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GIFTED
CHILDREN
TWICE-EXCEPTIONAL
GIFTED
CHILDREN
Understanding, Teaching,
and Counseling Gifted Students
business.
informa
an
Group,
Francis
&
Taylor
the
of
imprint
is
Routledge
2011
© by Taylor & Francis Group
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by
any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying
and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from
the publishers.
Notice:
Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for
identification and explanation without intent to infringe .
DOI: 10.4324/9781003239253
Contents
Preface vi
Introduction ix
Chapter 1
Unique Learners 1
Chapter 2
Response to Intervention 17
Chapter 3
Continuum of Needs and Services 33
Chapter 4
Nurturing Gifted Potential 53
Chapter 5
Supporting Cognitive Style 69
Chapter 6
Encouraging Academic Achievement 103
Chapter 7
Fostering Interpersonal Relationships 121
Chapter 8
Promoting Intrapersonal Understanding 137
Chapter 9
Putting the Pieces Together 155
Conclusion 163
References 165
qualitative
study focusing gifted on students with disabilities. The
insights I gained from an extensive review of the literature and
vii
viii Twice-Exceptional Gifted Children
the 1970s that educators realized gifted students also could have
disabilities. James J. Gallagher coined the term twice-exceptional
to denote students who are both gifted and have disabilities
IX
X
Twice-Exceptional Gifted Children
Chapters
of
Overview
■
Twice-exceptional learners have the characteristics of gifted students and
students with disabilities.
■
There is no federal definition for twice-exceptional learners to guide the
identification process.
■
Unique characteristics can make it difficult for twice-exceptional
learners
qualify
to for either
gifted special or education services.
■
Twice-exceptional learners are at risk when services are delayed.
Intervention
To
:Response
2
Chapter
and
define student needs, plan interventions, implement themoplanin,tor
intensive levels.
:Continuum
3
Services
and
Chapter
Needs
of
students’ progress, and make sure the plan is modify accordingly.
■
Determine the risk and resiliency factors that are
influencing the
student’sachievement in
positive negative a or way.
■
Review qualitative and quantitative data to get a clear understanding
of the student’s abilities and disabilities. Recommend additional
assessments
if needed.
■
Define the individual student’s strengths and challenges.
Introduction XI
■
Identify learner needs and develop measurable goals that will guide
interventions.
■
Provide a continuum of services to meet the diverse needs of
twice-exceptionallearners.
Monitor student’s progress and
■
modify the plan to ensure the student is
achieving at a level commensurate with her ability.
Potential
Gifted
:Nurturing
4
Chapter
Style
:Supporting
5
Chapter
Cognitive
learning process.
:Encouraging
6
Achievement
Chapter
Academic result in problems with organization, time management, andpriotzing.
■
Twice-exceptional learners continue to be at risk in an educational
system
that does understand their unique characteristics
not needs. or
■
Underachievement is a learned behavior that is easier to prevent than to
Interpersonal
Fostering
7:
Chapter
Relationships
■
Positive relationships with peers, teachers, and parents are essential for
twice-exceptional learners’ social and emotional development.
■
Family dynamics can empower students to develop their potential or can
enable them to use their disability as an excuse.
■
Twice-exceptional students must be coached in developing self-advocacy
skills.
■
Participating in extracurricular school activities extends learning
opportunities
and promotes affiliations with other students who have similar
interests.
Intrapersonal
:Promoting
8
Chapter
Understanding
■
Twice-exceptional learners are confused by their mixed abilities and, as a
result, they experience a great deal of anxiety and depression.
■
It is important for twice-exceptional learners to understand and accept
their strengths and challenges.
■
Dysfunctional perfectionism prevents students from viewing their
accomplishments as successes.
■
Learning to set realistic goals can lead to increased resiliency and
self-esteem.
Together
Pieces
the
:Putting
9
Chapter
■
Educational experiences, interpersonal relationships, and intrapersonal
understanding directly relates to resiliency and achievement.
■
Resiliency increases with supportive interpersonal relationships, positive
educational experiences, and intrapersonal understanding.
■
With realistic goals, internal locus of control, and the knowledge that they
can be successful,
twice-exceptional learners can become self-actualized.
LEARNERS
Chapter
UNIQUE
<br/>
1
CHARACTERISTICS
DOI: 10.4324/9781003239253-1
1
2 Twice-Exceptional Gifted Children
extremes of their abilities and disabilities can create academic, social, and
emotional
conflicts.
2002 ; Reis, Neu, & McGuire, 1995 ), penetrating insights into complex issues
(Nielsen, 2002), and a wide range of interests (Nielsen & Higgins, 2005 ). They
can
develop consuming interests in a particular topic and develop expertise
beyond their years (Nielsen, 2002). Twice-exceptional learners are highly creative
(Baum & Owen, 1988 ; Reis et ah, 1995 ), divergent thinkers with a sophisticated
sense of humor. Their sense of humor can at times be viewed as “bizarre” (Nielsen,
2002 ). With other gifted students they share a propensity for advanced-level
content,
task of interest, desire for creating original
commitment in areas a
products,
enjoyment of abstract concepts, and a nonlinear learning style (Renzulli,
1978 ; Tannenbaum & Baldwin, 1983 ; Van Tassel-Baska, 1991 ; Whitmore, 1980 ).
