence achievement tests 39 Not used to answering questions just for the purpose of showing knowledge they must use their knowledge to respond to authentic problems May perform poorly on paper and pencil tasks in an artificial lab setting May perform poorly on a culturally biased test especially if not their own Have test anxiety or suffer from stereotype threat Many traits that demonstrate intellectual giftedness are identified across a multitude of cultures such as 39 Displaying advanced reasoning and creative thinking generating ideas beyond the norm Resourceful and adaptable Strongly motivated to understand the world Well developed vocabulary in native language Learns concepts quickly and builds develops these concepts Strong sense of justice and morality Displays leadership skills in various ways such as persuasion taking initiative and leading by example Comprehending and using humor beyond their ageDevelopmental theory editGifted children may develop asynchronously their minds are often ahead of their physical growth and specific cognitive and emotional functions are often developed differently or to differing extents at different stages of development One frequently cited example of asynchronicity in early cognitive development is Albert Einstein who was delayed in speech but whose later fluency and accomplishments belied this initial delay Psychologist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker theorized that rather than viewing Einstein s and other famously gifted late talking individuals adult accomplishments as existing distinct from or in spite of his early language deficits and rather than viewing Einstein s lingual delay itself as a disorder it may be that Einstein s genius and his delay in speaking were developmentally intrinsic to one another 40 It has been said that gifted children may advance more quickly through stages established by post Freudian developmentalists such as Jean Piaget 41 Gifted individuals also experience the world differently resulting in certain social and emotional issues Francoy Gagne s 2000 Differentiated Model of Giftedness and Talent DMGT is a developmental theory that distinguishes giftedness from talent offering explanation on how outstanding natural abilities gifts develop into specific expert skills talents 42 According to DMGT theory one cannot become talented without first being gifted or almost so 43 There are six components that can interact in countless and unique ways that foster the process of moving from having natural abilities giftedness to systematically developed skills These components consist of the gift G itself chance C environmental catalyst EC intrapersonal catalyst IC learning practice LP and the outcome of talent T 43 citation needed It is important to know that C IC and EC can facilitate but can also hinder the learning and training of becoming talented The learning practice is the moderator It is through the interactions both environmental and intrapersonal that influence the process of learning and practice along with without chance that natural abilities are transformed into talents Multiple intelligences theory editMain article Theory of multiple intelligences Multiple intelligences has been associated with giftedness or overachievement of some developmental areas Colangelo 2003 44 Multiple intelligences has been described as an attitude towards learning instead of techniques or strategies Cason 2001 45 Howard Gardner proposed in Frames of Mind Gardner 1983 1994 that intellectual giftedness may be present in areas other than the typical intellectual realm The concept of Multiple Intelligences MI makes the field aware of additional potential strengths and proposes a variety of curricular methods Gardner argued that there are eight intelligences or different areas in which people assimilate or learn about the world around them interpersonal intrapersonal bodily kinesthetic linguistic logical mathematical musical naturalistic and spatial visual 46 The most common criticism of Gardner s MI theory is the belief by scholars that each of the seven multiple intelligences is a cognitive style rather than a stand alone construct Others consider the theory not to be sufficiently empirical 46 This perspective has also been criticized on the grounds that it is ad hoc that Gardner is not expanding the definition of the word intelligence but rather denies the existence of intelligence as traditionally understood and instead uses the word intelligence where other people have traditionally used words like ability and aptitude Identification of gifted students with MI is a challenge since there is no simple test to determine the giftedness of MI Assessing by observation is potentially most accurate but potentially highly subjective MI theory can be applied to not only gifted students but it can be a lens through which all students can be assessed This more global perspective may lead to more child centered instruction and meet the needs of a greater number of children Colangelo 2003 44 Savantism editSavants are individuals who perform exceptionally in a single field of learning More often the terms savant and savantism describe people with a competence level in a single field of learning well beyond what is considered normal even among the gifted community Such individuals are alternatively termed idiot savants a term that has been mentioned as early as the eighteenth century 47 Autistic savantism refers to the exceptional abilities occasionally exhibited by people with autism or other pervasive developmental disorders These abilities often come with below age level functioning in most if not all areas of skilled performance 48 The term was introduced in a 1978 article in Psychology Today describing this condition It is also proposed that there are savants with normal or superior IQ such as those with Asperger syndrome who demonstrate special abilities involving numbers mathematics mechanical and spatial skills 49 Gifted minority students in the United States editThe majority of students enrolled in gifted programs are White Black and Hispanic students constitute a smaller proportion than their enrollment in school 50 For example statistics from 1993 indicate that in the U S Black students represented 16 2 of public school students but only constituted 8 4 of students enrolled in gifted education programs Similarly while Hispanic students represented 9 of public school students these students only represented 4 7 of those identified as gifted 51 However Asian students make up only 3 6 of the student body yet constitute 14 in the gifted programs Poor students are also underrepresented in gifted programs even more than Black and Hispanic students are 52 Lack of equity and access in programs for the gifted has been acknowledged since the early twentieth century In the 1920s research by Lillian Steele Proctor pointed to systemic racism as a contributor to the relative invisibility of gifted African American youth 53 In their 2004 study Addressing the Achievement Gap Between Minority and Nonminority Children by Increasing