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| Understanding Gifted Education and Talent Development | |
| Gifted Education and Talent Development | p. 3 |
| The Mission of and the Rationale for Gifted Education and Talent Development | p. 4 |
| A Mission of Excellence and Equity | p. 5 |
| A Rationale | p. 6 |
| Excellence, Equity, and Gifted and Talented Learners | p. 9 |
| Interest in Educating Gifted Learners | p. 9 |
| Barriers to Appropri... MORE | p. 19 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 25 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 27 |
| The Concepts of Intelligence, Giftedness, Talent, and Talent Development | p. 28 |
| The Concept of Intelligence | p. 29 |
| The Behavioral Concept of Intelligence | p. 31 |
| The Concept of Intelligence as a Process Within the Brain | p. 38 |
| The Development of Intelligence | p. 48 |
| Nature Plus Nurture | p. 48 |
| High Levels of Intellectual Development: Giftedness | p. 50 |
| The Gifted Brain | p. 50 |
| Intelligence, Giftedness, Gifted Individuals, Talent, and Talent Development: Definitions | p. 52 |
| Intelligence | p. 53 |
| Gifted, Giftedness, and Gifted Students | p. 54 |
| Talent and Talent Development | p. 55 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 58 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 59 |
| The Origins and Growth of Giftedness | p. 61 |
| Families and Gifted Children | p. 63 |
| Siblings of Gifted Children | p. 67 |
| Ensuring Family Support for School | p. 68 |
| Characteristics of Gifted Learners | p. 73 |
| Highly and Profoundly Gifted Individuals | p. 79 |
| The Beginnings of Giftedness: Birth Through 2 Years | p. 86 |
| Prenatal and Perinatal Interaction | p. 90 |
| From Birth Through 3 Months | p. 90 |
| From 4 Months Through 20 Months | p. 92 |
| From 11 Months Through 2 Years | p. 95 |
| Creating a Responsive Learning Environment for Early Learning | p. 98 |
| Early Childhood: Ensuring the Development of High Potential | p. 102 |
| The Preschool Experience | p. 103 |
| Adolescence: Supporting Uniqueness | p. 112 |
| The Physical Transition | p. 114 |
| The Intellectual Transition | p. 115 |
| The Social-Emotional Transition | p. 117 |
| The Intuitive Transition | p. 119 |
| The Cross-Cultural Development of Identity in the Gifted Adolescent | p. 119 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 121 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 122 |
| Social-Emotional Development and Giftedness | p. 123 |
| The Social-Emotional Development of Gifted Children | p. 124 |
| Emotional Intelligence and Giftedness | p. 125 |
| Social-Emotional Characteristics of Gifted Children | p. 127 |
| Locus of Control | p. 128 |
| Competition | p. 131 |
| Perfectionism | p. 132 |
| Social-Emotional Well-Being of Gifted Children | p. 135 |
| The Self-Concept of the Gifted Child | p. 139 |
| Labeling Gifted Children | p. 148 |
| The Moral Development of Gifted Children | p. 149 |
| Attitudes of Society, Teachers, and Other School Personnel | p. 151 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 153 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 155 |
| Creativity: Integrated Thinking and Being | p. 156 |
| Views of the Concept of Creativity | p. 158 |
| Creativity as a Part of Giftedness | p. 159 |
| The Cognitive or Rational View of Creativity | p. 160 |
| The Affective or Emotional-Social View of Creativity | p. 162 |
| The Physical/Sensing View of Creativity | p. 163 |
| The Intuitive View of Creativity | p. 163 |
| The Holistic View of Creativity: Integrating the Views | p. 164 |
| Characteristics and Abilities Commonly Found in Creative Individuals | p. 166 |
| Rational Characteristics | p. 168 |
| Affective Characteristics | p. 168 |
| Physical Characteristics | p. 169 |
| Intuitive Characteristics | p. 169 |
| Creativity as a Process | p. 171 |
| Developing Creativity | p. 174 |
| Conditions That Enhance the Development of Creativity | p. 174 |
| Conditions That Inhibit the Development of Creativity | p. 182 |
