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Gifted Education |
Recognizing the Characteristics of Gifted Children
ERIC Clearinghouse on Handicapped and Gifted Children (1985) cites three types of
characteristics of gifted children: general behavioral, learning, and creative characteristics.
General Behavior Characteristics
Gifted children's behavior differs from that of their age-mates in the following ways:
• Many gifted children learn to read early, with better comprehension of the nuances of
language. As much as half of the gifted and talented population has learned to read before
entering school.
• Gifted children often read widely, quickly, and intensely and have large vocabularies.
• Gifted children commonly learn basic skills better, more quickly, and with less
practice.
• They are better able to construct and handle abstractions.
• They often pick up and interpret nonverbal cues and can draw inferences that other
children need to have spelled out for them.
• They take less for granted, seeking the "hows" and "whys."
• They can work independently at an earlier age and can concentrate for longer periods.
• Their interests are both wildly eclectic and intensely focused.
• They often have seemingly boundless energy, which sometimes leads to a
misdiagnosis of hyperactivity.
• They usually respond and relate well to parents, teachers, and other adults. They may
prefer the company of older children and adults to that of their peers.
• They like to learn new things, are willing to examine the unusual, and are highly
inquisitive.
• They tackle tasks and problems in a well-organized, goal-directed, and efficient
manner.
• They exhibit an intrinsic motivation to learn, find out, or explore and are often very
persistent. "I'd rather do it myself" is a common attitude.
Learning Characteristics
Gifted children are natural learners who often show many of these characteristics:
• They may show keen powers of observation and a sense of the significant; they have
an eye for important details.
• They may read a great deal on their own, preferring books and magazines written for
children older than they are.
• They often take great pleasure in intellectual activity.
• They have well-developed powers of abstraction, conceptualization, and synthesis.
• They readily see cause-effect relationships. • They often display a questioning attitude and seek information for its own sake as
much as for its usefulness.
• They are often skeptical, critical, and evaluative. They are quick to spot
inconsistencies.
• They often have a large storehouse of information about a variety of topics, which they
can recall quickly.
• They readily grasp underlying principles and can often make valid generalizations
about events, people, or objects.
• They quickly perceive similarities, differences, and anomalies.
• They often attack complicated material by separating it into components and analyzing
it systematically.
Creative Characteristics
Gifted children's creative abilities often set them apart from their age-mates. These
characteristics may take the following forms:
• Gifted children are fluent thinkers, able to generate possibilities, consequences, or
related ideas.
• They are flexible thinkers, able to use many different alternatives and approaches to
problem solving.
• They are original thinkers, seeking new, unusual, or unconventional associations and
combinations among items of information.
• They can also see relationships among seemingly unrelated objects, ideas, or facts.
• They are elaborate thinkers, producing new steps, ideas, responses, or other
embellishments to a basic idea, situation, or problems.
• They are willing to entertain complexity and seem to thrive on problem solving.
• They are good guessers and can readily construct hypotheses or "what if" questions.
• They often are aware of their own impulsiveness and irrationality, and they show
emotional sensitivity.
• They are extremely curious about objects, ideas, situations, or events.
• They often display intellectual playfulness and like to fantasize and imagine.
• They can be less intellectually inhibited than their peers are in expressing opinions and
ideas, and they often disagree spiritedly with others' statements.
• They are sensitive to beauty and are attracted to aesthetic values.