1 / 15

Why Aren’t All Gifted Kids Alike? …what accounts for differences in achievement?

Why Aren’t All Gifted Kids Alike? …what accounts for differences in achievement?. Learning Goals . What is the difference between high ability and high achievement? What causes highly able students to underachieve?

jada
Download Presentation

Why Aren’t All Gifted Kids Alike? …what accounts for differences in achievement?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Why Aren’t All Gifted Kids Alike?…what accounts for differences in achievement?

  2. Learning Goals • What is the difference between high ability and high achievement? • What causes highly able students to underachieve? • What “secrets” can parents learn in order to help their gifted child (continue to) be a high achiever?

  3. High ability:Much higher than average capacity to learn and master academic content High Achievement:Outstanding mastery of taught academic content High Ability does not always = High Achievement!!!

  4. Highly Able (“gifted”) Mastery of content may require very little effort, and very few repetitions – “absorbs” learning May display obsessive need to master specific content May be unconventional and resistant to a system Internal/external characteristics may lead to underachievement High Achieving Usually works hard to master content, and may appreciate repeated opportunities to engage Drive to achieve, within a given system Usually works well within a system Excellent grades Both highly able and high achieving students show interest and excitement about learning . But…

  5. What causes highly able students to underachieve?

  6. Egocentrism • Normal and natural self interests due to brain growth • Unawareness of, and inability to appreciate, individual differences in ability • Unable to see themselves changing – attribute changes to others • Others’ needs for repetition not understood or appreciated

  7. Perfectionism • Constant praise for ability generates both a need for perfection and a fear of inability to be perfect • Value shifts from learning to comparison • Fear of failure and comparison may lead to unwillingness to engage, or deliberate self-sabotage • Imposter syndrome

  8. Need for self-efficacy • Different from self-esteem • Being vs. Doing • Drive to learn, with independence from adults • Individuation • Success with independent thinking

  9. Asynchrony • Differences in cognitive, physical, emotional, social maturity • Young people show more amygdala activity than adults, and little prefrontal cortex activity • Appear to effectively inhibit task-irrelevant sensory input • May misinterpret or fail to deduce emotional information from nonverbal signals

  10. Need for affiliation/social acceptance • Not comfortable with differences – don’t want to be recognized for giftedness • But awareness of being different • Need for cognitive peers; possible discomfort with age peers • Stress raises the amygdala’s affective filter

  11. What “secrets” can parents learn, to help their gifted child (continue to) be a high achiever?

  12. For your knowledge… • Zone of proximal development – connect your child with others of like development/readiness • Focus beyond “smartness” • Look for ways to enrich learning and interests – increase motivation to find out • Choice is a best practice • Avoid comparisons and win/lose situations • Fine line between encouragement and pressure • Acceptance ≠ Tolerance (of inappropriate behavior)

  13. With your child… • Honesty is the best policy – address high ability in learning, asynchrony, perfectionism, etc. • Individual differences are valuable, and individuals should be valued, apart from their achievements • Provide specific praise about actions and products – not persons • Discuss ideas and encourage learning – biographies • Choice and realistic goal-setting • Listen and accept

More Related