Access to Gifted Programs Olszewski Kubilius et al write that minority students are less likely to be nominated by teachers as potential candidates for gifted programs and if nominated are less likely to be selected for the program particularly when such traditional measures as I Q and achievement tests are used for identification 54 This underrepresentation of such students in gifted programs is attributed to a multiplicity of factors including cultural bias of testing procedures selective referrals and educator bias and reliance on deficit based paradigms 55 To address the inequities in assessment procedures researchers suggest the use of multiple tests and alternative methods of testing such as performance based assessment measures oral expressiveness measures as well as non verbal ability assessments such as Naglieri Nonverbal Abilities Tests NNAT or Raven s Matrix Analogies Tests 56 According to 2013 2014 data collected by the Office of Civil Rights of the Department of Education White students have more opportunities and exposure to attending schools that offer gifted and talented education programs GATE than racial and ethnic minority students specifically Black and Latino students Data collected by the Office of Civil Rights department of the Department of Education also reveal that racial ethnic minority students are underrepresented in gifted and talented education programs Forty nine percent of all students enrolled in schools that offer GATE programs are White Whereas 42 of all students enrolled in schools that offer GATE programs are Latino and Black Thus revealing that white people have more opportunities to be a part of a school that offers GATE programs The issue is within these GATE programs 29 of the students are Latino and Black and 57 are White U S Department of Education 2016 57 58 Weinstein s 2002 suggests that some teachers recommend racial minority students with the exception of Asian students to special education and remedial classes more often than gifted and talented classes due to teacher expectancy biases placed on racial minority students Teachers expectations of their students academic performance influence how students perceive themselves If a teacher expects more success academically from specific students those students are prone to displaying behavior and work ethic that will set them apart from others in a positive light Whereas if a teacher only expects the bare minimum from his or her students those students will merely do what is expected of them Weinstein 2002 59 Racial minority students who are perceived as being disadvantaged from their peers in regards to socioeconomic status tend to have less supportive relations with their teachers Fitzpatrick 2015 60 Due to this lack of support teachers do not expect these disadvantaged students to go above and beyond therefore they are often overlooked when it is time for gifted and talented education program nominations Research suggests that teacher expectancy bias can also be diminish by matching the racial demographics of students to that of teachers Gershenson and colleagues 2016 found that non Black teachers held low expectations of their black students specifically in relation to black male students and math Whereas Black teachers held high expectations to black male students in regards to math This finding suggests that racial diversity in our educators is a positive step toward diminishing teacher expectancy bias 61 Weinstein and colleagues 1991 62 aimed to change the low expectations attached to racial minority students of an urban high school that placed many Black and Latino students in remedial programs rather than college preparatory or honor classes The study aimed to prepare these racial minority students for college level academic work while attending high school With positive teacher attitudes toward students and greater teacher self efficacy the students who were once on track to being recommended for remedial classes were performing at advanced academic levels after 2 years of intervention They were also more heavily involved in leadership roles at their high school This study supports the claim that teacher expectancy contributes to how a student sees him or herself in regards to achievements Weinstein et al 1991 62 Gifted students of color experience success when multicultural content is incorporated in the curriculum and furthermore when the curriculum itself is designed to be culturally and linguistically compatible 50 A culturally diverse curriculum and instruction encourages gifted minority students to experience a sense of belonging and validation as scholars 63 Furthermore the educator s role in this process is significant as Lee et al argue that t eacher awareness and understanding of students racial and cultural differences and their ability to incorporate multicultural perspectives into curricular content and instructional techniques may counter gifted minority students discomfort in being one of the few minority students in gifted programs 63 Twice exceptional editMain article Twice exceptional The term twice exceptional was coined by James J Gallagher to denote students who are both gifted and have disabilities 64 65 In other words twice exceptional students are those who have two special needs For instance they might have gifted learning needs and a learning disability Or they may be a gifted learner and have a developmental disability such as autism spectrum disorder People have known about twice exceptional students for thirty years however identification and program strategies remain ambiguous 66 These students represent a unique challenge for the educational system Teachers and educators will need to make special accommodations for their learning deficits such as remediation yet adapt the curriculum to meet their advanced learning needs for instance through acceleration or enrichment 66 Twice exceptional students are considered to be at risk because they are hidden within the general population of their educational environment and often viewed as either underachievers or average learners 66 67 Early identification and intervention is critical however giftedness in the twice exceptional population is often identified later than in the average population as it is masked by the disability The disabilities may include auditory processing weaknesses sensory motor integration issues visual perceptual difficulties spatial disorientation dyslexia and attention deficits Recognition of learning difficulties among the gifted is made extremely difficult by virtue of their ability to compensate Among the signs that the student may be twice exceptional are apparent inconsistencies between abilities and results deficits in short term memory and attention and negative behaviors such as being sarcastic negative or aggressive 68 A child prodigy who demonstrates qualities to be twice exceptional may encounter additional difficulties With insight at a young age it is possible for them to be constantly aware of the risk of failure This can be detrimental to their emotional state