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Posts Tagged ‘exceptionally gifted’

Looks nothing like an academic

Let’s just say I’ve read a LOT of articles and books on giftedness over the past 13 years, give or take. So something has to be pretty “wow” to, well, make me go “wow,” or in other words make my “I Wish I Could Have Read This Years Ago; It Would Have Explained/Helped So Much” list.

An Interview with Roland S. Persson:  The Talent of Being Inconvenient (First Published in The SENG Update Newsletter, June 2010) is one such article.  Dr. Persson looks like a member of the World Wrestling Federation or the older brother of Mr. Clean, but is in fact a Professor of Educational Psychology at Jönköpping University in Sweden, where his research focuses on giftedness, with an emphasis on social context and the gifted individual in society.

So what blew me away in this interview?   It’s the first time I’ve heard someone provide a coherent framework for understanding that which I’ve been clumsily trying to put forward these past 2.5 years in this blog, namely that verbally* gifted kids (and by extension I guess, adults) have it harder vis a vis their artistically and mathematically/science gifted peers.  (*IMO, verbal giftedness goes beyond facility with reading and writing.  It is sophisticated vocabulary, persuasive argument, deep interest in–and the precocious ability to question, analyse and think critically about–philosophical, ethical, moral, sociological, political and historical issues.)

Now some scoff at this notion.  Elementary school, they argue, is ALL about literacy and that “soft,” “easy,” “girly” stuff.  Instead, pity the mathy, science-kid!  It’s why our nation is falling behind and we have to pour inordinate resources into STEM (that’s Science, Technology, Engineering and Math, for those of you who might not be in the know.)  Or pity the artsy kid in this day and age of No Child Left Untested curriculum narrowing.

However what I have experienced through my girls, have heard mentioned quietly by some in the know, and have tried to argue here, is just the opposite.  “Geeky” mathiness–particularly among boys–is what our society typically reads as “gifted.”  By and large our school systems are pretty successful in meeting that need.  Not perfect, but there is a greater openness to and ability to provide acceleration, as well as a burgeoning math/science pipeline in place to foster and reward this type of gift (think math competitions, science camps, scholarships and mentorships, etc.).  Musical artistic talent too tends to be celebrated and rewarded. It’s “okay” for kids to be prodigies in these realms and it feels like summer programs for kids are chock-a-block with theater and art opportunities.  Meanwhile verbal talent is seen as somehow commonplace (“Everyone catches up by third grade and learns how to read”), thus serving as the source of endless frustration for parents trying to work within school systems to find appropriate educational pathways.

Frankly, I bought into the mainstream construct too.  It was only in the wake of a CTY SET ceremony that the reality was spelled out for me.  “Just look at the awards program,” this gifted expert told me.  “There is an entire page, four columns in small type of kids who made SET in math (700+ on the Math portion of the SAT before the age of 13).  Meanwhile, there is a quarter of a page, two columns in larger type of kids who reached the same mark on the Verbal section.”  Okaaaay.  Light bulb going off.  It explained why even in gatherings of EG/PG kids, my kid still had a hard time finding “her people.”  There truly aren’t that many.  Throw is the gender skew at the very far right of the bell curve and there really aren’t that many.

But back to Dr. Persson (whose research/writing I’m now going to have to seek out).  My “aha” in the interview was his Hero, Nerd and Martyr taxonomy of giftedness.  He writes:

Somewhat simplistically, perhaps, I construed societal functions as Maintenance, Escape, and Change, typified by the more common parlance expressions of Nerd, Hero, and Martyr…. Gifted individuals interested in, for example, technology, medicine, or finance—“the nerds”—all serve supportive functions in society. They are rarely controversial because their skills contribute towards maintaining society, its leaders on all levels, and its power structure as a whole. Also individuals gifted in sports, music, and the arts are much appreciated. A few are rewarded more for the moments of release from stress that their gifts offer. They allow us for a moment to escape into a very positive experience. As scientists, we go to great lengths to study the constituents of their skills.