| Measuring Creativity | p. 183 |
| Measures of Performance | p. 185 |
| Measures of Products | p. 186 |
| Measures of Creative Personality Characteristics and Attitudes | p. 186 |
| Problems in Measuring Creativity | p. 186 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 188 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 190 |
| Educating the Gifted Student at School | |
| Assessment and Identification of Gifted Students | p. 193 |
| Recognizing Giftedness | p. 195 |
| Different Approaches to Recognizing Giftedness | p. 197 |
| Other Issues That Make Identification Difficult | p. 199 |
| The Process of Identifying Gifted Students: Search, Screen, and Identify | p. 200 |
| Search | p. 200 |
| Effective Screening | p. 204 |
| Identification and Placement | p. 208 |
| Identification: Assessing Intelligence, Abilities, and Aptitudes | p. 210 |
| Traditional and Nontraditional Assessments | p. 211 |
| Alternative, Authentic, and Performance-Based Assessment | p. 211 |
| The Assessment of Intelligence, Abilities, and Aptitudes by Program Categories | p. 212 |
| A Summary of the Identification Process | p. 220 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 221 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 223 |
| Optimizing Learning: Using Brain Research in Elementary and Secondary Classrooms | p. 225 |
| The Seven Steps to Optimizing Learning | p. 227 |
| Understand Brain Development As the Basis for Learning | p. 228 |
| Create a Responsive Learning Environment | p. 228 |
| The Physical Learning Environment | p. 233 |
| The Social-Emotional Learning Environment | p. 235 |
| Integrate the Intellectual Processes: The Integrative Education Model (IEM) | p. 239 |
| Integrating Cognitive Processes: Combining Linear-Rational-Verbal and Spatial-Gestalt-Visual Functions of the Brain Hemispheres | p. 240 |
| Integrating Affective Processes: Social-Emotional Learning | p. 247 |
| Integrating Physical Processes | p. 252 |
| Integrating Intuitive Processes | p. 256 |
| Sample Lessons for Integrating Intellectual Processes | p. 265 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 272 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 275 |
| Optimizing Learning: Strategies and Modifications for Elementary and Secondary Gifted Learners | p. 276 |
| Establish the Continuum of Learning | p. 278 |
| Standards and Rubrics | p. 279 |
| A Caution | p. 280 |
| Assess the Student's Level of Mastery | p. 281 |
| Creating Student Portfolios | p. 283 |
| Differentiate and Individualize Teaching and Learning | p. 286 |
| Providing Differentiation to Meet the Educational Needs of Gifted Learners | p. 287 |
| Individualizing Instruction | p. 311 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 320 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 322 |
| Culturally Responsive Teaching and Giftedness | p. 323 |
| Multicultural Education and Giftedness | p. 324 |
| Global Education | p. 329 |
| Racially and Ethnically Diverse Gifted Populations | p. 330 |
| Learning Differences Among and Between Racial and Ethnic Cultures | p. 331 |
| Choosing Teachers for Racially and Ethnically Diverse Gifted Learners | p. 336 |
| The Choice Between Academic Achievement and Cultural Affiliation | p. 337 |
| Economically Disadvantaged Gifted Students: The Culture of Poverty | p. 338 |
| Learning Differences | p. 340 |
| Intervention | p. 341 |
| Underrepresentation of Culturally Diverse Groups in the Gifted Population | p. 342 |
| Identifying of Gifted Learners from Culturally Diverse Populations | p. 346 |
| Search and Screen for Giftedness Among Students in Culturally Diverse Populations | p. 349 |
| Identifying Economically Disadvantaged Gifted Learners | p. 354 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 356 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 358 |
| Exceptionality, Underachievement, Gender, and Giftedness | p. 359 |
| Gifted Learners with Disabilities | p. 361 |
| Characteristics of Gifted Children with Disabilities | p. 362 |
