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taken from Hoagies dot org: It explains why identifying highly gifted kids at a very early age is important, rather than waiting until they begin kindergarten. The meeting we attended last week indicated that the likelihood is much more common that initial research indicated and thought.
The 10 most commonly asked questions about highly gifted children
by Kathi Kearney
Used with permission
1. Who are the highly gifted?
Highly gifted or exceptionally gifted children include:
Those who score extremely high on individually administered IQ tests (generally in the 148+ range, Stanford-Binet L-M scores; or in the 140+ range on the WISC-R or Stanford-Binet Fourth Edition;
Child prodigies in areas such as music, mathematics, or chess;
Children with extremely highly developed talents in unusual areas;
Profoundly intellectually gifted children above 170 IQ
2. How many highly gifted children are there?
No one really knows. Although many researchers have made estimates, and test norms indicate the statistically rare incidence of children in this population, the actual numbers of such children may well be greater than the statistical norms imply. Webb, Meckstroth, and Tolan (1982) state that one child in about 2,000 has an IQ above 150 on the Stanford-Binet Form L-M; one child in a half-million has an IQ above 170. Hollingworth (1942) estimated one child in a million has an IQ above 180. But Robinson's research (1981) suggests that there may actually be more than six times as many children above 164 IQ than statistics would predict. Lewis Terman (1925), who designed the original Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, discovered many more children testing above 170 IQ than predicted; Dunlap (1967) discovered the same thing in his clinical work as a school psychologist in the Midwest. In several areas of the United States, including Los Angeles, northern New England, Alaska, Ohio, and Colorado, Many more children have been discovered in this IQ range than should statistically be there. We don't know how many highly gifted children exist in the population, but apparently there are more-possibly six to ten times as many more-than previously thought.
3. How do I know if I have a highly gifted child?
Exceptionally gifted children demonstrate extremely advanced development in a number of areas. However, they may or may not demonstrate this ability by achieving at a high level in school. Individual testing, coupled with observation and case study of the child, is the best way to determine the type and extent of giftedness involved.
4. What tests are most likely to identify the highly intellectually gifted child?
The Stanford-Binet Form L-M (the "old Binet") is still the best single tool available to measure the full extent of giftedness in the very highest ranges, in children under thirteen years of age. The Stanford-Binet Form L-M has a higher ceiling than any of the other tests currently on the market, and gives more opportunity than either the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-R) or the 1986 Stanford-Binet Fourth Edition (SB:FE) "for gifted children to display their fluency, imagination, unusual or advanced concepts, and complex linguistic usage" (Vernon, 1987, p. 256). It is not uncommon for a child to score in the 138-145 range on the WISC-R, for example, and later score above 160 on the Stanford-Binet Form L-M. When three or more subtest scores on the WISC-R, the K-ABC, or the SB:FE are at or near the ceiling of the test, the child should be retested with the Stanford-Binet Form L-M (Silverman & Kearney, 1989).
For children aged twelve and older, the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT's) can provide an early measure of mathematical and verbal precocity. Highly gifted children in the seventh grade will often score above 430 on the verbal section or above 500 on the math section of this test. Children with extremely advanced abilities may score above 630 on the verbal section or above 700 in math. Special summer classes are available in many areas for students who score in this range, and local schools may be able to arrange appropriate acceleration within the regular school program.
5. If my child has been identified as gifted, isnt that enough? Why is it important to know whether or not she is highly gifted?