and academic achievement If a child comprehends a subject well but due to a developmental disorder receives poor grades in a subject the child may have difficulty understanding why there is little success in that subject 69 Social and emotional issues editIsolation edit Social isolation is a common trait in gifted individuals 70 especially those with no social network of gifted peers In order to gain popularity gifted children will often try to hide their abilities to win social approval Strategies include underachievement discussed below and the use of less sophisticated vocabulary when among same age peers than when among family members or other trusted individuals 71 Some believe that the isolation experienced by gifted individuals is not caused by giftedness itself but by society s response to giftedness and to the rarity of peers Plucker and Levy have noted that in this culture there appears to be a great pressure for people to be normal with a considerable stigma associated with giftedness or talent 72 To counteract this problem gifted education professionals recommend creating a peer group based on common interests and abilities The earlier this occurs the more effective it is likely to be in preventing isolation 73 74 Since the mid 1940s several high IQ societies of varying levels of selectivity have been established to help gifted individuals find intellectual peers the oldest ones being Mensa and Intertel established in 1946 and 1966 respectively 75 76 Some research suggests that mathematically gifted adolescents might have deficiencies in social valuation amp mentalization 77 while gifted adolescents in general may struggle with social adaptive learning 78 but these conclusions are not supported by a large literature Perfectionism edit Perfectionism while considered to have many positive aspects can be another issue for gifted individuals It is encouraged by the fact that gifted individuals tend to be easily successful in much of what they do Healthy perfectionism refers to having high standards a desire to achieve conscientiousness or high levels of responsibility It is likely to be a virtue rather than a problem even if gifted children may have difficulty with healthy perfectionism because they set standards that would be appropriate to their mental age the level at which they think but they cannot always meet them because they are bound to a younger body or the social environment is restrictive In such cases outsiders may call some behavior perfectionism while for the gifted this may simply be their standard It has been said that perfectionism becomes desirable when it stimulates the healthy pursuit of excellence 79 Some believe that perfectionism can be unhealthy Unhealthy perfectionism stems from equating one s worth as a human being to one s achievements and the simultaneous belief that any work less than perfect is unacceptable and will lead to criticism Because perfection in the majority of human activities is neither desirable nor possible this cognitive distortion creates self doubt performance anxiety and ultimately procrastination Unhealthy perfectionism can be triggered or further exacerbated by parents siblings or classmates with good or ill intentions Parents are usually proud and will extensively praise the gifted child On the other hand siblings peers and school bullies may generally become jealous or envious of the intellectual ease of the gifted child and tease him or her about any minor imperfection in his or her work strength clothes appearance or behavior Either approach positive reinforcement from parents or negative reactions from siblings and peers for minor flaws may push gifted children into equating their worth amongst their peers to their own abilities thus any imperfection could be viewed as a serious defect in themselves This unhealthy perfectionism can be further exaggerated when the child counters bullying with the same tactics i e insulting the less exceptional abilities of others thus creating further disdain in himself for low or even average performance There are many theories that try to explain the correlation between perfectionism and giftedness Perfectionism can become a problem as it frustrates and inhibits achievements D E Hamachek identified six specific overlapping types of behavior associated with perfectionism They are 80 Depression A nagging I should feeling Shame and guilt feelings Face saving behavior Shyness and procrastination Self deprecationUnderachievement edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Underachievement is a significant issue for gifted learners There is often a stark gap between the abilities of the gifted individual and their actual accomplishments Many gifted students will perform extremely well on standardized or reasoning tests only to fail a class exam It is estimated that half of gifted children do not perform in school at a level that is up to their abilities Studies of high school dropouts in the United States estimate that between 18 and 25 of gifted students fail to graduate 81 This disparity can result from various factors such as loss of interest in classes that are too easy or negative social consequences of being perceived as smart 82 Underachievement can also result from emotional or psychological factors including depression anxiety perfectionism low self esteem or self sabotage 83 84 An often overlooked contributor to underachievement is undiagnosed learning differences A gifted individual is less likely to be diagnosed with a learning disorder than a non gifted classmate as the gifted child can more readily compensate for their paucities This masking effect is dealt with by understanding that a difference of one standard deviation between scores constitutes a learning disability even if all of the scores are above average Assessments may also fail to identify some gifted students entirely because their underachieving behaviours keep them from being recognized as exceptional 85 Some gifted children may not be aware that they are gifted One apparently effective way to attempt to reverse underachievement in gifted children includes educating teachers to provide enrichment projects based on students strengths and interests without attracting negative attention from peers Other methods include matching the underachiever with an achieving role model correcting skill deficiencies and ensuring that proper assessments are in place to identify all learning issues with underachieving students 86 Depression editIt has been thought in the past that there is a correlation between giftedness and depression citation needed This is not an established research finding As Reis and Renzulli mention With the exception of creatively gifted adolescents who are talented in writing or the visual arts studies do not confirm that gifted individuals manifest significantly higher or lower rates or severity of depression than those for the general population Gifted children s advanced cognitive abilities social isolation sensitivity and uneven development may cause them to face some challenging social