They learn concepts quickly and hate “drill and practice” assignments,
preferring
open-ended assignments and to solve real-world problems (Baum & Owen,
1988 ). They have a high energy level and tend to be more interested in the “big
picture” than the details. Twice-exceptional learners are curious and constantly
questioning to gain a more in-depth understanding of issues and concepts.
gifted learners feel when they cannot meet their own and others’ expectations,
combined with frustration of teachers who cannot understand why a bright child
does not achieve, leads to conflict, misunderstandings, and failure in school.
They can
appear stubborn, opinionated, and argumentative, yet they also can be
highly sensitive to Many twice-exceptional learners have limited
criticism.
are unable to
experience normal peer relationships. In an effort to avoid failure,
twice-exceptional learners may try to manipulate the situation. A refusal to
complete
assignments may be an
attempt to avoid failure. When faced with failure,
twice-exceptional learners canbecome very anxious, angry, and depressed.
It is the contrast between the student’s abilities and disabilities that creates
conflicts and tends to makes school a
frustrating experience for the
twice-exceptional
learner, their and teachers. Figure
parents, provides visual 1 a
representation
of the combination of contrasting strengths challenges that and creates
academic, social, and emotional problems for twice-exceptional learners. Use this
4 Twice-Exceptional Gifted Children
figure to help students, parents, and teachers understand how the strengths and
challenges influence the achievement and behavior of twice-exceptional learners.
Figure 2 provides a more extensive list of twice-exceptional characteristics. Copy
this list and ask teachers and parents to identify specific strengths and challenges
of a twice-exceptional learner. This information will be used to identify needs in
the Twice-Exceptional Planning Continuum, presented later in this book.
DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES
intelligence and are teacher pleasers have prevailed since the early 20th century
when Lewis Terman began using the Stanford-Binet IQ test, an intelligence test,
to identify students with mental retardation (now called intellectual disabilities)
who would not benefit from education and to identify students with superior
mental abilities (Davis & Rimm, 2004 ). Gifted students and students with
intellectual
disabilities
opposite were believed to be at ends of the intellectual
spectrum.
The early focus of gifted education students with superior IQ
was on scores
and the focus of special education was on children with intellectual disabilities.
selected for the study based on their IQ scores. Davis and Rimm (2004) were
critical of the selection process used for this study because classroom teachers
selected the students who would participate in IQ testing. Students selected for
the study were more likely to be teacher
pleasers. It should be noted that two
students, Luis Alvarez and William Shockley, were not included in the study
because their IQ scores were not high enough, yet years later they achieved
distinction
as Nobel Prize winners. The
description of the gifted child as the “near
perfect child” is not an accurate
picture of many gifted children, and it continues
to place destructive internal and external pressures on students who are gifted but
federal
Pennsylvania
court cases focused attention on students with disabilities.
Association for Retarded Citizens (PARC) v. Commonwealth ofPennsylvania (1971)
and Mills v. Board of Education of District of Columbia (1972) found under the
Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution that it was the
responsibility
of and school districts
state educate students with disabilities. The
local to
provide
limited financial assistance under joined advocates one law in 1972. States
toseek passage of federal legislation to subsidize the cost of special education.
FAPE for special education students became a reality with the 1975 Education
for All Handicapped Children Act (EAHCA). It was renamed the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, in 1990. IDEA was reauthorized with
substantive changes in 1997 and again in 2004.
CONVERGING IDEAS
include more students with less severe disabilities. EAHCA and IDEA included
students with physical, language, speech and vision, mental retardation (now
considered intellectual disabilities), and emotional and behavioral disabilities.
With the expanded definitions in the 1970s came the realization that gifted
students
could have disabilities and the categories of gifted and disabled were not
specialization was beginning. She calculated that between 120,000 and 180,000
handicapped students were gifted. However, in 1982, the U.S. Supreme Court
in Board ofEducation of Hendrick Hudson Central School District v. Rowley found
that Amy Rowley, a hearing impaired student, was performing adequately and
progressing through the grades. The Supreme Court held that the law did not
require states to develop the potential of students with disabilities (La Morte,
2005 ). This decision has negatively influenced the education of gifted students
with disabilities and prevented students who performed at grade level from
receiving special education services. From 1990-1996, the Jacob K. Javits Gifted
Education Grant funded the Twice-Exceptional Child Project (Nielsen, 1989 ,
DEFINITIONS
Marland Report (1972) and the U.S. Department of Education’s (1993) National
Excellence: A Case for Developing America’s Talent report provide examples of
composite definitions. These definitions usually are operationalized with
separate
identification procedures for each talent area. The Marland definition was
modified by Congress in 1978 and again in 1988. The federal definition reads as
follows:
Children and youth with outstanding talent who perform or show the
potential for performing at remarkably high levels of accomplishment
when compared with others of their age, experience, or environment.