The child of 160 IQ is as different from the child of 130 IQ as that child is from the child of average ability. The kind of educational program developed for the highly gifted child of 160, 170, or 180 IQ often differs markedly from appropriate programs for most gifted children, but usually these programs are designed for the moderately gifted. An exceptionally gifted child may have difficulty finding appropriate challenges even in the gifted class, because of the need to move at a much faster pace, the ability to process material in greater depth, and the increased sensitivity, awareness, and intensity typical of this population. Secondly, there is evidence to suggest that the social/emotional development of highly gifted children differs somewhat as well (Hollingworth, 1942; Roedell, 1984). They often exhibit an emotional intensity greater than that of many children. They are such abstract issues as freedom, justice, or war, but they may not be ready to deal with the emotional impact of such issues. Children in this range of development in early childhood-they will discuss Einstein's theory of relativity with you one minute, but kick a younger sibling in the shins the next! This can be confusing for child and parent alike. Yet such discrepancies represent perfectly normal development for the extremely gifted child, and should be accepted as such. Leta Hollingworth, a pioneer in the study of highly gifted children, described the issue this way:
It is especially to be noted that many of these problems are functions of immaturity. To have the intelligence of an adult and the emotions of a child combined in a childish body is to encounter certain difficulties. It follows that (after babyhood) the younger the child, the greater the difficulties, and that adjustment becomes easier with every additional year of age. The ages between four and nine are probably the most likely to be beset with the problems mentioned...(Hollingworth, 1942, p. 282-283)
Obtaining an accurate assessment of the child's ability can help parents and schools to better understand the intellectual and social/emotional needs of the child as development progresses.
6. Will the school know what to do with a highly gifted child?
Not necessarily. Surprising, as it may seem, extremely gifted children have been the least-studied children within the entire gifted population (Feldman, 1979). Very few articles and even fewer books have addressed the special needs of this population, so it is no surprise that even teachers of the gifted may not be familiar with the unique issues and problems these children face. Even if a school system has a gifted program, it is entirely possible that they have had no experience with a child who has been identified as highly gifted. When that is the case, parents will need to work very closely and cooperatively with the school, providing information about the highly gifted, helping to develop the child's program, and supporting the child and teacher emotionally as well as in other ways.
7. What effect does a highly gifted child have on the rest of the family?
Highly gifted children are often more intense, more demanding, and more expensive to raise than other children! They may need more challenging academic courses at an earlier age. Highly gifted children almost always accelerate their schooling in some manner before graduation from college. If the acceleration occurs over several grade levels, the child may leave home earlier than expected, resulting in an "early empty nest syndrome" (Silverman & Kearney, 1989). Parents often feel frustrated when they cannot provide enough educational stimulation for these children, who always seem to want "more, more, more". And they may feel other siblings are not getting equal attention. In addition, it has been our observation that a fair number of highly gifted children do not seem to need much sleep-in fact, they routinely need less sleep than their parents, even as infants and toddlers! Families of the highly gifted may struggle with certain issues such as schooling and sleep, but these families are also greatly enriched by the unexpected joys such a child brings to the family unit.
8. If one child in the family is highly gifted, is it possible that the other children are gifted also?
Yes. Recent research indicated that in many cases siblings are within ten IQ points of each other (Silverman, 1987, November). If one child is highly gifted, it is quite possible that the other children are gifted, too. In many circumstances, it is beneficial for families to have all of the children evaluated.
9. Are the parents of highly gifted children also gifted?
In many cases, yes. When parents first have their children assessed for giftedness, they usually begin to read and learn about the characteristics of gifted and highly gifted children. Then they may recognize those characteristics in themselves, often for the first time. Most adults did not attend schools which had gifted programs when they were young. Even those schools that provided programs often did not discuss with the children or their families the reasons for placement of the results of tests. Thus, many gifted adults today have long had a nagging sense that they were "different" or didn't fit in a school, but did not know the reason why. Often the first time they begin to face these issues themselves is when a child is identified as gifted. Then it comes as a "double whammy"--while they are trying to deal with the very real issues relating to a child's giftedness, they are also trying to come to terms with their own giftedness, often for the first time.
10. Does gifted go away?
No. Highly gifted children grow up to become highly gifted adults. However, on the way to adulthood, giftedness may appear to "hide out". For many complex reasons, exceptionally gifted children are not always high achievers. In schools where achievement, high academic performance, task commitment, or concrete products are a major factor in identification for gifted programs, these children may not even be identified as gifted, despite extremely high IQ scores and evidence of marked early and advanced development (Brown, 1984).