and emotional issues but their problem solving abilities advanced social skills moral reasoning out of school interests and satisfaction in achievement may help them to be more resilient 82 There is also no research that points to suicide attempt rates being higher in gifted adolescents than other adolescents 87 See also editAptitude Child prodigy Davidson Institute for Talent Development Genius Gifted education Greatness Heritability of IQ High IQ society IQ classification Multipotentiality Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth Talented programs A Nation Deceived How Schools Hold Back America s Brightest Students Marland reportReferences edit https www sengifted org post silverman moralsensitivity http hj diva portal org smash get diva2 807759 FULLTEXT02 pdf https www tandfonline com doi pdf 10 1080 10510974 2013 851726 https www researchgate net publication 321756596 Children Above 180 IQ Stanford Binet A Seventy Five Year Follow Up Mackintosh N J 2011 IQ and Human Intelligence second ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 19 958559 5 Retrieved 15 June 2014 The Binet scales as they were known formed the basis of modern IQ tests just as mental age formed the basis for IQ scores Although Galton was the first to try to measure individual differences in intelligence it was Binet who appeared to have succeeded Urbina Susana 2011 Chapter 2 Tests of Intelligence In Sternberg Robert J Kaufman Scott Barry eds The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 20 38 24 25 ISBN 9780521739115 The closest Binet came to defining intelligence was in an article he co authored with Simon 1904 in which they equate intelligence with judgment or common sense adding that to judge well to comprehend well to reason well p 197 are the essential activities of intelligence Unlike Galton Binet believed that intelligence consists of a complex set of abilities such as attention memory and reasoning that are fluid and shaped by environmental and cultural influences Pintner Rudolph 1923 Intelligence Testing Methods and Results New York Henry Holt p 196 Retrieved 14 July 2013 We do not mean to leave the impression that before the general use of mental tests no attention had ever been paid to children of remarkable ability We find many references in literature to especially bright children and the biographies of many great men bear record of their superior performances in childhood Nevertheless such references are scattered and leave the impression of something peculiar and very uncommon Superior intelligence has certainly not been recognized as a vital educational problem It is becoming to be so regarded today because of the scientific study of such children by means of intelligence tests Davis Gary A Rimm Sylvia B Siegle Del April 2010 Education of the Gifted and Talented Pearson Education Limited p 56 ISBN 978 0 13 505607 3 In her article The Case Against Formal Identification Davidson 1986 expressed strong frustration with formal testing rating and nomination procedures including the use of point systems and cutoffs Davidson noted that a student with a tested IQ of 110 may show greater giftedness in the sense of originality and thought provoking ideas and answers than a student with a tested IQ of 140 who will be selected for the program Even creativity tests do not measure every aspect of a child s creativeness noted Davidson and peer parent and teacher nominations can be biased in favor of popular English speaking middle class students Callahan Carolyn M Hertberg Davis Holly L 21 August 2012 Chapter 32 Heterogeneity among the Gifted In Callahan Carolyn M Hertberg Davis Holly L eds Fundamentals of Gifted Education Considering Multiple Perspectives Routledge p 330 ISBN 978 1 136 94643 1 While there are differences among subgroups of students identified as gifted there are also differences among students in the general population whose talents are never addressed because we fail even to recognize that talent Considerable attention has been directed at the under representation of these students in programs for the gifted Among the groups most often recognized as deserving of special attention for identification talent development and subsequent adjustments in curriculum are African American Latino Latina and twice exceptional learners McIntosh David E Dixon Felicia A Pierson Eric E 2012 Chapter 25 Use of Intelligence Tests in the Identification of Giftedness In Flanagan Dawn P Harrison Patti L eds Contemporary Intellectual Assessment Theories tests and issues Third ed New York Guilford Press pp 623 42 636 ISBN 978 1 60918 995 2 ERIC ED530599 The use of a single cognitive test composite score as the primary criterion for determining giftedness is highly common within schools In the past the WISC R Wechsler 1974 and the fourth edition of the Stanford Binet SB IV Thorndike Hagen amp Sattler 1986 were the most commonly used cognitive measures in the schools Coleman amp Cross 2005 Kalbfleisch M Layne 21 August 2012 Chapter 35 Twice Exceptional Students In Callahan Carolyn M Hertberg Davis Holly L eds Fundamentals of Gifted Education Considering Multiple Perspectives Routledge p 360 ISBN 978 1 136 94643 1 Because defining twice exceptionality has defied psychometric and empirical characterization up to this point and because it can include co morbidity with a number of disorders specific learning disability dyslexia attention deficit disorders and autism to name the few highlighted in this chapter the gifted education field at large has only been able to respond to the consequences of it when the goal should be proactive identification and support to enable the success that should come from educational experience and learning not in spite of it This is critical because the social and emotional aspects of twice exceptionality are fundamentally important to the twice exceptional individual s ability to achieve a well adjusted life Assouline Nicpon amp Huber 2006 Foley Nicpon Doobay amp Assouline 2010 Gardynik amp McDonald 2005 King 2005 New 2003 McIntosh David E Dixon Felicia A Pierson Eric E 2012 Chapter 25 Use of Intelligence Tests in the Identification of Giftedness In Flanagan Dawn P Harrison Patti L eds Contemporary Intellectual Assessment Theories tests and issues Third ed New York Guilford Press pp 623 42 636 ISBN 978 1 60918 995 2 ERIC ED530599 Although many would consider screening to be the crucial point in the identification process predictive validity must be established between the screening procedure and the intellectual measure s used to ensure the accuracy and utility of the identification process Sternberg Robert J Davidson Janet E eds 2005 Conceptions of Giftedness Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54730 7 This review of contemporary research includes chapters by James Borland Linda E Brody Julian Stanley Carolyn M Callahan Erin M Miller Tracy L Cross Laurence J Coleman John F Feldhusen Joan Freeman Francoys Gagne Edmund Gordon Beatrice L Bridglall Kurt A Heller Christoph Perleth Tock Keng Lim Ida Jeltova Elena L Grigorenko Franz J Monks Michael