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Chapter 14: Children on Different Developmental Paths

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Chapter 14: Children on Different Developmental Paths. Children Who Thrive: ... Others beat the odds. ... Graph on Slide 4: from Cook, J. L., & Cook, G. (2005) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 14: Children on Different Developmental Paths


1
Chapter 14 Children on Different Developmental
Paths
  • Children Who Thrive
  • Gifted, Talented, and Resilient Children
  • Kati Tumaneng (for Drs. Cook and Cook)

2
Gifted and Talented Children
  • Children who show extraordinary achievement in
    one or more areas.
  • Some are globally gifted while others are
    unevenly gifted.
  • Three characteristics
  • Precocious
  • March to their own drummer
  • A rage to master!
  • (Ellen Winner)

GT World http//gtworld.org/
3
A Longitudinal Study of Gifted and Talented Teens
(Csikzentmihalyi)
  • Teachers in Chicago suburbs nominated 208
    students who were felt to show great promise
    (Csikzentmihalyi, Rathunde, Whalen, 1997).
  • Students followed through high school activities
    compared to average teens.
  • Talented teens more self-critical, rated selves
    as less happy, showed strong intrinsic
    motivation, desire for challenge.

4
Time Spent by Talented High School Students
(Csikzentmihalyi et al., 1997)
5
Termans Kids The Classic Study of Gifted
Individuals
  • Began in 1921 sampled more than 1,500 children
    with exceptional intelligence or talent (Terman,
    1947).
  • Goal to see how they fared in life.
  • Termites were larger, healthier, better
    adjusted than average children (Shurkin, 1992
    Terman, 1925).
  • Study still continues today, more than 80 years
    after it began (Holahan Sears, 1995).

Terman http//www.indiana.edu/intell/terman.shtm
l
6
Resilient Children Thriving through Adversity
  • Resilient children Children who succeed,
    achieve, or otherwise have positive developmental
    outcomes despite growing up under negative
    conditions (Garmezy, 1985 Luthar, Cicchetti,
    Becker, 2000 Rutter, 1987).
  • When researchers study resilient children, they
    consider risk factors and protective factors that
    interact throughout their development.

7
Resilient Children Thriving through Adversity
  • Risk factors Characteristics of children or
    aspects of childrens environments that tend to
    be associated with developmental problems.
  • Risk chains Situations where one risk factor
    leads to another.
  • Protective factors Characteristics of children
    or aspects of childrens environment that block
    or reduce the negative impact of risk factors.

Resilient Children http//www.nwrel.org/cfc/frc/
beyus1.html
8
Risk and Protective Factors and Characteristics
of Resilient Children
(Kirby Fraser, 1997 Katz, 1997)
9
Risk and Protective Factors and Characteristics
of Resilient Children
(Kirby Fraser, 1997 Katz, 1997)
10
Resilient Children Thriving through Adversity
  • Children demonstrate resilience in different ways
    (Kirby Fraser, 1997).
  • Some use intelligence and coping skills to play a
    bad hand well (Katz, 1997).
  • Others suffer negative effects but find a way to
    bounce back.
  • Others beat the odds.
  • Keep in mind that they may seem well adjusted and
    successful, but may show signs of trauma on the
    inside (Luthar et al., 2000).
  • Never know how much better their lives could have
    been if they had not been exposed to risk factors.

11
A Few Final Thoughts
  • Childrens development is complex.
  • Think about childrens development from several
    different perspectives.
  • Be active in your thinking about and analysis of
    child development information.
  • Most importantly, be an active advocate for
    children!

12
  • Graph on Slide 4 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 583). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • Table on Slide 8 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 589). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • Table on Slide 9 from Cook, J. L., Cook, G.
    (2005). Child development Principles and
    perspectives (1st ed.) (p. 589). Boston Allyn
    and Bacon.
  • All other images retrieved from Microsoft
    PowerPoint Clip Art.
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