Gifted girls may let their abilities go "underground" during junior high school (Silverman, 1986, p.69), and may adapt to their environments in other ways so that they will not appear gifted. Highly gifted girls need special encouragement and role models in order to understand and appreciate their own giftedness, to actualize their own potential as gifted women, and to balance the dual roles of gifted achiever and gifted nurturer (Kerr, 1985; Piechowski, 1988; Silverman * Kearney, 1989), should they choose both a career and family life.
Finally, highly gifted children may be affected by the ceiling effects of the tests they are given. For an extremely gifted child older than ten or eleven, even the Stanford-Binet Form L-M may not be able to completely measure his ability. On many tests, the older the child is when the test is administered, the less "room" there is on the test itself to demonstrate advanced ability; thus, an older child's score may not reflect the full extent of his giftedness.
Giftedness doesn't go away; only the contexts change throughout the lifespan. The issues of "general conduct" that Leta Hollingworth outlined more than fifty years ago follow highly gifted children right into adulthood.
Of all the special problems of general conduct which the most intelligent children face, I will mention five, which beset them in early years and may lead to habits subversive of fine leadership: (1) to find enough hard and interesting work at school; (2) to suffer fools gladly; (3) to keep from becoming negativistic toward authority; (4) to keep from becoming hermits; (5) to avoid the formation of habits of extreme chicanery (Hollingworth, 1942, p. 299)
Instead of learning to find enough hard and interesting work at school, the highly gifted adult must learn to find enough challenge in her daily tasks and in her life's work. She must learn to weigh the importance of issues, and to understand the limitations of others (and of herself) in the process. She must come to terms with the external authorities of adulthood-the supervisor at work, the tax laws, the mortgage payment-as well as the growing inner authority of her own conscience to find ways to use her abilities to advance society, rather than merely sustain it.
Intellectual giftedness doesn't go away. Instead, it influences development from infancy to old age. If you need further assistance in understanding the needs of highly gifted child, finding a support network of other parents and educators working with this population, or in understanding your own giftedness, please contact The Hollingworth Center for Highly Gifted Children, P.O. Box 464, South Casco, Maine, 04077 (Telephone: 207-655-3767).
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K, Here is the article. New research has shown, apparently, that gifted kids may have delayed gross motor skills more often than they have advanced motor skills, which was the case with my dd. (did not walk until 19 months). YOu can read the entire article at:
[url]http://www.gt-cybersource.org/Record.aspx?NavID=2_0&rid=11286[/url]
Developmental Differences in Highly Gifted Children
Research on intellectually gifted children, and particularly the highly gifted, reveals that even in early childhood they display significant differences from the developmental patterns observable in age-peers of average ability. The precocious development of speech, movement and reading are powerful indicators of possible giftedness. Of course, not every child who speaks, walks or reads early is even moderately gifted (Jackson, 1992), but when these skills appear at extremely early ages, and particularly when they appear in tandem, they are generally linked to unusually advanced intellectual development.
Early Development of Speech
Numerous researchers have noted the early development of speech and movement which is typical of moderately gifted children. Whereas the average age at which a child can be expected to utter her first meaningful word is around 12 months (Staines and Mitchell, 1982), the gifted child begins to speak, on average, some two months earlier. Furthermore, the stages of speech acquisition are passed through earlier and with greater rapidity than in the child of average ability. By 18 months the average child has a vocabulary of 3-50 words, but little attempt is made to link them into short phrases until the age of 2; however, in gifted children, linking words into phrases can commence as early as 12 months. Jersild (1960) noted that, at the age of 18 months, children of average ability were uttering a mean number of 1.2 words per "remark", whereas their gifted age-peers were uttering 3.7 words per "remark". By the age of 4-1/2 the difference was even more remarkable; the mean number of words per "remark" for average children was 4.6 words, while for the gifted it was 9.5.