W Katzko Jonathan A Plucker Sasha A Barab Sally M Reis Joseph S Renzulli Nancy M Robinson Mark A Runco Dean Keith Simonton Robert J Sternberg Rena F Subotnik Linda Jarvin Joyce Van Tassel Baska Catya von Karolyi Ellen Winner Herbert J Walberg Susan J Paik Albert Ziegler and Richard E Mayer Renzulli J November 1978 What Makes Giftedness Reexamining a Definition Phi Delta Kappan 60 3 180 84 261 Retrieved 29 November 2014 a b Johnsen Susan K May 2011 Identifying Gifted Students A Practical Guide 2nd ed Waco Texas Prufrock Press ISBN 978 1 59363 701 9 Retrieved 29 November 2014 Shaw P March 2006 Intellectual ability and cortical development in children and adolescents Nature 400 7084 676 79 Bibcode 2006Natur 440 676S doi 10 1038 nature04513 PMID 16572172 S2CID 3079565 Kaufman Alan S 2009 IQ Testing 101 New York Springer Publishing pp 151 153 ISBN 978 0 8261 0629 2 Fisher Ronald 1925 Statistical Methods for Research Workers Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd p 47 ISBN 0 05 002170 2 Howell D C 1992 Statistical methods for psychology 3rd ed PWS Kent Publishing Co Statistical Infrequency Definition of 20 April 2020 Anastasi A amp Urbina S 1997 Psychological testing 7th ed Prentice Hall Pearson Education Urbina S 2014 Essentials of psychological testing 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc Cronbach L J 1949 Essentials of psychological testing 2nd ed Harper Carman C A 2013 Comparing apples and oranges Fifteen years of definitions of giftedness in research Journal of Advanced Academics 24 1 52 70 doi 10 1177 1932202X12472602 S2CID 146556870 Gifted child psychology Gottfredson Linda S 2009 Chapter 1 Logical Fallacies Used to Dismiss the Evidence on Intelligence Testing In Phelps Richard F ed Correcting Fallacies about Educational and Psychological Testing Washington DC American Psychological Association ISBN 978 1 4338 0392 5 Gifted And Talented Students A Resource Guide for Teachers PDF Educational Services Division Government of New Brunswick Canada Department of Education 2007 p 39 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 09 04 Retrieved 29 November 2014 citing Davis and Rimm 2004 Kranzler John H Floyd Randy G 1 August 2013 Assessing Intelligence in Children and Adolescents A Practical Guide Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 4625 1121 1 Archived from the original on 16 October 2014 Retrieved 9 June 2014 Perleth Christoph Schatz Tanja Monks Franz J 2000 Early Identification of High Ability In Heller Kurt A Monks Franz J Sternberg Robert J et al eds International Handbook of Giftedness and Talent 2nd ed Amsterdam Pergamon p 301 ISBN 978 0 08 043796 5 norm tables that provide you with such extreme values are constructed on the basis of random extrapolation and smoothing but not on the basis of empirical data of representative samples Zhu Jianjun Cayton Tom Weiss Larry Gabel Amy WISC IV Technical Report 7 WISC IV Extended Norms PDF Raiford Susan E Courville Troy Peters Daniel Gilman Barbara J Silverman Linda WISC V Technical Report 6 Extended Norms PDF Georgas et al 2003 p xxv The Wechsler tests are perhaps the most widely used intelligence tests in the world Meyer amp Weaver 2005 p 219 Campbell 2006 p 66 Strauss Sherman amp Spreen 2006 p 283 Foote 2007 p 468 Kaufman amp Lichtenberger 2006 p 7 Hunt 2011 p 12 Freides D 1972 Review of Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Third Revision In Oscar Buros ed Seventh Mental Measurements Yearbook Highland Park NJ Gryphon Press pp 772 773 ISBN 0803211600 The Binet scales have been around for a long time and their faults are well known Requiescat in pace Waddell Deborah D 1980 The Stanford Binet An Evaluation of the Technical Data Available since the 1972 Restandardization Journal of School Psychology 18 3 203 209 doi 10 1016 0022 4405 80 90060 6 Retrieved 29 June 2010 Perleth Christoph Schatz Tanja Monks Franz J 2000 Early Identification of High Ability In Heller Kurt A Monks Franz J Sternberg Robert J et al eds International Handbook of Giftedness and Talent 2nd ed Amsterdam Pergamon p 302 ISBN 978 0 08 043796 5 a gifted sample gathered using IQ gt 132 using the old SB L M in 1985 does not contain the top 2 of the population but the best 10 Feldman David 1984 A Follow up of Subjects Scoring above 180 IQ in Terman s Genetic Studies of Genius Exceptional Children 50 6 518 523 doi 10 1177 001440298405000604 S2CID 146862140 Retrieved 8 July 2010 Put into the context of the psychometric movement as a whole it is clear that the positive extreme of the IQ distribution is not as different from other IQ levels as might have been expected a b Sternberg Robert J et al Explorations in Giftedness Cambridge University Press 2011 http eclass hua gr modules document file php OIK268 CE A7 CE B1 CF 81 CE B9 CF 83 CE BC CE B1 CF 84 CE B9 CE BA CF 8C CF 84 CE B7 CF 84 CE B1 explorations 20of 20giftedness pdf a b c Vialle Wilma Australian Association for the Education of the Gifted and Talented Asia Pacific Conference on Giftedness 11th 2010 Sydney Australia 2011 Giftedness from an Indigenous perspective Australian Association for the Education of the Gifted and Talented ISBN 978 0 9808448 1 8 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Steven Pinker His Brain Measured Up Archived from the original on 2006 12 11 M Gross 18 March 1999 Small poppies Highly gifted children in the early years Colangelo N amp Davis G 2003 Handbook of Gifted Education Boston Pearson education Inc a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 18 Retrieved 2011 01 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Colangelo N 2003 Handbook of Gifted Education third ed Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 978 0205340637 Archived from the original on 2016 06 08 Retrieved 2014 12 01 Renzulli J May 2001 Evaluation of a Preschool Nutrition Education Program Based on the Theory of multiple Intelligences Journal of Nutrition Education 33 3 161 166 doi 10 1016 S1499 4046 06 60186 3 PMID 11953232 a b Gilman Lynn 2012 2008 The Theory of Multiple Intelligences Indiana University Archived from the original on 25 November 2012 Retrieved 14 November 2012 Weiner Irving B Craighead W Edward 2010 The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons p 1497 ISBN 978 0 470 17024 3 Bellack Alan S Hersen Michel Kazdin Alan E 2012 International Handbook of Behavior Modification and Therapy Second Edition New York Plenum Press p 766 ISBN 978 1 4613 0523 1 Casanova Emily L Casanova Manuel 2018 Defining Autism A Guide to Brain Biology and Behavior London Jessica Kingsley Publishers p 178 ISBN 9781785927225 a b Taylor Lorraine S and Catharine R Whittaker Bridging Multiple Worlds Case Studies of Diverse Educational Communities Allyn and Bacon 2003 Ford Donna Grantham Tarek June 2003 Providing Access for Culturally Diverse Gifted Students From Deficit to Dynamic Thinking Theory into Practice 42 3 217 225 doi 10 1207 s15430421tip4203 8 S2CID 144525477 Callahan C M Moon T R amp Oh S 2014 National surveys of gifted programs executive summary Charlottesville VA National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented