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Is
your Child Gifted ? 

Academically gifted children have a number of special
needs related to their individual level of intelligence and talent.
Many wrongly think that placing gifted children in regular classes
will help non-gifted students learn. There could be nothing further
from the truth. But first, how can you tell if your child is
academically gifted?
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Often bored in regular classes |
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Behavioral problems at school |
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Poor grades even though he/she
displays qualities of intelligence |
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Frustration |
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Viewed as arrogant |
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Advanced for his/her age,
especially in reading and vocabulary |
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Independent worker |
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Good leader (take-charge kind
of person) |
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Daydreamer |
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Good imagination |
In most states, to be admitted to the school's gifted/talented
classes, a child must first be nominated by a teacher or faculty
member. Having been brought to the school's attention, he/she is then
"screened" or given a preliminary test. If the results of
this test are favorable, three more tests are administered. Having
passed all three tests, the parent has the option of placing the child
in academically gifted classes.
Why do academically gifted children not help average children learn
when placed in the same classes? One would assume that a gifted child
would grasp what is being taught immediately and would then help out
the kids who were having a more difficult time understanding the
material. Unfortunately, this is not the case.
The average child must hear a
concept repeated (in one form or another) 32 times. A gifted child
requires its presentation two or three times, or, in some cases, only
once. When the gifted child grasps the concept, he/she is ready to
learn more. The teacher, though, is simply repeating the same old
thing. As a result, gifted children in regular classes tend to
daydream, ignore the teacher, and/or (especially at younger ages)
misbehave. This, of course, causes lower grades, and the child is
likely to be thought of as arrogant by other students, since he/she is
likely to vent his/her frustration insultingly (i.e. "Figure it
out" or "Gosh, stupid" or other milder forms of the
same). By keeping the child in the regular classes, their mental
potential is not reached, and due to their frustration, they may lose
all desire to learn and therefore have their mental potential stunted.
That's possibly the greatest irony of all--smart kids making good
grades.
The solution to this is to put all your gifted children together in
one (or more) class(es) and greatly accelerate the intensity and speed
of your teaching. Gifted classes are usually small (8-15 people) and
this size helps them to know each other and bounce ideas off one
another. Gifted children aren't arrogant or elitist, they just learn
differently.
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