Studies of highly gifted children record instances of linguistic precocity far beyond even that of the moderately gifted. The mean age at which 52 children of IQ 160+, studied by Gross (see Gross, 1993) uttered their first word was 9.1 months, with a standard deviation of 3.48. If two outliers are removed from this statistic (two brothers who spoke at 18 and 21 months respectively) the mean drops to 8.63 months with a much narrower standard deviation of 2.64. Eleven of these children spoke their first meaningful word (other than "mamma-dadda" babble) by the age of 6 months. Barbe (1964) studying children of IQ 148+, noted that the average age by which these children were speaking in sentences was 16 months.
The speech of some highly gifted children demonstrates quite remarkable fluency and complexity. Adam, one of Gross's subjects of IQ 160+, uttered his first word at 5 months and by two months later was talking in 3 and 4 word sentences. His mother recalls the astonishment of supermarket assistants as Adam, aged 7 months, gave a running commentary on the grocery items as she wheeled him past the shelves in the shopping cart. Peter, whose first word, spoken at 8 months, was "*****cat", surprised his parents at 18 months by announcing, "I think I'll have a quick shower." Roedell and her colleagues reported a 2-year-old who regularly used such complex sentences as "I want to take a look at this story to see what kinds of boys and girls it has in it" (Roedell, Jackson and Robinson, 1980).
It is this early and fluent command of language, linked to the cognitive precocity of the highly gifted, that gives rise to the love of wordplay which characterizes many highly gifted children - such as Steven's juggling with the alternate meanings of "pass".
Occasionally the speech of highly gifted children may be delayed, as in the case of the two brothers in Gross's study who did not speak until 18 months and 21 months respectively and whose mother was warned by their pediatrician that this might be indicative of intellectual disability. (Jonathan later tested at IQ 170 and Christopher at IQ 200!) In these situations, however, when speech does appear, it often arrives in the form of phrases or short sentences, rather than words in isolation. Robinson (1987) reports a young boy whose first utterance, at 20 months, was "Look! Squirrel eating birds' food!" It is important, therefore, to note that while unusually early speech is a powerful indicator of possible giftedness, delayed speech should not be taken as an indicator that the child is not gifted!
However, as will be discussed later, young gifted children who are verbally articulate may quickly learn to moderate their vocabulary at pre-school or in kindergarten if they sense disapproval from their classmates. Some even develop two vocabularies - one for home, the other for school (Gross, 1989) - and may even appear relatively inarticulate in the classroom.
Early Development of Mobility
Just as highly gifted children generally demonstrate an unusually rapid progression through the stages of speech development, the development of mobility may also arrive early and progress with unusual speed.
Even moderately gifted children tend to crawl, walk and run earlier than their age-peers (Terman, 1926; Witty, 1940) but highly gifted children may display even greater precocity. Silverman (1989b) describes a girl of 7 months who stood alone, climbed into chairs unassisted and navigated stairs by herself. Gross (1993) describes Rick, of IQ 162, who sat up by himself at 4-1/2 months, ran at 11 months and rode a two-wheeled bicycle unaided at age 3. The mean age at which Gross's subjects of IQ 160+ sat up unsupported was 6.1 months, as opposed to 7-8 months in the general population. The mean age at which they walked while supported was 10.1 months - 1-1/2 months earlier than the population mean - and the mean age at which they were walking independently was 12.1 months - fully 3 months earlier than is usual. Not only did these children become physically mobile at remarkably early ages, but the stages of skill development were traversed with exceptional speed.
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K, My dd is at my moms, pretend playing I am sure, and my darling son just awakened from his slumber, so I have to go. Three good books:
Guiding the Gifted Child
Gifted Children
Helping Gifted Children Soar (most beneficial for me.)
Check out Hoagies.org and you will find a wealth of information. Talk to you tomorrow.
Relevant when discussing happiness, school and pace. You can read the entire article (an Australian publication) at
[url]http://helendowland.terminus.net.au/Highly%20Gifted%20Children.htm[/url]
Children who are highly gifted intellectually are in a comparable situation; if possible it would be much more appropriate for them to go to school daily with other children of similar intelligence. Unfortunately this isn't yet possible because they're so statistically rare in our society that we don't have special classes or schools for them. But if special provision is made for them, by means of an Individual Education Program, then it's only natural for them, if they feel happy and confident about themselves as a person, and about their ability, to want to move ahead with their intellectual work, and function at the level of their ability, which will of course be well ahead of most other children.