University of Virginia Terzian Sevan August 2021 Subtle vicious effects Lillian Steele Proctor s Pioneering Investigation of Gifted African American Children in Washington DC History of Education Quarterly 61 3 351 371 doi 10 1017 heq 2021 22 S2CID 236779619 Olszewski Kubilius Paula Seon Young Lee Jan 2004 Addressing The Achievement Gap Between Minority And Nonminority Children By Increasing Access To Gifted Programs Journal for the Education of the Gifted 28 2 127 158 doi 10 1177 016235320402800202 S2CID 145198023 Mary M Frasier Jaime H Garcia 2014 09 15 A Review of Assessment Issues in Gifted Education and Their Implications for Identifying Gifted Minority Students PDF Lee Seon Young Olszewski Kubilius Peternel Follow Up with students after 6 years of participation in project EXCITE The Gifted Child Quarterly Cincinnati 2009 53 2 p 137 U S Department of Education Office of Civil Rights 2016 Key Data Highlights on Equity and Opportunity Gaps in our Nation s Public Schools Retrieved from http www2 ed gov about offices list ocr docs 2013 14 first look pdf Mary M Frasier Jaime H Garcia 2015 03 19 A Review of Assessment Issues in Gifted Education and Their Implications for Identifying Gifted Minority Students Weinstein R S 2002 Reaching higher The power of expectations in schooling Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press Fitzpatrick C Cote Lussier C Pagani L S Blair C 2015 I Don t Think You Like Me Very Much Child Minority Status and Disadvantage Predict Relationship Quality With Teachers Youth amp Society 47 727 743 doi 10 1177 0044118X13508962 S2CID 144010803 Gershenson S Holt S B Papageorge N W 2016 Who believes in me The effect of student teacher demographic match on teacher expectations Economics of Education Review 52 209 224 doi 10 1016 j econedurev 2016 03 002 hdl 10419 114079 a b Weinstein R S Soule C R Collins F Cone J Mehlhorn M Simontacchi K 1991 Expectations and high school change Teacher researcher collaboration to prevent school failure American Journal of Community Psychology 19 3 333 363 doi 10 1007 bf00938027 PMID 1892131 S2CID 23934639 a b Seon Young Lee Olszewski Kubilius Paula April 2009 Follow Up with students after 6 years of participation in project EXCITE The Gifted Child Quarterly 53 2 137 156 doi 10 1177 0016986208330562 S2CID 145115827 Coleman Mary Ruth Harradine Christine King Emily Williams September 2005 Meeting the needs of students who are twice exceptional Teaching Exceptional Children 38 1 5 6 doi 10 1177 004005990503800101 S2CID 148809016 King Emily Williams September 2005 Addressing the social and emotional needs of twice exceptional students Teaching Exceptional Children 38 1 16 20 doi 10 1177 004005990503800103 S2CID 149087075 a b c Krochak L A Ryan T G 2007 The challenge of identifying gifted learning disabled students PDF International Journal of Special Education 22 3 44 53 Nielson M E 2002 Gifted students with learning disabilities Recommendations for identification and programming Exceptionality 10 2 93 111 doi 10 1207 S15327035EX1002 4 S2CID 143676305 Shenfield T 2014 Twice Exceptional When Your Child is Both Gifted and Learning Disabled Advanced Psychology Ganry Tardy Marie Noelle Watching Prodigies for the Dark Side Scientific American 1 Apr 2005 www scientificamerican com article watching prodigies for th Matta M Gritti E S Lang M 2019 Personality assessment of intellectually gifted adults A dimensional trait approach Personality and Individual Differences 140 21 26 doi 10 1016 j paid 2018 05 009 S2CID 150039612 Swiatek M A 1995 An Empirical Investigation Of The Social Coping Strategies Used By Gifted Adolescents Gifted Child Quarterly 39 3 154 160 doi 10 1177 001698629503900305 S2CID 144179860 Plucker J A Levy J J 2001 The Downside of Being Talented American Psychologist 56 1 75 76 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 56 1 75 PMID 11242991 Robinson N M 2002 Introduction In M Neihart S M Reis N M Robinson S M Moon eds The Social and Emotional Development of Gifted Children Waco Texas Prufrock Press ISBN 1882664779 Lardner C 2005 School Counselors Light Up the Intra and Inter Personal Worlds of Our Gifted About Us Mensa International www mensa org Retrieved 2021 05 08 Intertel Home www intertel iq org Retrieved 2021 05 08 Yun Kyongsik 2011 Mathematically Gifted Adolescents Have Deficiencies in Social Valuation and Mentalization PLoS ONE 6 4 e18224 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 618224Y doi 10 1371 journal pone 0018224 PMC 3070719 PMID 21483742 Chung Dongil 2011 Different Gain Loss Sensitivity and Social Adaptation Ability in Gifted Adolescents during a Public Goods Game PLoS ONE 6 2 e17044 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 617044C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0017044 PMC 3040203 PMID 21359224 Parker W D Mills C J 1996 The Incidence of Perfectionism in Gifted Students Gifted Child Quarterly 40 4 194 199 doi 10 1177 001698629604000404 S2CID 145769977 Schuler P 2002 Perfectionism in Gifted Children and Adolescents In M Neihart S M Reis N M Robinson amp S M Moon Eds The Social and Emotional Development of Gifted Children pp 71 79 Waco Texas Prufrock Press Inc Davis Gary A 2011 Education of the Gifted and Talented New Jersey Pearson pp 287 288 ISBN 9780135056073 a b Reis S M amp Renzulli J S 2004 Current Research on the Social and Emotional Development of Gifted and Talented Students Good News and Future Possibilities Psychology in the Schools 41 published online in Wiley InterScience Reis S M amp McCoach D B 2002 Underachievement in Gifted Students In M Neihart S M Reis N M Robinson amp S M Moon Eds The Social and Emotional Development of Gifted Children pp 81 91 Waco Texas Prufrock Press Inc Davis Gary A 2011 Education of the Gifted and Talented New Jersey Pearson p 293 ISBN 9780135056073 Mofield Emily 8 April 2019 Understanding Underachievement Mindset Perfectionism and Achievement Attitudes Among Gifted Students Journal for the Education of the Gifted 42 2 107 134 doi 10 1177 0162353219836737 S2CID 151040091 Davis Gary A 2011 Education of the Gifted Learner New Jersey Pearson pp 320 321 ISBN 9780135056073 Neihart M 2002 Risk and Resilience in Gifted Children A Conceptual Framework In M Neihart S Reis N M Robinson amp S M Moon Eds The Social and Emotional Development of Gifted Children pp 113 124 Waco Texas Prufrock Press Inc Bibliography editAiken Lewis 1979 Psychological Testing and Assessment Third ed Boston Allyn and Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 06613 1 Ambrose Don Sternberg Robert J Sriraman Bharath eds 2003 Confronting Dogmatism in Gifted Education New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 89446 3 Anastasi Anne Urbina Susana 1997 Psychological Testing Seventh ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 02 303085 7 Benbow Camilla Persson Lubinski David eds 1996 Intellectual Talent Psychometric and Social Issues Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5302 9 Borland James H 1 January 2003 Rethinking Gifted Education Teachers College Press ISBN 978 