However, when it comes to gifted individuals having the potential to change the social world by their knowledge and insight, they are rarely as appreciated as their colleagues more devoted to maintenance and escape. We tend to fail to realize the consequences of having an uncanny grasp of cause and effect, so typical of the academically gifted. When confronted with certain conditions and decisions, the gifted individual is very good at understanding what the outcome will be. However, being one voice in a group of others less equipped to foresee the results and problems, who in the group is inclined to listen and acknowledge the single and voice differing in opinion and conclusion? If this individual is being contrary to the leadership, harassment and being contrary to the leadership, harassment and persecution are sure to follow in one way or
another. Interestingly, it rarely matters whether the gifted individual is right or wrong; he or she poses a threat to the credibility of authority. Again, history is full of examples, and “martyr” is sadly an appropriate term.

The greater the prestige to be lost, the more severe the battle to retain dominance and authority.

Or, as Ellen Winner (1996) put it Gifted Children: The gifted are risk-takers with a desire to shake things up. Most of all they have the desire to set things straight, to alter the status quo and shake up established tradition. Creators do not accept the prevailing view. They are oppositional and discontented.

I also like what Persson has to say earlier in his article about why and when are gifted individuals likely to be “considered inconvenient or ignored.”  For me, this explains so much of our journey, particularly with C.

You can be “inconvenient” in any number of ways, of course, but in relation to being academically gifted, it is not always appreciated amongst teachers or other students to be a “know-it-all”: one who usually has all the correct answers. …. Then, of course, there are school systems which do not recognize giftedness at all as a viable reason for an adapted curriculum, such as is the case in the Swedish and Norwegian school systems. In these environments teaching is certainly student-active, but giftedness is a considerable inconvenience because students who want more, know more, and learn quicker than everyone else only become a further reason for teacher stress. Gifted students become inconvenient indeed! In a recent study, I found that 92% of students in the Swedish compulsory school system, with an IQ beyond 131 (n = 287), were everything from ignored to harassed by their teachers, resulting in some students even becoming suicidal….

A gifted individual becomes inconvenient either when posing a threat to others’ low self-esteem or when being perceived as a threat to social authority…. History is replete with examples: individuals who see and understand injustices, bring them to light believing this will be a good deed, but, more often than not, find themselves having become “inconvenient.” In short, our genetically imprinted social behavior, which we share with other species, decides whether we are friends or foes of authority. As a rule, perceived “foes” are ignored.

Boy did this resonate….  He also has some pretty interesting things to say about gifted individuals in the workplace.  So a three-fer.

Next up, my look at another recent “wow.”  This time a memoir that ties in very neatly with this Persson interview.

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The other day Husband Dear pointed out a blogging milestone that slipped my notice:  sometime in the past month I exceeded 200,000 page views.  Thanks to everyone who’s stopped by and who continues to read my musings.

A milestone which most certainly did NOT escape attention took place this morning:  For the very last time, I drove C. to school.  Her last day ever as an MCPS student.  Hard to believe this MCPS chapter, such a huge part of our life for the past 10 years, has drawn to a close.  Seems like just yesterday that I stood with her on the playground as she lined up with her class for her very first day of first grade.  I didn’t have to drive her, and normally I don’t, but hey, it was her last exam and she needed the extra half hour of sleep.  Besides, she’s leaving in three months–I have to spend some time with my baby while I can!

So was C. the least bit wistful?  Um, no.  Not a bit. She attended the drama picnic a week ago and will miss her drama friends, but has no interest in attending her classwide picnic tomorrow afternoon.  Didn’t want to buy the yearbook.  Laughed how all of a sudden people who never talked to her were posting to her Facebook wall about how her leaving is a “betrayal” of the ol’ alma mater.  Nope, no looking back.

It’s a nice half hour drive to her school, so I asked, what were her reflections on this, her last day in MCPS?  What would she do differently, what should have been done differently?  Because one could argue, hey, it didn’t really turn out too badly.  You’re in the best school in the county (Newsweek says so!), and you’re leaving to go to one of the best boarding schools in the country.  Can you really complain?

Her answer, unequivocally, was that she should have been allowed to grade skip.  Really?  I pressed her.  Really, she insisted.  Socially, she has always gravitated to kids a grade, and more often several, ahead of her.  The teachers she looked back on most positively were the ones who understood, and gave her more challenging material beyond what was offered to everyone else.  The second grade teacher who gave her unlimited access to the library.  The third grade teacher who let her read different books from the rest of the class. Aha!  So doesn’t that just prove that MCPS does differentiate and that it works?  Alas, those teachers were, according to her, the grand exceptions.  The counter example would be offering to “reward” a verbally gifted kid with math acceleration and sitting in heterogeneous classes where all the other kids loath you because you “know everything” (being called “The Walking Dictionary” comes to mind) and you resenting them for being so painfully slow.  So much for having bright students serve as “role models” in the class.

