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Robert J. Sternberg – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2024
This article proposes a duplex model for understanding giftedness. The first part of the duplex is the set of gifted skills and attitudes that one possesses as a result of heredity, the environment, and their interaction. It is the input that one has acquired from one's life experiences. The second part of the duplex is the utilization or…
Descriptors: Gifted, Individual Characteristics, Ability, Models
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Gilson, Cindy M.; Lee, Lindsay E. – Gifted Child Today, 2023
Educators have the responsibility to meet the academic, social, and emotional needs of every child in their care, including students who are gifted or high-achieving from diverse backgrounds. For gifted students to thrive in the differentiated classroom, teachers can consider the ways in which they establish and promote positive affective,…
Descriptors: Gifted, Academically Gifted, Student Diversity, Educational Environment
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Farnaz Mehdipour Maralani; Steven Pfeiffer – Gifted Education International, 2025
This paper explores the social-emotional challenges faced by bright immigrant youth. We incorporate Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory to identify complexities across the model's 5 layers. In the microsystem, cultural heritage conflicts with assimilation, disrupting support networks, suggesting the need for culturally sensitive support in…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Minority Group Students, Academically Gifted, Gifted Education
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Fleith, Denise S.; Pereira, Nielsen; Alencar, Eunice M. L. S. – Gifted Education International, 2022
For more than 90 years, terminology related to giftedness in Brazil has evolved, proliferating terms used to describe gifted individuals. Terms such as "superdotado" (the common translation of "gifted" into Portuguese) may lead lay people to think of gifted students as only those with extremely high ability or extraordinary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gifted, Vocabulary, Academically Gifted
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Tirri, Kirsi – Gifted Education International, 2022
Giftedness in the Finnish educational culture is seen as taboo, and it is easier to talk about talent development. We need to widen the concept in the ways that would address both excellence and ethics. The definition of transformational giftedness includes a beyond-the-self orientation and implies that the purpose of giftedness is to help to make…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academically Gifted, Gifted, Talent Development
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2023
This article reviews the implications of many of the major schools in the history of psychology for understanding giftedness and its inner workings: operationist, psychometric, psychoanalytic, associationist, behaviorist, Gestalt, cognitive, humanistic/positive psychology, functionalist/pragmatic/constructivist, cultural, and biological. Each…
Descriptors: Psychology, Models, Individual Characteristics, Gifted
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2022
The field of giftedness legitimates itself on the basis of correlations of gifted-identification measures with future success that do not mean what they often are taken to mean. When one views the inadequacies of these correlations, the field turns out to be much like the emperor who had no clothes. This essay reviews some of the assumptions upon…
Descriptors: Gifted, Academically Gifted, Talent Identification, Construct Validity
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Glaveanu, Vlad; Kaufman, James C. – Gifted Education International, 2022
What is the aim of giftedness? Is the goal to narrow in on the gifts of a select few or to nurture everyone's gifts such that they may be exchanged with each other? Drawing from creativity theory, we emphasize the possible interactive element of giftedness. Current paradigms risk ignoring hidden creativities and for potential to remain in the…
Descriptors: Gifted, Creativity, Cooperation, Models
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Robert J. Sternberg; Maren Stern – Roeper Review, 2025
Just as children have fairly consistent attachment styles toward parents, we argue that parents have fairly consistent attachment styles toward children. It generally will be easiest for gifted children to develop their gifts and display them successfully if their parents were securely attached to them. But the children who have experienced…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Attachment Behavior, Gifted, Child Development
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Gentry, Marcia – Gifted Education International, 2022
This essay offers six reasons why the field of gifted education should retire the terms giftedness and gifted. Additionally, in the historical context of longstanding, severe, and pervasive racial and income inequities in the field of gifted education, the term Master's Discourse is introduced and defined in this call to change terminology. Among…
Descriptors: Gifted Education, Gifted, Equal Education, Low Income
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Sternberg, Robert J.; Karami, Sareh – Gifted Education International, 2022
Gifts can be individually, dyadically, or collectively chosen and oriented. Society, in its identification of the gifted, has chosen to focus on individual and sometimes dyadic goods. This practice represents a culture of individualism, but it has become solipsistic. We argue that identification instead should focus on those most likely to help to…
Descriptors: Gifted, Definitions, Individualism, Collectivism
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Anne Van de Vijver; Sven Mathijssen – Roeper Review, 2024
High ability and talent development literature present different and sometimes competing or contradictory goals for talent development. One side emphasizes that talents should be developed to enable individuals with high abilities to make societal contributions, while the other side focuses on the individual's personal life goals. This article…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Talent Development, Ability, Theories
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Rachelle M. Johnson – Grantee Submission, 2023
There has been relentless debate as to whether dyslexia is a gift, and specifically, if dyslexics are more creative than the average person, despite established research evidence that there is no difference in creativity between those with and without dyslexia. With this paper, I outline that this conversation is not that simple, and one must…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Attitudes, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Sevan G. Terzian; Hannah Williams – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
In 1972, the United States Office of Education (USOE) released a lengthy and unprecedented report about gifted education in response to a Congressional mandate. Both Congress and the USOE lamented the inadequate state of gifted programmes in American schools and urged that gifted education should become a greater national priority. In this essay,…
Descriptors: Educational History, United States History, Disadvantaged, Children
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Tracy L. Cross – Gifted Child Today, 2024
The author focuses on positive psychology as an important approach to supporting the psychological well-being of students with gifts and talents. Research has identified protective factors that can counteract risk factors for suicidal behavior. These protective factors may be found within the individual, the family, peers, the school, the…
Descriptors: Student Welfare, Gifted, At Risk Students, Suicide
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