0 8077 4304 1 Burks Barbara S Jensen Dortha W Terman Lewis M 1930 The Promise of Youth Follow up Studies of a Thousand Gifted Children Genetic Studies of Genius Volume 3 Stanford CA Stanford University Press Campbell Jonathan M 2006 Chapter 3 Mental Retardation Intellectual Disability In Campbell Jonathan M Kamphaus Randy W eds Psychodiagnostic Assessment of Children Dimensional and Categorical Approaches Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 21219 5 Cianciolo Anna T Sternberg Robert J 2004 Intelligence A Brief History Blackwell Brief Histories of Psychology Malden MA Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 0824 9 Colangelo Nicholas Davis Gary A eds 2003 Handbook of Gifted Education Julian C Stanley Guest Foreword Boston Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 34063 7 Cox Catherine M 1926 The Early Mental Traits of 300 Geniuses Genetic Studies of Genius Volume 2 Stanford CA Stanford University Press Cropley David H Cropley Arthur J Kaufman James C Runco Mark A eds 2010 The Dark Side of Creativity Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13960 1 Dai David Yun 12 July 2014 The nature and nurture of giftedness a new framework for understanding gifted education Teachers College Press ISBN 978 0 8077 5087 2 OCLC 762963086 Archived from the original on 9 October 2016 Retrieved 20 July 2013 Davis Gary A Rimm Sylvia B Siegle Del April 2010 Education of the Gifted and Talented Pearson Education Limited ISBN 978 0 13 505607 3 Dumont Ron Willis John O Elliot Colin D 2009 Essentials of DAS II Assessment Hoboken NJ Wiley p 126 ISBN 978 0 470 22520 2 Dumont Ron Willis John O 2013 Range of DAS Subtest Scaled Scores Dumont Willis Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Eysenck Hans 1995 Genius The Natural History of Creativity Problems in the Behavioural Sciences No 12 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48508 1 Eysenck Hans 1998 Intelligence A New Look New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 0 7658 0707 6 Flanagan Dawn P Harrison Patti L eds 2012 Contemporary Intellectual Assessment Theories tests and issues Third ed New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 60918 995 2 Flanagan Dawn P Kaufman Alan S 2009 Essentials of WISC IV Assessment Essentials of Psychological Assessment 2nd ed Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 18915 3 Flynn James R 2012 Are We Getting Smarter Rising IQ in the Twenty First Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 60917 4 Winerman Lea March 2013 Smarter than ever Monitor on Psychology 44 3 30 Foote William E 2007 Chapter 17 Evaluations of Individuals for Disability in Insurance and Social Security Contexts In Jackson Rebecca ed Learning Forensic Assessment International Perspectives on Forensic Mental Health New York Routledge pp 449 480 ISBN 978 0 8058 5923 2 Freeman Joan 2010 Gifted Lives What Happens when Gifted Children Grow Up London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 47009 4 Barbieri Annalisa 8 October 2010 Young gifted and likely to suffer for it The Guardian Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved December 14 2016 Freides David 1972 Review of Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Third Revision In Oscar Buros ed Seventh Mental Measurements Yearbook Highland Park NJ Gryphon Press pp 772 773 ISBN 0803211600 Friedman Reva C Rogers Karen B eds 2002 Talent in Context Historical and Social Perspectives on Giftedness Washington DC American Psychological Association ISBN 978 1 55798 944 4 Gallagher Sherri L Sullivan Amanda L 2011 Chapter 30 Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children Second Edition In Davis Andrew ed Handbook of Pediatric Neuropsychology New York Springer Publishing pp 343 352 ISBN 978 0 8261 0629 2 Georgas James Weiss Lawrence van de Vijver Fons Saklofske Donald 2003 Preface In Georgas James Weiss Lawrence van de Vijver Fons Saklofske Donald eds Culture and Children s Intelligence Cross Cultural Analysis of the WISC III San Diego CA Academic Press pp xvx xxxii ISBN 978 0 12 280055 9 Gleick James 2011 Genius The Life and Science of Richard Feynman ebook ed Open Road Media ISBN 978 1 4532 1043 7 Gottfredson Linda S 2009 Chapter 1 Logical Fallacies Used to Dismiss the Evidence on Intelligence Testing In Phelps Richard F ed Correcting Fallacies about Educational and Psychological Testing Washington DC American Psychological Association ISBN 978 1 4338 0392 5 Gregory Robert J 1995 Classification of Intelligence In Sternberg Robert J ed Encyclopedia of human intelligence Vol 1 Macmillan pp 260 266 ISBN 978 0 02 897407 1 OCLC 29594474 Groth Marnat Gary 2009 Handbook of Psychological Assessment Fifth ed Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 08358 1 Heller Kurt A Monks Franz J Sternberg Robert J Subotnik Rena F eds 2000 International Handbook of Giftedness and Talent 2nd ed Amsterdam Pergamon ISBN 978 0 08 043796 5 Holahan Carole K Sears Robert R Cronbach Lee J 1995 The Gifted Group in Later Maturity first ed Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804724074 Ellen Idler July 1996 Reviewed Work The Gifted Group in Later Maturity American Journal of Sociology 102 1 316 318 JSTOR 2782225 Frances Degen Horowitz O Brien Marion eds 1985 The Gifted and talented developmental perspectives American Psychological Association ISBN 978 0 912704 94 4 LCCN 85007559 OCLC 11972824 Horowitz Frances Degen Subotnik Rena F Matthews Dona J eds 2009 The Development of Giftedness and Talent Across the Life Span Washington DC American Psychological Association ISBN 978 1 4338 0414 4 Hunt Earl 2011 Human Intelligence Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 70781 7 Jensen Arthur R 1998 The g Factor The Science of Mental Ability Human Evolution Behavior and Intelligence Westport CT Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96103 9 ISSN 1063 2158 Charles Locurto 1999 A Balance Sheet on Persistence Psycoloquy Review 10 59 Jensen Arthur R 2011 The Theory of Intelligence and Its Measurement Intelligence 39 4 171 177 doi 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73553 3 Kaufman Scott Barry 1 June 2013 Ungifted Intelligence Redefined Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02554 1 Retrieved 1 October 2013 Ungifted Intelligence Redefined The Truth about Talent Practice Creativity and the Many Paths to Greatness Publishers Weekly Review Lang Margherita Matta Michael Parolin Laura Morrone Cristina Pezzuti Lina 2017 Cognitive Profile of Intellectually Gifted Adults Analyzing the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale Assessment 26 5 929 943 doi 10 1177 1073191117733547 PMID 28948838 S2CID 35100607 Leslie Mitchell July August 2000 The Vexing Legacy of Lewis Terman Stanford Magazine Retrieved 5 June 2013 Levine Albert J Marks Louis 1928 Testing Intelligence and Achievement Macmillan OCLC 1437258 Retrieved 23 April 2014 Lohman David F Foley Nicpon Megan 2012 Chapter 12 Ability Testing amp Talent Identification PDF In Hunsaker Scott ed Identification The Theory and Practice of Identifying Students for Gifted and