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Characteristics Of Gifted Students

Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

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Page 1: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Characteristics Of Gifted Students

Page 2: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Characteristics Of Gifted Students

Chapter 2

May Alessa

Stephanie Livingston

Page 3: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

- Cognitive and language ability- Interests- Learning styles- Motivation and energy- Personality- Mental health and self-concept- Habits and behavior- Background and experience (32)

GT kids differ from one another in…

Page 4: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Terman studies based on “usual”

• …traits that have appeared and reappeared in studies of gifted children and adults.

• These traits will not and cannot apply to each gifted child.

• Biased study-group (teacher nominations)

(32)

Page 5: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Terman Studies

• Psychologist at Stanford – pioneer of educational psychology in the 20th century.

• His studies showed that gifted students were not only more intelligent but better adjusted psychologically, socially, and physically.

• His studies did not include the “undesirables.” Teachers nominated students for the studies that they deemed “gifted.”

• Relationship between giftedness and health and socioeconomic level – In his studies, students who were gifted were born healthier.

(32-34)

Page 6: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Traits of Intellectually Gifted Children

Page 7: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Precocious Language and Thought

• Intellectually gifted students are developmentally advanced in language and thought.

• They express higher mental age compared with their chronological age.

• Asynchronous development characterized by advanced cognitive abilities.

• Mental development outstrips their chronological (physical) development.

(35)

Page 8: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

ACTIVITY

Page 9: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Logical Thinking

• Gifted students have quick and logical thinking process.

• They are characterized with natural curiosity and urge to learn.

• They articulate higher levels of internal control and personal responsibility.

• High expectations and perfectionism also set them apart from other students.

(35-36)

Page 10: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

ACTIVITY

Page 11: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Early Math, Art, and Music

• Definition – early appearance of advanced mathematical, artistic, and musical abilities

• Examples – Kindergartener counting by 5s and 10s and adding and

subtracting 2-digit numbers– 5-year old blind child with perfect pitch and the ability to

play Beethoven on the piano• Musical giftedness appears as early as age 1 or 2• Might be hindered by slower-developing motor ability

– Student who learns to draw at an early age, has superior visual memory, and sees the world less conceptually and more in terms of shapes and visual surfaces

(36)

Page 12: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Motivation, Persistence, Advanced Interest

• Definition – productive gifted students have higher motivation with persistence

• High motivation + curiosity, advanced comprehension and logical abilities = advanced accomplishments – Due in large part to family values

(36)

Page 13: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Affective Characteristics

Page 14: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Social Skills, Personal Adjustment, Self-Concept

Terman Studies• Bias study group (teacher

selected)• Students had high mental

health• Better adjustment for

those who don’t feed extremely different – Level of giftedness

Leta Hollingworth• Troubled gifted students • Too smart and too different• IQ above 180 (140-160 – well

adjusted)• Disliked and rejected• In need of “emotional

education”– Fully aware that they are

disliked and rejected (Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory)

(36-38)

Page 15: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Independence, Self-Confidence, Internal Control

• High level of self-confidence and independence– Stems from comparison with “average” peers,

teacher/parent praise, and history of success• Internal Control vs External Control

– Confident. Feel responsible for success and failure. In control of their destiny. Set high goals.• Disappointment, frustration, self-criticism.

Comparing to their own high-expectations and perfectionism.

– Contribute success/failure to luck or chance and/or teacher generosity. Does not accept responsibility.

(38)

Page 16: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Preferred styles

Intellectually gifted students are noted for their preferred styles of learning, instruction, thinking, and expression. They are keen in selecting various styles that enable them to grasp lessons in no time. They prefer styles that match the frequent characteristics of high motivation, persistence, self-confidence, independence and high internal control.

(38-40)

Page 17: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Preferred styles of instruction

• Self-motivated learners more than teacher motivated.• Pursuing active participant approach to learning

rather than spectator approaches.• Lecture tied with drill and recitation, discussion,

demonstration, small group discussion, peer tutoring, co-operative learning , field trips, learning centers, learning games, electronic learning, simulation/role playing, projects, mentorships, and independent study.

Page 18: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Preferred styles of expression

• Regarding the styles of expression, intellectually gifted students seek variations.

• It includes written style, oral, manipulative, discussion, display, dramatization, artistic, graphic, commercial, or service types of demonstrations of learning.

Page 19: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Thinking style preferences

• Intellectually gifted students prefer triarchic categories of thinking, namely, analytic, synthetic and practical giftedness.

Page 20: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Superior Humor

• Majority of the gifted students are quick witted.• Their humor springs from their to think quickly and

see relationships and from general confidence and social adeptness.

(40)

Page 21: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

High Moral Thinking and Empathy

• Sensitive to values and moral issues.• Intuitively understand ‘good’ and ‘bad’ behaviors.• Not ego-centric, but are able to see a situation from

another person’s point of view. (40-

41)

Page 22: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Characteristics of the Creatively Gifted:

Page 23: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Creativity and Intelligence: The Threshold Concept

• Relationship between creativity and intelligence– Threshold concept: a base level of intelligence usually is essential for

creative productivity; above that threshold there is virtually no relationship between measured intelligence and creativity.

• Highly creative and highly intelligent students did equally well in course work – teachers preferred the highly intelligent.

• GT tests will miss a majority of creative students• Teachers nominate well-behaved, conforming, neat, dutiful

students rather than highly creative, unconventional students.

• Less visible due to the lack of application of creativity in some content areas

• Contribution to society will surpass intelligently gifted students

(41)

Page 24: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Personality and cognitive characteristics

• One of the notable features of the character of intellectually gifted children is their intuitive understanding of a creative person.

• Another notable personality characteristic is their high energy and motivation.

• Sometimes described as impulsive, overactive (even hyperactive), enthusiastic, excitable, spontaneous, persistent, preserving, adventurous.

Page 25: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Other Traits and Some Negative Traits

Page 26: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

• Understanding Creative Students– Likes to work by himself or herself– Is a “what if” person– Sees relationships– Is full of ideas– Possesses high verbal, conversational fluency– Constructs, builds, rebuilds– Copes with several ideas at once– Is irritated and bored by the routine – Goes beyond assigned tasks– Enjoys telling about his or her discoveries or

inventions– Finds ways of doing things differently from

standard procedures– Is not afraid to try something new– Does not mind consequences of appearing

different(42-43)

Page 27: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Stereotypical characters can ensnare teachers and parents

• Typical characteristics of gifted children can confuse teachers and parents.

• Teachers make the mistake of assuming that gifted children who are not self-directed, persevering, and motivated should not be considered gifted.

• Parents often misunderstand the undesirable character of their children as giftedness.

Page 28: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

Characteristics of the Teachers of the

Gifted

Page 29: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

• Teachers should be competent, skilled and should have knowledge rather than personal traits to teach gifted students.

• Competencies needed to teach gifted math and science students should be different from teaching art, music or literature students.

• Personal-social character of teachers are more important than intellectual qualities.

Page 30: Chapter 2 May Alessa Stephanie Livingston -Cognitive and language ability -Interests -Learning styles -Motivation and energy -Personality -Mental health

ACTIVITY