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Gifted Children
There
has been much discussion on the difficult child. Let’s look
at the gifted child. Not to imply that gifted children aren't
difficult ... as a matter of fact, I hold the belief that most
difficult children are probably gifted and therein lies a part of
their social problem. For clarity, let's refer to the gifted child in
this article as the one who excels at academics and extra curricular
activities of an extraordinary nature. My
older daughter has a friend, Megan, who is highly gifted ... highly
gifted being a step grander than gifted in the public
school system. In her special class, she has massive amounts of
homework, incredibly difficult assignments and a rigorous school
schedule, including mandatory extra hours. Her after school
activities include piano lessons, singing lessons (she's great!) and
any other challenging activity she can persuade her parents to pay
for. Megan is an incredible child ... sweet, personable and
kindhearted. We rally round her with each new accomplishment. This is
a child who clearly shines in her highly gifted classes and is happy
to be there. My
older daughter is very bright, too. OK, bragging but she really is!
;-) She was pegged by her preschool teachers as destined for
the gifted groups in elementary school. Well, turns out she was never tested,
which, in California, must be done only on the request of her
teachers. She graduates with honors each year but her social life is
much too important to her and she has never shown the focus or passion
for learning that other gifted and highly gifted children we know have
demonstrated. I've
come to the conclusion that gifted children have a burning desire to
achieve academic excellence, whether in a competitive atmosphere or
not. One gifted child we know had taught himself to read at two years
of age, learned a foreign language (French) by age 4 and loved nothing
more than to read historical novels and advanced math books. By age
11, he had acquired an amount of knowledge that most of us would be
happy to acquire in a lifetime. Highly
gifted children can be found in all walks of life, in any economic
class and from parents who are themselves high achievers or not. These
are children who are born to learn, excel and accomplish. There is
also the consideration of the child who is gifted in more subjective
or artistic talents, not necessarily academic, but gifted nonetheless.
These children are not as often identified but need as much
stimulation and advanced learning as academic achievers. For parents or caretakers, there is a responsibility that goes with the nurturing of such a personality. These children need to be intellectually stimulated more than average and need greater outlets for their mental creativity. Sometimes, parents of these kids are hard-pressed to keep up, either financially or intellectually. The more parents and caretakers can offer these remarkable young ones, the greater their chance of reaching their potential as outstanding individuals in our society. Copyright – 2000-2004 – Rexanne Mancini
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rexanne
Mancini is the mother of two daughters, Justice and Liberty. She is a
novelist, freelance writer and maintains an extensive yet informal
parenting and family web site, Rexanne.com – http://www.rexanne.com
-Visit her site for good advice, award-winning Internet holiday pages
and some humor to help you cope. Subscribe to her free newsletter,
Rexanne’s Web Review, for a monthly dose of Rexanne: http://www.rexanne.com/rwr-archives.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This article is available, free, for reprint with my bio line included. Please contact me for information on how you can feature this article on your web site: Click here: Reprint Permission - You may also request an email version of this article by sending any blank email to: Gifted Children Article |
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