Talented Education Services Waco TX Prufrock pp 287 386 ISBN 978 1 931280 17 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 15 Retrieved 2014 11 29 Mackintosh N J 2011 IQ and Human Intelligence second ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958559 5 LCCN 2010941708 Retrieved 15 June 2014 Matarazzo Joseph D 1972 Wechsler s Measurement and Appraisal of Adult Intelligence fifth and enlarged ed Baltimore MD Williams amp Witkins R D Savage April 1974 Wechsler s Measurement and Appraisal of Adult Intelligence 5th ed British Journal of Industrial Medicine Review 31 2 169 PMC 1009574 McIntosh David E Dixon Felicia A Pierson Eric E 2012 Chapter 25 Use of Intelligence Tests in the Identification of Giftedness In Flanagan Dawn P Harrison Patti L eds Contemporary Intellectual Assessment Theories tests and issues Third ed New York Guilford Press pp 623 642 ISBN 978 1 60918 995 2 Meyer Robert G Weaver Christopher M 2005 Law and Mental Health A Case Based Approach New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 59385 221 4 Naglieri Jack A 1999 Essentials of CAS Assessment Essentials of Psychological Assessment Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 29015 5 Park Gregory Lubinski David Benbow Camilla P 2 November 2010 Recognizing Spatial Intelligence Scientific American Retrieved 5 June 2013 Phillipson Shane N McCann Maria eds 2007 Conceptions of Giftedness Sociocultural Perspectives Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum ISBN 978 0 8058 5751 1 Pickover Clifford A 1998 Strange Brains and Genius The Secret Lives of Eccentric Scientists and Madmen Plenum Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 0 688 16894 0 Pintner Rudolph 1931 Intelligence Testing Methods and Results New York Henry Holt Retrieved 14 July 2013 Plucker Jonathan A Callahan Carolyn M eds 2008 Critical Issues and Practices in Gifted Education What the Research Says Waco TX Prufrock Press ISBN 978 1 59363 295 3 Reynolds Cecil Kamphaus Randy 2003 Reynolds Intellectual Assessment Scales RIAS PAR Psychological Assessment Resources Archived from the original PowerPoint on 9 October 2021 Retrieved 11 July 2013 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Jerome M 1988 Assessment of Children Third ed San Diego CA Jerome M Sattler Publisher ISBN 978 0 9618209 0 9 Sattler Jerome M 2001 Assessment of Children Cognitive Applications Fourth ed San Diego CA Jerome M Sattler Publisher ISBN 978 0 9618209 7 8 Sattler Jerome M 2008 Assessment of Children Cognitive Foundations La Mesa CA Jerome M Sattler Publisher ISBN 978 0 9702671 4 6 Shurkin Joel 1992 Terman s Kids The Groundbreaking Study of How the Gifted Grow Up Boston MA Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 78890 8 Frederic Golden May 31 1992 Tracking the IQ Elite TERMAN S KIDS The Groundbreaking Study of How the Gifted Grow Up By Joel N Shurkin Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2012 11 08 Shurkin Joel 2006 Broken Genius The Rise and Fall of William Shockley Creator of the Electronic Age London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 8815 7 Brian Clegg Review Broken Genius Joel Shurkin Popular Science Archived from the original on 2006 10 06 Simonton Dean Keith 1999 Origins of genius Darwinian 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Introduction Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 186102 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Terman Lewis M 1925 Mental and Physical Traits of a Thousand Gifted Children Genetic Studies of Genius Volume 1 Stanford CA Stanford University Press LCCN 25008797 Retrieved 2 June 2013 Terman Lewis Madison Merrill Maude A 1937 Measuring intelligence A guide to the administration of the new revised Stanford Binet tests of intelligence Riverside textbooks in education Boston Houghton Mifflin Terman Lewis M Oden Melita 1947 The Gifted Child Grows Up Twenty five Years Follow up of a Superior Group Genetic Studies of Genius Volume 4 Stanford CA Stanford University Press LCCN 25008797 Terman Lewis M Oden Melita 1959 The Gifted Group at Mid Life Thirty Five Years Follow Up of the Superior Child Genetic Studies of Genius Volume V Stanford CA Stanford University Press Retrieved 2 June 2013 Terman Lewis Madison Merrill Maude A 1973 Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Manual for the Third Revision Form L M with Revised IQ Tables by Samuel R Pinneau Houghton Mifflin Company tests Samuel R Pinneau Revised IQ Tables 1960 R L Thorndike 1972 Norms Tables 1972 Norms ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Thompson Bruce Subotnik Rena F eds 2010 Methodologies for Conducting Research on Giftedness Robert J Sternberg Foreword Washington DC American Psychological Association ISBN 978 1 4338 0714 5 Pat O Connell Ross 1993 National excellence a case for developing America s talent PDF United States Government Printing Office Archived PDF from the original on 5 December 2014 Retrieved 6 June 2014 Alt URL Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Urbina Susana 2011 Chapter 2 Tests of Intelligence In Sternberg Robert J Kaufman Scott Barry eds The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 20 38 ISBN 978 0 521 73911 5 Uzieblo Katarzyna Winter Jan Vanderfaeillie Johan Rossi Gina Magez Walter 2012 Intelligent Diagnosing of Intellectual Disabilities in Offenders Food for Thought PDF Behavioral Sciences amp the Law 30 1 28 48 doi 10 1002 bsl 1990 PMID 22241548 Retrieved 15 July 2013 Wasserman John D 2012 Chapter 1 A History of Intelligence Assessment In Flanagan Dawn P Harrison Patti L eds Contemporary Intellectual Assessment Theories tests and issues Third ed New York Guilford Press pp 3 55 ISBN 978 1 60918 995 2 Wechsler David 1939 The Measurement of Adult Intelligence Baltimore Williams amp Witkins LCCN 39014016 Wechsler David 1939 The Measurement of Adult Intelligence first ed Baltimore Williams amp Witkins LCCN 39014016 Weiss Lawrence G Saklofske Donald H Prifitera Aurelio Holdnack James A eds 2006 WISC IV Advanced Clinical Interpretation Practical Resources for the Mental Health Professional Burlington MA Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 088763 7 Wolman Benjamin B ed 1985 Handbook of Intelligence consulting editors Douglas K Detterman Alan S Kaufman Joseph D Matarazzo New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 89738 5 Woodrow Herbert Hollingworth 1919 Brightness and Dullness in Children J B Lippincott Company Archived from the original on 30 September 2012 Retrieved 14 November 2013 Reviewed Work Brightness and Dullness in Children Lippincott s Educational Guides The Elementary School Journal 20 6 469 471 February 1920 doi 10 1086 454779 JSTOR 994141 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Schools for gifted students nbsp The dictionary definition of gifted at Wiktionary Portals nbsp Psychology nbsp Society nbsp Education nbsp Schools Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intellectual giftedness amp oldid 1217972978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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