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Eales, Connie; de Paoli, Wendy – Gifted Education International, 1991
This paper examines possibilities in allowing accelerated progression of talented students in the New South Wales (Australia) education system. The concept of acceleration is supported by a review of the research evidence showing that accelerated students have usually been more successful than nonaccelerated peers. (DB)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Educational Philosophy
Robinson, Nancy M.; Noble, Kathleen D. – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1992
A variety of accelerative options for gifted high school students is described, including part-time college programs and full-time early entrance programs. The University of Washington's Transition School and Early Entrance Program is presented as an option for teenagers to enter university without attending high school at all. (DB)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Age Grade Placement, College School Cooperation
Peer reviewedLaBatte, Jill – Journal of American Indian Education, 1991
Learning activities that use visual art symbols enhance the creative and artistic potential of gifted and talented students; promote integration of thought and feeling and the development of multiple symbol systems. Proposes combining with Clark's integrative education model to improve the academic success of all American Indian students. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Art Activities, Art Expression, Creative Art
Duperrault, JoAnn Hunter – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1992
The Executive High School Internship Program in Tampa, Florida, involves gifted and talented high school seniors working for a semester as nonpaid administrative assistants in public or private sector organizations. The program's history, recruitment policies, placement practices, and monitoring are reviewed. (DB)
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Gifted, High School Seniors, High Schools
Peer reviewedCzeschlik, Tatiana; Rost, Detlef H. – Roeper Review, 1994
Fifty gifted children (age 10) were matched with 50 pupils of average intelligence on gender and socioeconomic status. Data on personality and socioemotional behavior from three sources (children, parents, and teachers) did not reveal even one gender-by-giftedness interaction. (JDD)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Elementary Education, Emotional Adjustment, Gifted
Peer reviewedThorkildsen, Theresa A. – Roeper Review, 1994
Two studies of high ability students' communal notions about the purposes of school and the fairness of classroom practices suggest that the moral and intellectual development of high ability students would be best fostered by collaborative learning practices and by educational programs that encourage them to seek knowledge that will be of value…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Competition, Cooperative Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedRuder, Robert – Middle School Journal, 1994
Providing additional academic challenges to gifted middle schoolers can be demanding, considering their involvement in multitudinous activities. A Pennsylvania school developed a three-prong approach that provides more rigorous curricular content and adopts the group instruction method favored by music departments and the one-on-one technique used…
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Gifted, Individualized Education Programs, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedColeman, Laurence J.; Sanders, Michael D. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 1993
Gifted and talented adolescents have two primary social needs: to have normal social interaction with others and to develop an identity as a person who is gifted and talented. The choices an individual makes are always influenced by personal needs in a social context. Gifted children are members of a subgroup--the gifted--which has negative and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Gifted, Identification (Psychology), Interaction
Peer reviewedMarquardt, Ronald G.; Karnes, Frances A. – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 1994
This article reviews activities of the Office for Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Education involving programs for gifted students from 1985 through 1991. Analysis of 48 letters of findings identified issues involved, protected classes, geographic regions involved, and results of investigations. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Conflict Resolution, Due Process, Educational Discrimination
Meeker, Mary – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1991
Long-documented gaps between male and female performance on tests of spatial mathematics ability are discussed. Possible explanations are offered, and suggestions are put forth for cultivating spatial relationships ability in girls through sports and other activities. (PB)
Descriptors: Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Mathematical Concepts
Trede, Mildred – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1991
This article presents activities for helping gifted students learn about caring, sharing, and charity, with projects in the areas of language arts, social studies, science, and mathematics. Teachers' notes are also included. (PB)
Descriptors: Altruism, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Humanitarianism
Peer reviewedDark, Veronica J.; Benbow, Camilla Persson – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Two experiments compared the working memory performance of 77 highly gifted seventh and eighth graders (13 and 14 Years ole) with verbal or mathematical precocity, or both. Different types of intellectual talent correlate with different working memory characteristics and differences in how digit and word stimuli are represented in memory. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Adolescents, Encoding (Psychology), Grade 7
Peer reviewedMcClelland, Robert; And Others – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 1991
This study, with 87 underachieving and 77 achieving gifted students in grades 6-9, found that general locus of control measures did not differentiate between the 2 groups, that both scored significantly higher on positive internal than on negative internal locus of control, and that there were no gender or grade effects. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Gifted, High Achievement
Jeon, Kyung-Won; And Others – Gifted Education International, 1992
A survey of 98 educators of the gifted in South Dakota indicated that respondents viewed gifted females as self-confident, having nontraditional career plans, experiencing deeper satisfaction from their talents, having a greater interest in science and math, worrying about success and failure equally, and being more global in their problem solving…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Females, Problem Solving, Rural Education
Accommodating Both Group and Individual Differences among the Gifted. ADAPT: A Diagnostic Technique.
Armstrong, Dorothy – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1992
The "Armstrong Diagnostic and Prescriptive Technique" of curriculum modification involves modifying the curriculum, first, to accommodate the shared learning characteristics of gifted students and, second, to accommodate individual differences. Use of the technique and checklist are illustrated by a case study. (DB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Curriculum Development, Diagnostic Teaching, Elementary Secondary Education