I told her that it had recently been suggested that we could/should have pursued a legal remedy back in her middle school days.  Part of me so wanted to, however I also knew that legally gifted isn’t like special education. And really, when you are in the midst of the crisis, stressed beyond belief, does it really make sense to launch a lawsuit?  How is going to make the immediate situation at hand better?  Which sadly means that the system continues along, unchallenged.

I’ve suggested that she document her experiences and maybe even share them with members of the school board. Heck, ask to meet with Jerry Weast and Jay Mathews.  It’s what her friend up in the Boston area is doing.  Only he’s actually been invited by a member of the school committee to speak to them about the needs of “high-end learners.”  When’s the last time AEI ever asked students what they think of gifted education in MCPS?  Oh, that would be never.

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Like a lot of nerdy folks, I could totally care less about football.  Really.  Truly. However about a year and a half ago I came across a story in the New York Times (just about the only place I might run into some sports news) about a young man by the name of Myron Rolle.

Not only was he a standout high school and college athlete (the number one high school football prospect in the country in 2006 according to ESPN), but he was brilliant, graduating from Florida State in two and a half years with a degree in pre-med and a grade point average of 3.75.  In fact at the time of the Times story, he was waiting to hear if he had been tapped to be one of 32 American Rhodes Scholars.

This week Rolle is back in the news.  Evidently he did receive that Rhodes Scholarship, and he spent his senior year studying at Oxford instead of playing football for the Seminoles.  Which some people in the NFL have a problem with.  Rolle was drafted in the 6th round, the 207th pick.

Clay Travis at NFL Fanhouse (gawd, who’d have ever thought I’d link to a sports blog!) writes

Multiple NFL teams, scouts and executives questioned Rolle’s commitment to football because he made this decision.

Why?

Because the thinking goes — and we’re defining “thinking” broadly here since many of the scouts, coaches and executives making these comments would be pumping gas for a living without football — that Rolle is too smart, that his priorities in life don’t revolve entirely around a pigskin bouncing on a field.

Welcome to the 21st century NFL, where your commitment to the game doesn’t get questioned if you fail multiple drug tests, drive drunk or rape a woman. But woe unto you if you have the audacity to graduate early from college and take a year off to pursue a Rhodes Scholarship. Then you’re a smart guy, the NFL’s own version of the untouchable caste in India. That’s why the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, including head coach Raheem Morris, could ask Rolle at the Senior Bowl how it felt to desert his teammates for his senior season.

Rolle’s “desertion”?

Accepting the Rhodes Scholarship in Oxford.

If only we could all be so lucky to be deserted by our teammates for this.

Would the Tampa Bay Bucs “brain trust” have asked a player who left college early to play pro football how he felt about deserting his teammates?

Doubtful.

Would the Bucs have asked a player who was caught smoking pot how he felt about letting his teammates down?

Doubtful.

Nope, because Rolle wears the NFL’s own scarlet letter, intelligence. And that’s just something the NFL can’t stand. The league wants their players focused on football or nothing else, barefoot and padded.

Travis doesn’t let up, continuing,

How did kids react when they watched the draft, saw Myron Rolle celebrating, and immediately heard draft analysts discussing his fall down the draft boards because teams questioned his commitment? I’ll tell you, kids aren’t dumb, they know what that means. That when their coaches preach academics and exploring outside interests, that’s really just a shell game. The reality is something different: we want you to care about nothing else at all.

Wow.  And that’s just a sample! Nice to see a passionate defense of intelligence in unexpected places!

For his part, Rolle is placed in the position of almost having to apologize for his Rhodes Scholarship,

I didn’t expect it to be as big, or as huge of an issue in the whole scheme of the draft process. …The only thing I can say or try to convey is that I have a lot of options, I do, and I’m very proud I won the Rhodes Scholarship. Medical school will be in my future 15 years from now, Lord willing … and being a politician is not out out of the question either. But if I have all these options and I still choose to play football, that must mean that I really love it. … I really do want it, and I have to show it.”

You can read more about this very very impressive young man on his website.  He’s someone to watch.

