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Giftedness

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Gifted, creative, and talented are descriptors of a special group ... genetic ... to help them develop their artistic and creative endowments. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Giftedness


1
Giftedness
2
Definitions
  • Gifted, creative, and talented are descriptors of
    a special group of individuals who have
    extraordinary abilities in one or more areas of
    performance.

3
Prevalence
  • Currently, 3 percent to 5 percent of students in
    the school population may be identified as
    gifted.  

4
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
  • Currently, the term talented has been added to
    the descriptors associated with giftedness.
    Individuals who are talented have exceptional
    skills in the visual or performing arts or excel
    in other related areas.  
  • It is important to note that there is no federal
    mandate in the United States requiring
    educational services for students identified as
    gifted, as is the case with other areas of
    exceptionality.

5
DEFINITIONS
  • Definitions of giftedness influence the
    following  
  • The number of students who are ultimately
    selected.  
  • The types of instruments and selection procedures
    used.  
  • The scores an individual must obtain to qualify
    for specialized instruction.  
  • The types of education provided.  
  • The amount of funding required to provide
    services.  
  • The types of training required to teach students
    who are gifted and talented.  

6
DEFINITIONS
  • The following six major components
  • Individuals who are gifted should be identified
    by qualified assessment personnel through the use
    of multiple assessment measures.  
  • Students who are gifted may demonstrate their
    extraordinary abilities in a variety of domains.
  • Children who are gifted may be identified during
    the preschool, elementary, or secondary school
    years.  

7
  • Such children exhibit high levels of task
    commitment and creativity.  
  • Children who are gifted combine their high levels
    of intelligence, task commitment, and creativity
    to make lasting contributions to their fields of
    endeavor.  
  • These children need special educational
    opportunities to realize their full intellectual
    and creative potentials.

8
ORIGINS OF GIFTEDNESS  
  • A number of factors appear to contribute
    significantly to the emergence of the various
    forms of giftedness  
  • Heredity or genetic endowment.  
  • Environmental stimulation provided by parents,
    teachers, coaches, tutors, and others (e.g.,
    individuals reared in democratic family
    environments that foster risk-taking, openness,
    and spontaneity are more likely to be creative as
    youth and adults).  
  • The interaction of innate abilities (heredity)
    with environmental influences and encouragement.
       

9
ASSESSMENT  
  • The assessment process (screening and
    identification) uses various measures, including
    teacher nomination, intelligence and achievement
    tests, and creativity tests.  
  • Teacher nominations have been integral to many
    screening approaches. Scales are able to assist
    teachers in making nominations of students who
    are gifted but may be overlooked due to
    underachievement or disruptive behavior.

10
ASSESSMENT  
  • Intelligence and achievement tests are used to
    identify intellectual giftedness however, their
    use has been criticized because  
  • Performance on IQ tests is a poor criterion for
    predicting future creative and productive
    achievement.  
  • IQ tests are believed to be restrictive and
    inadequate in measuring the higher mental
    processes that characterize the functioning of
    individuals who are gifted, such as memory
    capacity and divergent thinking.  
  • Intelligence tests are limited in their use with
    individuals who are culturally different.  
  • Achievement tests are not designed to measure the
    full extent of achievement of children who are
    academically gifted.

11
INTERVENTIONS
  • Early Childhood
  • Activities such as feeding, bathing, and dressing
    can be used to provide varied sensory experiences
    and to convey a sense of trust.
  • As children develop, experiences provided by
    parents can become more varied and suited to
    individual interests and strengths.  
  • Language and cognitive development can be
    encouraged by the parents reading to the
    children and telling them stories.  

12
INTERVENTIONS
  • Preschool programs.
  • Various preschool programs have been developed
    for young children who are gifted. Some children
    participate in traditional preschool programs,
    and others are involved in programs designed to
    help them develop their artistic and creative
    endowments.  

13
INTERVENTIONS
  • Childhood and Adolescence.
  • Various service delivery systems and approaches
    are used in responding to the individual
    capacities and interests of students who are
    gifted.  

14
Service delivery systems
  • Organizational structures for students who are
    gifted are similar to those found in other areas
    of special education. A continuum model has been
    developed, with services ranging from regular
    class placement to special school placement.  
  • The selection of the service delivery system is a
    function of financing, human resources, and
    community values and conditions.

15
Acceleration
  • Programs for students who are gifted have often
    used acceleration strategies.  
  • Acceleration allows students to achieve at rates
    consonant with their capacities.  
  • Acceleration options include grade skipping,
    telescoped programs, rapid progress through
    subject matter, and early entrance into college.
     

16
Enrichment
  • Enrichment refers to experiences that extend or
    broaden a persons knowledge.  
  • Enrichment refers to adding courses such as music
    appreciation or foreign language to a students
    curriculum.  
  • Enrichment also involves experiences in which the
    student develops sophisticated thinking skills or
    has an opportunity to master advanced concepts in
    a subject area.  
  • Since enrichment is the least expensive service
    option, it is sometimes used as a token response
    to parental demands for programs for gifted
    students.  

17
Other program options
  • Special programs and schools
  • Special programs and schools have been designed
    to advance the talents of individuals in
    nonacademic areas, such as the visual performing
    arts.  
  • Career education
  • Career education activities and experiences
    assist students in making educational and
    occupational decisions by providing opportunities
    to investigate and explore various fields.  
  • Mentoring
  • Mentor programs allow students the opportunity to
    work directly with professionals who are
    contributors in their fields.

18
Problems and challenges of giftedness
  • Students who are gifted must cope with a number
    of problems  
  • Students who are gifted frequently feel an
    inordinate amount of pressure to achieve high
    grades or select particular courses or
    professions because of the expectations they have
    of themselves and those that have been explicitly
    and implicitly imposed by others.  

19
Problems/challenges of giftedness
  • Historically underrepresented groups
  • The number of girls identified as gifted appears
    to decline with age.  
  • The gender-role socialization that girls receive
    discourages competition, risk-taking, and
    independence.
  • Females who are gifted experience problems
    demonstrating their abilities in careers and
    other pursuits. Problems include fear of
    appearing unfeminine when competing with males,
    competition between marital and career
    aspirations, stress induced from traditional
    cultural and societal expectations, and
    self-imposed and/or culturally imposed
    restrictions related to educational or
    occupational choices.  

20
Problems and challenges of giftedness
  • Minority groups are underrepresented in programs
    for the gifted and talented
  • Programs should begin early.  
  • Programs should be tailored to the needs of these
    children.  
  • Other key components include parental involvement
    in the educational program model, experiential
    education, activities that foster
    self-expression, plentiful use of mentors and
    role models who represent the childs ethnic
    group, and counseling.  
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