| Identification of Gifted Children with Disabilities | p. 364 |
| Programming for Gifted Children with Disabilities | p. 366 |
| Underachieving Gifted Students | p. 369 |
| Characteristics of Underachieving Gifted Students | p. 370 |
| Causes of Underachievement | p. 372 |
| Prevention and Remediation of Underachievement | p. 375 |
| Gender and Giftedness | p. 379 |
| Gender Characteristics That Affect Learning | p. 381 |
| Issues Regarding Gifted Females | p. 383 |
| Issues Regarding Gifted Males | p. 392 |
| The Special Needs of Gifted Students Who Are Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, or Transgendered (GLBT) | p. 395 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 396 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 398 |
| Building and Maintaining Effective Programs and Services for Gifted Learners | |
| Program Models, Structures, and Organizations for Elementary and Secondary Gifted Learners | p. 401 |
| Developing Effective Programs for Gifted and Talented Students | p. 403 |
| Programming by Level of Involvement | p. 404 |
| Programming in a Full-Inclusion Classroom | p. 406 |
| Administrative and Curricular Modifications Used in Gifted and Talented Education Programs | p. 407 |
| Enrichment | p. 407 |
| Acceleration | p. 409 |
| Grouping by Ability and Need | p. 411 |
| Models and Structures Used to Teach Elementary and Secondary Gifted Learners | p. 416 |
| Conceptual Frameworks | p. 416 |
| Curriculum Models Often Used to Educate Gifted Learners | p. 419 |
| Program Organizations for Gifted Learners in Elementary School | p. 427 |
| Regular Classrooms | p. 432 |
| Individualized Classrooms | p. 435 |
| Special Classes | p. 435 |
| Special Schools | p. 436 |
| Adjunct Programs | p. 436 |
| Program Organizations for Gifted Learners in Middle School and High School | p. 436 |
| Early Admission Programs | p. 439 |
| Core Academic Classes | p. 439 |
| Group Seminars | p. 439 |
| Honors Classes | p. 439 |
| Mini-Course Structure | p. 440 |
| School-Within-a-School | p. 441 |
| Governor's Schools | p. 441 |
| Advanced Placement Program | p. 442 |
| International Baccalaureate Program | p. 442 |
| Secondary Triad Model | p. 442 |
| Autonomous Learner Model | p. 443 |
| Purdue Secondary Model | p. 443 |
| Accelerated College Enrollment and Early Entrance Programs | p. 443 |
| Johns Hopkins University's Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth | p. 444 |
| Homeschooling: An Alternative Approach for Elementary and Secondary Gifted Learners | p. 446 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 450 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 452 |
| Effective Programs for Gifted and Talented Education | p. 453 |
| Developing Effective Gifted and Talented Education (GATE) Programs | p. 455 |
| Seven Actions to Take in Developing an Effective GATE Program | p. 455 |
| Teachers of Gifted Learners at School | p. 463 |
| Abilities, Values, and Characteristics of Teachers of Gifted Students | p. 464 |
| Teacher Education and Certification | p. 467 |
| The Coordinator of the Gifted and Talented Education Program | p. 472 |
| The Gifted and Talented Education Program Advisory Committee | p. 474 |
| The Importance of Support for Effective Programs | p. 475 |
| Gaining the Support of Teachers | p. 475 |
| Gaining the Support of Parents | p. 476 |
| Gaining the Support of the Administrator | p. 478 |
| Counselors and School Psychologists as Support Personnel | p. 480 |
| Gaining the Support of the Community | p. 486 |
| Assessment and Evaluation of Programs and Services | p. 490 |
| Evaluating Program Effectiveness | p. 490 |
| Evaluating Teaching and Learning: Step Seven to Optimizing Learning | p. 492 |
| Grading Gifted Learners | p. 493 |
| Reflect and Reform: The Final Step to Optimizing Learning and Maintaining an Effective GATE Program | p. 497 |
| Review of Important Ideas | p. 498 |
| Check Your Understanding | p. 500 |
| References | p. 503 |
| Name Index | p. 523 |
| Subject Index | p. 529 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |