Social & Emotional Needs of the Gifted, Adults and Children
"SOCIAL & EMOTIONAL NEEDS OF THE GIFTED (ADULTS AND CHILDREN)"
by Deborah L. Ruf , written as a speech hand-out, 1994
Basic needs do not vary from one individual to another; the ways to meet
those needs, however, varies from one person to another. All of us need love and
acceptance, and a sense of purpose and fulfillment. It is my goal to help people
understand how high intellectual functioning affects children and their
development. I believe that once parents, teachers, and others who have
influences over children’s lives know what these bright children need in order
to flourish and become emotionally healthy, fulfilled, productive adults, they
will gladly give it.
Any differences we have from those around us affect their perception of us.
In our times of political-correctness we are loath to imply that intellectual
giftedness is the same as intellectually superiority. We use terms including
“able learners,” “academically advanced,” “bright,” and so on. The term “gifted”
implies that the person thus “blessed” was given special intellectual tools. One
must earn the gift through hard work, accomplishment, and good attitude. Many
people view high intelligence with a mixture of fear, interest, admiration,
resentment, contempt, suspicion, and appreciation. Most of us are familiar with
the sometimes rather delighted observation, “Even though he was really smart as
a kid, he hasn’t amounted to anything.”
An intellectually gifted child begins life receiving feedback that she is a
surprising delight to her family. She receives positive feedback for her speech
and vocabulary and for how quickly she figures things out and learns to do
things. I believe many gifted people spend much of their remaining life trying
to recreate this positive feedback and wondering what they are doing wrong.
This is one of the reasons I believe people should be given clear feedback on
their giftedness. In most any other aspect of life we are willing to discuss
openly with people their assorted handicaps and strengths. It is unhealthy to
pretend there is nothing wrong or different, that we don’t notice these
differences. It is certainly preferable to try to address and talk about the
impact it can and does have on the individual’s life. Then, the adult can guide
the child to problem-solve ways to cope and adjust, work on how to play up
strengths and positives, and move on from there.
Sylvia Rimm (1986) and Susan Winebrenner (1994) make the connection between
good self-esteem and the opportunity to engage in challenging learning. “The
surest path to high self-esteem is to be successful at something the learner has
perceived to be difficult. Each time we steal a student’s struggle, we steal the
opportunity for him or her to feel capable by stretching to reach worthwhile
goals.” Ms. Winebrenner specializes in meeting the needs of gifted learners in
the inclusion classroom through a combination of curriculum compacting,,
differentiating, pre-testing and individual lessons and projects. She gives many
examples and samples and tries to make it sound like do-able fun. I used to
teach this way, and it was challenging, fun, and rewarding. It takes lots of
organization, follow-through, time, and effort. We must convince teachers that
some children really do need special attention before they will go to that much
effort.
I favor ability grouping and clustering for the average gifted child, not a
universally popular notion, but one supported by the research literature. Kulik
and Kulik (1984, 1990) and Rogers (1991) have conducted meta-analyses on
grouping research results. The bottom line statistic when all the research is
pooled indicates that there is no harm to anyone in either self-esteem or
achievement. When schools go from heterogeneous to ability-grouped instruction,
the kids in the slower two-thirds show slight achievement gains, and they show
slight to no increase in academic attitude and self-esteem. How the grouped
highest third reacts depends on what they receive by way of instruction. If the
curriculum content and delivery are not modified to meet the ability levels of
the students, the achievement gain is slight. When appropriately paced and
challenging material is presented, high ability grouped students make
significant gains over their comparably gifted, non-grouped peers. Their
self-esteem scores take a slight initial dip, but recover as the students adjust
to the challenge.
Grouping and clustering can be done informally or formally. The principal can
assign children to classrooms based on demonstrated academic ability and
performance. Teachers can cluster or group among themselves at grade level. Kids
can be sent to higher or lower grades for instruction with other children who
are working at a similar instructional level. The primary advantage of grouping
over compacting and differentiating is that it is less work for the teacher. It
takes less time and preparation. When a grade level team divides the children
into ability groups for a particular subject, each teacher plans for just one
level. Differentiation and individualizing can still take place within that
group if the teacher feels the need and chooses to do so.
There are obvious advantages to an ability-grouped approach. The teacher can
assign more complex material, work at a faster pace, and work on such skills as
time-management and organizational skills for the rapid learners. The children
have less reason to exhibit their impatience and lack of tact with the poor
readers and slower learners. A big problem with non-ability grouped classes is
the lack of tolerance the brightest kids seem to show for the least able
learners. In young gifted children who have not had the time to learn about and
understand these differences, it is natural that their responses and
observations would appear insensitive and rude. “Why,” they wonder, “am I not
supposed to notice when so-and-so reads worse than I did when I was in
preschool, and the teacher tells him, ‘very, good, Johnny,’ and tells me to be
quiet?” Young gifted children do not yet see the big picture, and sometimes we
make it very hard for them indeed. In an ability grouped classroom we can more
easily give the gifted child that positive feedback all human beings crave,
without worrying about hurting someone else’s feelings or treating the gifted
child as a pet student.
