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Showing 1 to 15 of 139 results
Tunks, Karen W.; Gilles, Rebecca M. – Understanding Our Gifted, 2013
Social-emotional development is a fundamental part of a child's overall well-being. Healthy development forms a critical foundation for building positive relationships and a strong self-esteem. Social-emotional development includes the ability to express and manage emotions and to establish secure relationships. All children have a natural desire…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Well Being, Childrens Literature, Emotional Development
Novak, Angela – Understanding Our Gifted, 2013
Overexcitabilities (OEs) are part of a larger theory, the Theory of Positive Disintegration (TPD), postulated by Polish World War I and II survivor Kazimierz Dabrowski. Simply put, an OE is a stimulus-response that is different from the norm; it is a heightened ability to both receive and respond to stimuli. Originally translated as…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment, Coping
Corash, Dennis N.; Jones, Melinda – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
Many children fall in love with science at an early age. There is just something about exploring critters, crud, gears, pulleys, and other "stuff" that has fascinated generations of young students. Unfortunately, in many schools across the nation, science in the elementary classroom is relegated to the back burner as other curricular areas have…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Learner Engagement, Learning Motivation, Young Children
Otto, Shawn Lawrence – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
Literacy in STEM is critical to individual and national success in the twenty-first century, the century of science. Gifted students are in a position to make especially profound contributions to solving the world's major challenges and creating new economic opportunity. But modern American culture and the way STEM education is approached and…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Evolution, Science Teachers, STEM Education
Otto, Shawn Lawrence – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
Considering the close link between family attitudes about science and student performance, it is especially troubling that it has become increasingly acceptable in public dialogue, particularly in the "professional/executive" class, to be antiscience. This change is noticeable by watching the changing public expressions of U.S. politicians, who…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Family Attitudes, Public Policy, Science Education
Merrill, Jen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
The author's son has been an engineer since birth. He never asked "why" as a toddler, it was always "how's it work?" So that he wanted a STEM-based home education was no big surprise. In this article, the author considers what kind of curricula would work best for her complex kid.
Descriptors: Home Schooling, STEM Education, Curriculum, Personal Narratives
Smutny, Joan Franklin – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
To meet the needs of young gifted and talented learners, teachers need the flexibility to respond to individual needs without the stress of extra planning and preparation. Certainly, some planning comes into play. Engaging the gifts and interests of these students in a way that is also reasonable presents a unique challenge. One of the most…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Advanced Students, Poetry, Reading Assignments
Schroeder-Davis, Stephen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
In the author's experience, when concerns about camouflaging differentiation occur, they tend to center around issues related to fear of stigmatizing students who are working ahead of (or behind) their age-peers. These fears often manifest in specific concerns about grouping arrangements, as well as the issues of fairness, grading, and confusion…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Classroom Environment, Learning, Students
Lloyd-Zannini, Lou – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
What can parents and educators of gifted children do to help them build the connections that will allow them to thrive? In this article, the author suggests a few practical and simple things that parents and educators of gifted children might want to consider as they live and work with them day by day. He breaks those suggestions out into two…
Descriptors: Gifted, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Children, Parents
Schroeder-Davis, Stephen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
In this column the author explores the middle school nexus of asynchronicity, Maslow's hierarchy of needs and bullying as they apply to gifted students in secondary schools, with an emphasis on the middle school student. The premise is typically referred to as "achievement vs. affiliation," (Ford, 2004; Neihart, 2006, 2008) and concerns the…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Bullying, Middle School Students, Academic Achievement
Leggett, Nick – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
After-school activities....Those three little words can strike fear into any parent's heart. Extra-curricular activities are needed for resumes, college applications, to keep young ones occupied; they define many a child's life during pre-college years. Parents often rush to involve their children in as many activities as possible as early as…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Student Development, Academically Gifted, Student Interests
Rivero, Lisa – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
Parents who homeschool gifted children often find the daily practice of home education very different from what they had imagined. Gifted children are complex in both personality and learning styles. Parents who say that homeschooling works well for their gifted children have learned from others or discovered on their own several secrets that make…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Home Schooling, Persistence, Interviews
Smutny, Joan Franklin – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
While resources for the gifted are not abundant, many schools do offer classes, programs, services, and/or clubs that broaden student learning beyond the curriculum. What can educators do to expand the horizons of gifted children--to open their minds to new worlds of knowledge and understanding? Programs for gifted students, particularly those…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted, Academic Achievement, Teaching Methods
Gross, Miraca U. M. – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
Children who are intellectually gifted are often emotionally mature for their ages. For a variety of reasons--including an unrewarding curriculum, preference for others of the same intellectual ability, or a feeling of social rejection--this maturity is sometimes masked at school. This can lead to what the author calls a "forced-choice" dilemma.…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, High Achievement, Peer Acceptance, Age Differences
Cramond, Bonnie – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
In this article, the author talks about celebrating the differences of all gifted students. Rather than isolate or ridicule creative individuals, people need to recognize that the very characteristics that enable creative people to think originally may cause them to be seen as different and even bizarre. She suggests that people need to accept and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Academically Gifted, Gifted, Parent Student Relationship

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