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Everyone’s weighed in on it, I may as well too.  I’m talking about “The Junior Meritocracy,” this month’s New York Magazine cover story.  The subhead is a tip-off to where the article is going:  “Should a child’s fate be sealed by an exam he takes at the age of 4? Why kindergarten-admission tests are worthless, at best.

Things to keep in mind when reading/my take:

– The article is about that unique microcosm of craziness, New York City school admissions.  You can get a taste in one of my previous posts, on the documentary “Getting In.”

– This is generally NOT the situation for public schools in Montgomery County. (Private school in DC, from what I gather, different matter–the article actually quotes a post from DCUrbanMoms in which a mom is seeking test prep materials.  Trust me, the DCUM private school forum is in-tense.)  Here, GT testing happens at the end of second grade, when kids are (assuming they haven’t been red-shirted) 7-8 years old , as recommended in the article.** They take the Raven test, not even mentioned in the article, which comes with its own limitations. And there are, as the experts in the article recommend, multiple inputs, and multiple opportunities in a child’s school career to access “accelerated and enriched” instruction.  If anything, the situation in MoCo is so expansive that that’s what’s worrisome.  The 2009 2nd grade screening report shows that 38.7% of MCPS 2nd graders were identified as gifted and talented.  38.7%! Ludicrous.

(** the exception is testing for the Takoma Elementary magnet. Even if a child “passes” they still have to be selected via lottery.)

–Deliberate prepping, at this age, is wrong and people like Suzanne Rheault, “M.I.T. graduate and former Wall Street analyst,” are despicable (“I can understand people getting offended by 4-year-olds getting tutoring for these exams,” says Rheault when we meet in her Soho conference room. “But I’m not the one making them take them.”  She charges $500 for her WPPSI prep books.)

– Just because high IQ people don’t all go on to cure cancer, write Academy Award winning screenplays or solve conflicts the Middle East doesn’t mean that we should dismiss IQ tests out of hand.

– “Giftedness is a real thing, no question. But giftedness can be extinguished, and it can be nurtured.” So sayeth, Samuel J. Meisels, assessment expert and president of Chicago’s Erikson Institute, the renowned graduate school in childhood development.  And so sayeth me, not-an-expert.  At the end of the day, there is no getting around that gifted exists.  Author Jennifer Senior writes, ” So what do psychologists and educators think makes the difference between good and exceptional?  Opportunity, connections, mentors.”  Those are the externals that can benefit any child.  And “Perseverance and monomaniacal devotion, or what the psychologist Ellen Winner calls “the rage to master.” Creativity, a willingness to fail.”  The internals.  The neurons.  The raw stuff.  Whatever you want to call it.  And not every kid has it in equal measure.

Just draw the parallel to athletics.  As Laura Vanderkam writes, “If a kid has a growth spurt at age 15, he’s more likely to make the basketball team in high school than if he has a growth spurt at age 18, or just stays pretty short. That may not be entirely fair, since playing a sport can teach great lessons for life and maybe help with college admissions. But we don’t go apoplectic as a society about how unfair this is or, more ridiculously, try to claim that tall people don’t exist.”

– Even if you do away with tests and go to other “measures,” such as “observational assessment” you still need a) teachers/educators who know what they are looking at/for, b) it’s still a “snapshot.”  And even the marshmallow test is coachable.

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Not my ancestor

The initial rush from seeing relatives who you haven’t seen in awhile has worn off.  You’ve stuffed yourself with turkey.  The thought of hitting the malls gives you a rash.  Maybe the weather is bad and you’re cooped up in the house.  You’ve snuck out to check the Internet because you’re reading this (busted!).  And there are still three more days left of this Thanksgiving holiday.  Now what?

You participate in the National Day of Listening, that’s what!  The good folks of Story Corps (You know, the ones who set up those orange booths around the country and have pairs of people record interviews each other–with the results being archived in the National Archive and some being broadcast to tear-jerking effect on NPR) last year wisely established the day after Thanksgiving as the National Day of Listening

On the day after Thanksgiving, set aside one hour to record a conversation with someone important to you. You can interview anyone you choose: an older relative, a friend, a teacher, or someone from the neighborhood.

You can preserve the interview using recording equipment readily available in most homes, such as cell phones, tape recorders, computers, or even pen and paper. Our free Do-It-Yourself Instruction Guide is easy to use and will prepare you and your interview partner to record a memorable conversation, no matter which recording method you choose.