Its important for parents and family to become comfortable with this, and not to feel that they are ғpushing their child. Ideally, unless the highly gifted child has already become very unhappy and confused about him or herself, it should be quite clear that the drive for knowledge and challenging intellectual and creative activities comes from the child her or himself. It's also important for parents and family not to get so excited about the child's wonderful achievements that they do start pushing the child to do things he or she doesn't really want to do.
All happy children naturally have strong curiosity and exploring instincts, which leads to interest in activities and topics outside those provided by their schoolwork. This is even more so for gifted children; school covers such a small proportion of the subjects of possible interest in life, and even those it does cover, in many cases it covers too superficially for gifted children, so their own activities outside school are very important. In the case of highly gifted children, this aspect is even more extreme; they will very likely have many personal projects and intense interests of their own, from early childhood, throughout their lives; in fact this can be used as a sort of barometer of their internal happiness and mental health. Allowing for personal differences, happy highly gifted children should have many personal projects and interests; ԓshould in the sense that if they donԒt it may be a sign that theyre seriously unhappy. It may very well be that their own projects and interests will be more important for highly gifted children than their primary and secondary school program Җ if they are a person who is going to become a high achiever in life, it may well be in one of their personal project or interest areas, rather than in one of their school subject areas.
To give gifted and especially highly gifted children as many options as possible for a rich and full intellectual life, I usually suggest that parents try to make sure, early in life, that their children have a very good chance to develop an interest in those areas which can provide virtually infinite pleasure, to the highest levels of achievement, one's whole life long - art, music, languages and literature, etc.
As a general educator (no specialization in gifted children or special education outside of my own children), I have routinely seen children in gifted programs who are unhappy and I was never sure why up until reading this information. My best girlfriend is a gifted educator (with a daughter who was identified as gifted at age 2) always remarked that the school system is not equipped to handle gifted children. The school system will normally have the child "work a few grade levels ahead" or send them out for numerous lessons in other classes but they never clearly fully allow the child to lead. SO many school districts' funding for special programs and services (as well as salaries and staffing) depend upon those gifted students' test scores (including special needs students).
I did have one other important observation in my girlfriend's class..........the fact that she had SEVERAL students who were highly functioning academically but would fall apart by something as having shoe laces that kept coming apart! She adores teaching gifted students and I learned a lot from simply hanging out in her classrooms during my breaks. Their schoolwork was astonishing, to say the least, but some were very aloof, or unaffectionate or weepy or even disturbed (one child had a habit of licking EVERYTHING and would routinely throw up due to severe stomach issues) and he had the HIGHEST IQ in the class. My girlfriend had a professor who used to say that there was a fine line between genius and insanity. I applaud those parents that know thier children well enough to fight for their individual needs! :D
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KL, I think HG people are just so different; their experience and brain function is so out of the ordinary that there are some super quirks that go with the territory. Sometimes I think a measure of success is how/if they were able to streamline those quirks into something that they love or interests them. But I think a harsh and odd humor seems rather standard. They now know that many HG people may be what they refer to as "twice gifted," an exceptional intelligence combined with a disability, as in the case of a "savant." My mom speculates that HG people understand the world so well and so quickly, the way we operate as a society that they become rather skeptical and jaded quite young at the overwhelming "sense" of it, the unfairness, the injustice, the doom for lack of a better word. Of course, it does not happen to everyone and I think there can be accepting it and living life or indulging the reality of one's experience, which I guess could lead to a dark abyss.
The emotional fragility is pretty common; we saw it in my dd very very young. When a child was injured at the playground, she cried, really cried, talked about it for days. She experienced utter awareness and empathy by 16 months. The emotions may just not be able to catch up with the mind ever, and they are doing two very separate things; I think levels of frustration can be high and escalate quickly when young, which is why major major "spirited" tantrums can occur regularly and over the smallest, craziest most insignificant stuff.
You always have something to contribute. Please share more experiences with us.