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About The Author  
Carol Fertig

Carol Fertig
I have been active in the education community for 37 years and involved in gifted education for the past 18 years. At various times I have been a classroom teacher, gifted education teacher, consultant, writer, editor, you name it. I live in Colorado, but also spend a fair amount of time in Chicago. I have two grown boys: one in Colorado and one in California. In my spare time I enjoy skiing, mountain biking, and golfing. I also like to read, go to plays, and watch foreign movies. Feel free to send me an e-mail.

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Articles from May 2006

Clarifying Giftedness

Friday, May 26, 2006 - by CFertig - 240 Views - 0 Comments - Category: Parents and Educators
 
In a recent article appearing in the Cincinnatti Enquirer titled Finding the Gift in Every Child, the author sets forth several interesting premises about gifted education.
  • It’s a shame children have to be labeled at all. Words like gifted and challenged seem rigid and exclusive when the truth is that children, their abilities and inabilities, come in a jumbled and motley assortment.
  • Some children can and should move more quickly and wade more deeply into some coursework. It isn’t fair to hold them back, or deny that they need to be served differently than other students.
  • Schools need to create learning environments that are shaped around the child, rather than trying to shape the child around the environment.
  • Teachers need support in the form of training to deal with wide ranges of ability levels and learning styles and they also need support staff.
  • Caution should be exercised when identifying gifted children. While identifying children at early ages may help the brightest students get off to a good start, it may be too early to see the gifts that are just starting to bloom in some students.
  • In addition to academic gifts, schools must acknowledge and support gifts of empathy, leadership, kindness, creativity, organization, and problem-solving.
  • We must help all children see their potential and work towards it.
I receive many e-mails from parents who want to know if their young children are gifted. What a difficult question to answer. I’m still not sure if I know what the term really means. I do know that it means many different things to different people—including experts in the field. I personally think it is too much of a “catch all” term and does not really describe much about a child. I would understand much more about a young person if strengths and weaknesses were described to me, as well as personality traits and learning styles. So, I agree somewhat with the author of the above article. I agree that the term gifted is rigid. It is certainly not very descriptive.
 
The author acknowledges that some children should move more quickly and delve more deeply into some coursework. I know this is definitely true. I also agree that teachers need lots of support in terms of training and additional people power to make this work. A point is well made about needing to create learning environments that are shaped around the child. I’m afraid the No Child Left Behind Act has made this almost impossible. Little room is left in the curriculum for variance or creativity.
 
The concept of the need for caution when identifying children is an interesting one. This concept poses the question: Is a person born gifted or can giftedness be developed at various points during one’s life? Can we fit people into neat little slots when they are young and expect them to always stay in those slots?
 
The author also stresses that we need to acknowledge and support various types of giftedness. Here are a couple of questions to ponder. Is one type of giftedness more important than another type of giftedness? Should we expect schools to address all types of giftedness?
 
Finally, we must help all children to see their potential and work toward it. I guess I would restate this to say we must help all children see the possibilities in life even if they aren’t obvious. The young people will then need to decide if they are willing to work toward those possibilities. Much needs to come from the internal drive of the individual. Just providing opportunities does not mean that everyone capable will take advantage of them.

Challenging the Minds of the Gifted Children with Chess

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - by CFertig - 237 Views - 0 Comments - Category: Parents and Educators
 
Chess is the gymnasium of the mind - Blaise Pascal
 
Are you looking for an excellent extracurricular activity for your school? One that will really excite and draw kids while improving their minds? Think chess clubs. At one school where I worked, parents started a before and afterschool chess club and it was one of the most popular extracurricular activities available. Kids not only learned strategies and practiced chess during club time; they also went on to compete at various levels with one child going all the way to nationals.

 

Don't Protect Your Gifted Students Too Much

Friday, May 05, 2006 - by CFertig - 227 Views - 0 Comments - Category: Parents and Educators
 
As parents, we want our kids to be happy. It is painful to watch them experience the bumps of life. We also worry about their self-esteem and try to protect it. But BEWARE!! Too much protection can be harmful.
 
Many parents fight to get their kids into more challenging academic classes because it is understood that challenge is healthy. It is interesting then that parents often protect their students from challenge in other aspects of their lives, such as dealing with uncomfortable situations, learning to work with people who have different ideas, earning money to purchase something they want, doing without a lot of material things, or learning to fill their own free time. We don’t allow children to struggle because we are afraid it will damage their self-esteem. Parents who constantly hover over their children, trying to make the world just right for them are called “helicopter parents.”
 
The term helicopter parents began at the early elementary school level, but has now extended to high school, college, and has even included parents getting involved in their post-graduate children’s salary negotiations. These well-meaning parents deprive their children of the confidence-building skills that come with learning to overcome struggle. Children who are consistently “rescued” cannot develop confidence to solve their own problems.
 
It is felt that parents who shelter and provide too much for their children may cause some “of our most gifted young people to go lacking in the strength of character, commitment and coping skills for even the mundane first job.” Rather than take unglamorous jobs for relatively low pay beginning in their mid-teens, well-intentioned parents choose to provide enrichment activities, travel, and social interaction. As a result, kids expect ever-increasing cash outlays without responsibility even for household chores. This can lead to a feeling of self-entitlement, which in turn raises issues with ethics and social responsibility.
 
So stop trying to solve all your children’s problems. Just as you demand challenging academic classes for your kids, also demand that they accept their own challenges in life.
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