Make a yearly tradition of listening to and preserving a loved one’s story. The stories you collect will become treasured keepsakes that grow more valuable with each passing generation.

What a most excellent idea!  Particularly for verbally gifted kids.

I say so because as a child and teen I had–for some unknown reason–an unusual interest in genealogy.  I have no idea where it came from. No one else I knew shared my passion.  But there it was.  And I know that somewhere in my years of reading about giftedness, particularly verbal giftedness, I have come across references to an interest in genealogy being a gifted “thing.”  Maybe it was this mention on the Hoagies Gifted Official Homepage of the PG (Profoundly Gifted) Cult:  “Are you researching your family’s genealogy? Before you retire? Before you even have kids?”

Gulp.  Hand raised.  Um, that would have been me.  I was the one who when she was 14 and spending a summer with her grandparents in Switzerland quizzed them on our family’s history, poured over a box of old photographs and wrote down names, dates, and whatever details I could find.

Genealogy is a great hobby for gifted kids, as it blends history, research, interviewing and writing, all in an intensely personal way.  Because more than most, gifted kids are seeking answers to the big question of “Who am I and where do I belong in this vast arc of human experience?” (Yes, gifted kids really do think intensely about these things.)  Family history, the personal narrative, provides that.  Genealogy is also systematic.  There is a structure (begat, begat, begat). There is a concreteness and a progression that is almost like a game (can I get the birth certificate? Immigration record? A census record?  And if I get that information, then I can get…).   Finally, there are now so many amazing media tools with which to organize and present and share genealogy information in really creative ways (Hello PowerPoint, YouTube and podcasts!).

Now as a grown up person in her 40s, I am pleased to report that my early interest in family history has finally paid off.  A few other people in my family have finally caught up with me  and suddenly I have this treasure trove of info that otherwise would have been completely lost.  Nerd Girl has become Go To Girl.

One thing I did several years ago was put it all on Ancestry.com so that it could be easily shared.  Not to sound like a commercial or anything, but the site is rather cool, despite the fact that somehow they and the genealogy gods have locked up electronic access to many many records unless you’re willing to pay.  That part is not so great.  Nonetheless, I think the site would be a kick for a gifted kid to play around with.

So instead of driving each other crazy today, get started on your family history.  Your ancestors will thank you.

P.S.  If your family gathering was less than optimal, if the grandparents think you’re just a little bit crazy about “this gifted thing,” you may want to check out Jim Webb’s Grandparents’ Guide to Gifted Children.  And give it as a not-so-subtle holiday present.

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Been busy with some In Real Life GT issues lately and yesterday evening I found myself once more combing through down county school websites.  Out of close to 40 schools, I think maybe four had GT liaisons listed on their PTA websites.  Even more discouraging was to find that some schools don’t even have a PTA website…or even a page on the school’s website that lists some officers and committees or basic parent information.

But in my Web-surfing I did have the chance to stop at the site of Silver Chips, the award-winning online newspaper of Richard Mongomery Blair High School.  There, I read a great feature story about Maneesh Agrawala, a recent MacArthur Fellow “genius award” recipient–and Blair Math Science Magnet alum.

Although Agrawala was shocked to be receiving the MacArthur grant, his entire life has been committed to the creativity and knowledge the MacArthur Fellows Program looks for. Ever since he was young, Agrawala was interested in math and computer science. Agrawala recalls that seeing his father teach computer science at the University of Maryland influenced his interest in the field.

Agrawala took his love of these subjects to Takoma Park Middle School’s Math and Science Magnet Program, where he excelled in math….

From 1986 – 1990, Agrawala continued these pursuits, enrolling in Blair’s Magnet Program and furthering his interests in computer science and math. “The Magnet was really great,” Agrawala says. “The Magnet was able to put me on my set path and helped me understand concepts.”

Agrawala’s residency in the Magnet was quite notable. He was a finalist in the Intel Science Talent Search competition and had an interest in writing.

However, his biggest impact on Blair came in 1988. Along with Sven Khatri, Dan Mall and Howard Gobioff, all in Blair’s class of 1990, he took part in the first national “SuperQuest – The High School Supercomputing Challenge,” according to notes from the Board of Education. The team won second place out of 1,480 high schools nationwide, winning Blair a Cyber 910 workstation. What’s more, Blair received its first-ever direct connection to the Internet, making it the first school in Montgomery County to have Internet access, according to the Magnet Foundation. The connection even initiated the mbhs.edu domain that Blair still uses.