Clusters are small groups within a classroom. Clusters are intended to be for
the two or three children who have demonstrated such superior learning abilities
that it is clear most of the regular classroom material and pace is
inappropriate. Typically, these two or three children are spread out across the
grade level and need to be either assigned to the same teacher or brought
together periodically during the day for instruction together. These are the
children who are more than moderately gifted. I must add here that there really
are some rare individuals who won’t even fit in a grade level cluster,
especially in elementary school. Their reading and comprehension skills, and
sometimes mathematics reasoning abilities, so far outpace other children that
the early school years can be quite painful for the child, the parents, and the
teachers.
Home is an important place for all of us. Gifted children need the same basic
parenting as any other child. Because it is harder to find age-mates who can be
soul-mates, gifted kids often prefer the company of their parents to that of
other children. Many parents, themselves survivors of a difficult gifted
childhood, are thrilled to be developing such a close, wonderful relationship
with their child. Danger. Enmeshment is more damaging for the child than the
adult. When you talk to your child the way you would a friend, you violate
adult-child boundaries. The child can take on a peer or even spousal position.
This robs the child of his childhood. Gifted children are often so eager to
please and to accept responsibility that it is difficult for the parent to see
this problem coming. The long-range damage includes eventual adult relationship
problems for the grown child as well as an inability to separate from parents in
a healthy emotional sense. What do you do instead?
Maintain your own healthy adult relationships. Don’t become over-invested in
your child. Parents should be raising their children together, not taking sides
with the child against each other. (That’s whether you’re together or not.) Have
an outside social life. Family activities are good, activities with just the
parent and the child are good, but encourage and facilitate friendships and
activities for your children. Guide your children toward involvement in sports,
lessons, music, classes at the zoo or museum, scouts, church or synagogue
activities. Make it clear to your children that although they are an important
part of your life, you have important parts of your life that do not include
them. Encourage them to do the same. Then, most important, believe it yourself
and act on it.
Gifted children, like all children, need responsibilities. Give your bright
child household chores and expectations. Increase your expectations as the child
matures. It is important for the child to see himself as a whole, competent,
independent person. Let him budget his time for activities, chores, homework,
play. When he budgets that time poorly, follow up as quickly as possible. “You
didn’t leave time before school to make your bed. You’ll have to come straight
home from school to do it before you go out to play” (...or have your snack, or
play computer, etc.). Even the most brilliant person needs love, companionship,
and relationships. Be sure to teach your child how to function accordingly.
Paying other people to do things for us is not fulfilling and does not create
intimacy. No matter how successful your child may eventually be, he will be
well-prepared if he knows how to get down to basics and take care of himself and
others personally.
Prepare your child to find happiness in the real world. Being polite,
sensitive and patient are all valuable character traits, even for doctors,
business executives, movie moguls, scientists, neighbors, parents, and spouses.
Help your child find balance. It is a mistake to think a gifted child should
be good at everything. Just like anyone else, it is pleasurable and gratifying
to develop our best areas. It is not necessary or advisable to make the gifted
child bring deficient areas up to her best talent areas, unless the deficient
area is below an age-appropriate level. Legible handwriting is important.
Following directions is necessary in life. If your child resists certain
activities, ask yourself why you care. Is the activity something your child
really needs, or simply something you want for some reason? I believe it’s
reasonable to tell a non-athletic child that physical fitness is important. You
may reasonably insist that your child brainstorm physical activities with you
and select from the list. Brainstorm a frequency schedule and have the child
help decide her schedule. Gifted children respond well to research results,
facts, and statistics. Use them to guide the child into activities you know are
important, i.e., fresh air, sunshine, exercise, or challenging reading to
develop denser dendritic connections.
Finally, give your child space. Over-scheduled children do not have time to
process what they are seeing, reading, feeling, thinking, and learning.
Sometimes educators suggest getting your child in challenging activities outside
of school time. Be careful not to overdo it or let your child overdo it. We grow
and gain maturity during our alone time, our down times. It is when we get to
know ourselves. Model that behavior yourself. If you are over-busy, you are
sacrificing your own growth. Psychologists say that chronically tired, over-busy
people are running away from self-examination. Take the time to integrate all
that you are learning into the person you are constantly becoming. That may be
the greatest gift you can give your gifted child. Have a good time.
References
Kulik, C-L. C., & Kulik, J. (1984). Effects of ability grouping on
elementary school pupils: A meta-analysis. Paper presented at the annual
meeting of the American Psychological Association, Ontario, Canada.
Kulik, J.A., & Kulik, C-L. C. (1990). Ability grouping and gifted students.
In N. Colangelo & G. A. Davis (Eds.)
Handbook of gifted education (pp. 178-196). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Rimm, S. (1986).
Underachievement syndrome: Causes and cures. Watertown, WI: Apple
Publishing.
Rogers, K. B. (1991).
The relationship of
grouping practices to the education of the gifted and talented learner.
The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented, 9101, 11-18.
Winebrenner, S. (1994). How gifted kids can survive in “inclusion”
classrooms. Understanding Our Gifted 6(6),1, 8-11.