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Helping Your Highly Gifted Child (page 6)

Educational Resource Information Center (U.S. Department of Education)

Conclusion

Raising a highly gifted child may be ecstasy, agony and everything between. Adults must perform almost impossible feats of balance - supporting a child's gifts without pushing, valuing without overinvesting, championing without taking over. It is costly, physically and emotionally draining, and intellectually demanding. In the first flush of pride, few parents realize that their task is in many ways similar to the task faced by parents of a child with severe handicaps. Our world does not accommodate differences easily, and it matters little whether the difference is perceived to be a deficit or an overabundance.

We have covered only a few issues in this space, but the most important help you can give your highly gifted child or children can be expressed in a single sentence: Give them a safe home, a refuge where they feel love and genuine acceptance, even of their differences. As adults with a safe home in their background, they can put together lives of productivity and fulfillment.

Resources

Boyer, A. (1989). Surviving the blessing: Parenting the highly gifted child. Understanding our Gifted, 1 (3), pp. 5, 17, 20-21.

Dirks, J. (1979). Parents' reactions to identification of the gifted. Roeper Review, 2 (2), 9-10.

Feldman, D. H., with Goldsmith, L. T. (1986). Nature's gambit: Child Prodigies and the development of hu- man potential. New York: Basic Books.

Grost, A. (1970). Genius in Residence. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.

Higham, S., & Buescher, T. M. (1987). What young gifted adolescents understand about feeling different. In T. M. Buescher (Ed.), Understanding gifted and talented adolescents (pp. 26-30). Evanston, IL: The Center for Talent Development, Northwestern University.

Hollingworth, L. S. (1942). Children above 180 IQ Stanford-Binet: Origin and Development. Yonkers- on-Hudson, NY: World Book.

Janos, P. M., Marwood, K. A. & Robinson, N. M. (1985). Friendship patterns in high intelligent children. Roeper Review, 8 (1), 46-49.

Janos, P. M. & Robinson, N. M. (1985). The performance of students in a program of radical acceleration at the university level. Gifted Child Quarterly, 29 (4), 175- 179.

Kearney, K. (1989). Home schooling gifted children. Understanding Our Gifted, 1 (3), pp. 1, 12-13, 15-16.

Kline, B. E. & Meckstroth, E. A. (1985). Understanding and encouraging the exceptionally gifted. Roeper Review, 8 (1), 24-30.

Lewis, G. (1984). Alternatives to acceleration for the highly gifted child. Roeper Review, 6 (3), 133-136.

Powell, P. M., & Haden, T. (1987). The intellectual and psychosocial nature of extreme giftedness. Roeper Review, 6 (3), 127-130.

Silverman, L. K. (1989). The highly gifted. In J. F. Feldhusen, J. VanTassel-Baska, & K. R. Seeley (Eds.), Excellence in educating the gifted (pp. 71-83). Denver: Love.

Silverman, L. K. & Kearney, K. (1989). Parents of the ex- traordinarily gifted. Advanced Development, 1, 41-56.

Tolan, S. S. (1982). An open letter to parents, teachers and others: From parents of an exceptionally gifted child. In Webb, J. T., Meckstroth, E. A. & Tolan, S. S. Guiding the gifted child. Columbus, OH: Ohio Psychology Publishing Co.

Tolan, S. S. (1989). Special problems of young highly gifted children. Understanding Our Gifted, 1 (5), 1, 7- 10.

Tolan, S. S. (1985 Jan.). Stop accepting, start demanding! Gifted Child Monthly 6 (1), p.6.

Tolan, S. S. (1985 Nov/Dec). Stuck in another dimension: The exceptionally gifted child in school. G/C/T (41), 22-26.

Webb. J. T., Meckstroth, E. A. & Tolan, S. S. (1982). Guiding the gifted child. Columbus, OH: Ohio Psychology Publishing Co.

Copyright, 1989, Stephanie S. Tolan. Properly attributed, this material may be reproduced. Stephanie Tolan is a noted author of children's books and one of the authors of Guiding the Gifted Child.

 

 

ERIC digests are in the public domain and may be freely reproduced and disseminated, but please acknowledge your source. This publication was prepared with funding from the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, under Contract No. RI88062207. The opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of OERI or the Department of Education.

 

 

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