Ah, those magnets.  You know, those “boutique programs” that MCPS Superintendent Jerry Weast was talking about back in April.  Wisely, believing that the strong defense is an offense, some magnet parents offered passionate testimony in support of the math science magnets at recent Board of Education-sponsored Community Forums [sic].  You can read their testimony here, on pages 5, 11, 12, 14 and 17.

Maybe their cause will be bolstered with a local screening of the documentary Whiz Kids at the National Academy of Sciences in December.

WHIZ KIDS is a coming-of-age documentary that marks the distinct paths of three remarkably passionate 16-year-old scientists who vie to compete—win or lose—in the Intel Science Talent Search, a program of Society for Science & the Public (and formerly known as the Westinghouse Science Talent Search)….   For a year and a half, they visited high schools around the country searching for teenagers who were engaged in sophisticated research.  The team found students, who at 16 and 17, were already working in university and government labs, sometimes alongside Nobel Prize-winning scientists.  They also found students with fewer resources who were making discoveries in the apocryphal basement or garage lab.  Several traits were consistent among these “whiz kids” — an insatiable curiosity, a deeply felt determination to communicate their work to the public, and a passion to make a difference in the world.

You can see a trailer of the film on the film’s website, www.whizkidsmovie.com, as well as get information on the issue of fostering excellence in science.  Which can start right here in Montgomery County.

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The New York Times reports that there’s a new player on the New York City school scene, and for the preschoolers and early elementary students who enroll, it’s all gifted all the time.

In a city where the public school gifted programs have long provided an enviable free education, and there are many expensive private schools that emphasize rigorous academics, the Speyer Legacy School [Note: annual tuition is $28,500], which caters to advanced learners, is a rare breed: a private school with an all-gifted student body. It opened last month with 26 children in kindergarten through second grade in a leased space in the Gateway School.

Named after one of the city’s earliest public schools for gifted students from the 1930s, Speyer Legacy is attracting interest (74 children applied for this fall) at a time when New York’s top public gifted programs and private schools have far more applicants than they have seats. The competition is driven by a boom in the school-age population as more families have multiple children and choose the city over the suburbs, as well as by the city’s own efforts to expand access to gifted classes.

Envious?  Wishing there were something similar here in the DC area?  Look no further!  Montgomery County will soon have the Feynman School, opening its doors in September, 2010.  According to the website, which went up last week:

Curious-minded preschoolers will now have the opportunity to learn in a fun, science-based, bilingual environment designed to celebrate and nurture their natural inquisitiveness.

Opening in fall 2010 in Montgomery County, Maryland, Feynman School will serve the DC metro area’s brightest young minds with a dynamic hands-on curriculum built upon exemplary gifted education programs throughout the US.

Feynman School will welcome both 3-year-olds and 4-year-olds during 2010-2011. The school, which is named for Nobel Laureate Dr. Richard Feynman, will eventually grow to also serve K-8.

Frankly, given the growing disenchantment with MCPS gifted services, I’ve been waiting for someone to figure out that there is a ripe market for a school like this.  Unlike New York City, where the start-up Speyer Legacy School is “up against the big gun” privates, the playing field in MoCo strikes me as wide open.  The closest competitor is across the river in Fairax County, the Nysmith School for the Gifted.

I had a chance to meet with the Feynman School founders, Robert and Susan Gold, over the summer.  She’s a former MCPS teacher and her husband is a lawyer with an interest in gifted education born of personal experience.  They’re the parents of a two precocious preschoolers who started looking around at preschool  and elementary school options and didn’t like what they saw.  So they decided to start their own school.

They’ve done extensive research, including visits to the Hollingsworth Preschool at Columbia University mentioned in the Times piece, and have secured permission from Richard Feynman‘s heirs to use his name in conjunction with their school.  The school will have a science focus and offer bi-lingual education in Mandarin Chinese and Spanish.  Among their other influences they cite Howard Gardner, Daniel Goleman, Joan Smutny, Kendall King, Alison Mackey and David Sousa.

I expect there will be no shortage of people knocking on their doors, and wish them luck. The more choices available for gifted kids, the better.

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Finally!  I’ve been meaning to put up a blog post about the the New York Times magazine article, Understanding the Anxious Mind, since the day it was posted to their website.  Especially in light of a recent comment by reader Kirsten, who wrote:

The other thing that stands out in this post is C.’s high level of executive function. The combination of organization and determination that she has is rare.

Exactly.  I have always believed that to a large extent she–and other PG kids like her–came wired that way.  It’s one thing for Malcolm Gladwell et al to say that it takes 10,000 hours of practice and anyone can be “gifted.”  But it doesn’t explain where the dedication, the drive, the executive function to actually do that 10,000 hours comes from.  I say it’s wiring.

I first heard about Dabrowski’s Theory of Overexcitability was when the CTY psychologist went over C.’s test results.  It was a big “aha” for us.  Here’s how Ann Rinn describes overexcitabilies in the Fall 2009 Duke University Gifted Letter.

Overexcitabilities are extreme intensities or sensitivities that affect the ways in which an individual experiences the world. The Polish psychologist Kazimierz Dabrowski (1902-1980) identified overexcitabilities as part of a larger theory of development. Although most of us may have extra energy at times or have strong reactions to various stimuli on occasion, those with overexcitabilities experience these distinguishing behaviors regularly. Most researchers believe overexcitabilities are innate and will be present in some form throughout one’s life. It is important to note that not all gifted children have overexcitabilities, but they do seem to be found to a greater degree in gifted and/or creative children than in average-ability children. (emphasis added).

It’s something I certainly noticed in C. early on–heck, it’s why this blog has the name it does.  She still is highly sensitive to smells, has acute hearing, dislikes crowds and noisy environments in general, is afraid of dogs and tends to brood and worry. Which is why I found this article on anxiety sooo interesting. I think it really ties in with Dabrowski and giftedness.

Harvard psychology researcher Jerome Kagan, like many people, was initially resistant to the idea of “wiring”:

Kagan studiously ignored this finding; it didn’t fit with his left-leaning politics, which saw all individuals as born inherently the same — blank slates, to use the old terminology — and capable of achieving anything if afforded the right social, economic and educational opportunities. “I was so resistant to awarding biology much influence, I didn’t follow up on the inhibited temperaments I was seeing,” he told me. It took another 20 years of listening to arguments about nature versus nurture for Kagan finally to entertain the possibility that some behavior might be attributed to genes.

But research revealed that

in people born with a particular brain circuitry, the kind seen in Kagan’s high-reactive study subjects, the amygdala is hyperreactive, prickly as a haywire motion-detector light that turns on when nothing’s moving but the rain.

I think it’s that edge of anxiety that could be the driver of C.’s drive, which in turn feeds into achievement.  In the article Susan Engel, a developmental psychologist at Williams College, says,

“The way we deal with [anxiety] is that we both get everything done in lots of time. We can’t stand the anxiety of a looming deadline; we’re so worried about being late that we do it five days early.” This is one way to alleviate anxiety, she said. “There are other things we could do. We could drink, we could procrastinate, we could pretend we don’t have the deadline. I guess we both happen to be lucky that our method is adaptive.”

The article continues,

”This kind of adapting might have something to do with intelligence, says Steven Pinker, a psychologist at Harvard and author of “The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature.” He says he believes, based on pure conjecture, that people with higher intelligence are better at overcoming their anxious temperament and more likely to “see their own worry list as a problem to be solved, minimizing unnecessary anxiety while still being anxious enough to get things done.”

This certainly squares with what I’ve observed.

In the modern world, the anxious temperament does offer certain benefits: caution, introspection, the capacity to work alone. These can be adaptive qualities. Kagan has observed that the high-reactives in his sample tend to avoid the traditional hazards of adolescence. Because they are more restrained than their wilder peers, he says, high-reactive kids are less likely to experiment with drugs, to get pregnant or to drive recklessly. They grow up to be the Felix Ungers of the world, he says, clearing a safe, neat path for the Oscar Madisons.

People with a high-reactive temperament — as long as it doesn’t show itself as a clinical disorder — are generally conscientious and almost obsessively well-prepared. Worriers are likely to be the most thorough workers and the most attentive friends. Someone who worries about being late will plan to get to places early. Someone anxious about giving a public lecture will work harder to prepare for it. Test-taking anxiety can lead to better studying; fear of traveling can lead to careful mapping of transit routes.

Now watch her read this and do something crazy just to prove me wrong ;-) .

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