These children and youth exhibit high performance capability in intellec-
Unique Learners 9
The National Association for Gifted Children (n.d.c) has updated its
definition
of gifted children to read as follows:
A gifted person is someone who shows, or has the potential for showing, an
exceptional level ofperformance in one or more areas of expression.
Some of these abilities are very general and can affect a broad
spectrum
of the persons life, such as leadership skills or the ability to think
creatively Some are very specific talents and are only evident in
particular
circumstances, such as a special aptitude in mathematics, science, or
music. The term giftedness provides a general reference to this spectrum
of abilities without being specific or dependent on a single measure or
index. It is generally recognized that approximately five percent of the
student population, or three million children, in the United States are
considered gifted.
A person’s giftedness should not be confused with the means by
which giftedness is observed or assessed. Parent, teacher, or student
recommendations, a
high mark on an examination, or a high IQ score are
not giftedness; they may be a signal that giftedness exists. Some of these
giftedness
increases. It is important to remember that gifted potential is present in
studentsfrom all cultural groups and economic backgrounds. However, for gifted
potential to develop, it must be nurtured. Educators play an important role in
supporting the development of gifted potential. I like Renzulli’s definition of
giftedness, which is also on the National Association for Gifted Children’s (n.d.c)
website and reads as follows:
all people), at certain times (not all the time), and under certain
circumstances
(not all circumstances).” (para. 11)
The Education for All Handicapped Children Act and the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act broadened the definition of children with disabilities
and identified specific categories of disabilities. IDEAs definition of disability
reads as follows:
activities
and
stereotyped change movements, resistance to environmental or
■
Emotional Disturbance: A condition exhibiting one or more of the
following characteristics, displayed over a long period of time and to a
marked degree that adversely affects a child’s educational performance:
•
An inability to learn that cannot be explained by intellectual,
sensory,
health factors
or
•
An inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal
relationshipswith peers or teachers.
Inappropriate types of behavior feelings under normal circum¬
•
or
stances.
Unique Learners 11
•
A general pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression.
•
A tendency to develop physical symptoms or fears associated with
personal or school problems.
•
This term includes schizophrenia, but does not include students who are
socially maladjusted, unless they have a serious emotional disturbance.
■
Hearing impairment: An impairment in hearing, whether permanent
or
fluctuating, that adversely affects a child’s educational performance
but that is not included under the definition of deafness as listed above.
■
Mental retardation: Significantly subaverage general intellectual
functioning
concurrently
manifested
adaptive
existing
the
with deficits in behavior and
during
developmental period adversely affects a
that
child’s educational performance.
■
Multiple disabilities: A combination of impairments (such as mental
retardation-blindness, or mental retardation-physical disabilities) that
causes such severe educational
problems that the child cannot be
accommodated
in a special education program solely for one of the
impairments.
The does include deaf-blindness.
term not
■
Orthopedic impairment: A severe orthopedic impairment that adversely
affects educational performance. The term includes impairments such as
alertness
due
problems
to chronic
condition, or acute health such as a heart
rheumatic fever, asthma, hemophilia, and leukemia, which adversely
affect educational
performance.
■
Specific learning disability: A disorder in one or more of the basic
psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language,
spoken or written, that may manifest itself in an imperfect ability to
listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations.
This term includes conditions such as perceptual disabilities, brain injury,
minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia. This
term does not include children who have learning problems that are
or brain
injuries induced by birth trauma.
■
Visual impairment, including blindness: An impairment in vision
that, even with correction, adversely affects a child’s educational
performance.
The term includes both partial sight and blindness, (p. 2)
impacted school districts across the nation because the cost of educating students
with disabilities is twice the cost of educating general education students (Vaughn
& Fuchs, 2003 ). Flaws in the discrepancy method blamed for this increase include
(a) the inability to distinguish if poor school performance was a result of a learning
disability or underachievement, (b) statistical regression that causes scores to regress
toward the mean over time, (c) overestimation and underestimate of ability, and (d)
lack of sensitivity to learning problems (Fuchs, Mock, Morgan, & Young, 2003 ).
IDEA (2004) changed the way eligibility decisions are made. Now the process is
more student-centered and includes a collaborative team informed by assessment
data and progress-monitoring decisions based on the student’s needs and strengths
(U.S. Department of Education, n.d.).
IDENTIFICATION
giftedness
and disabilities (Hannah & Shore, 1995 ). Twice-exceptional learners are a
heterogeneous group representing all types of giftedness combined with various
disabilities (Brody & Mills, 1997). There is no consensus on one defining pattern
or set of scores to identify
gifted students with disabilities. Identifying students
for gifted programs and students with disabilities for special education services
continue to be mutually exclusive activities (Boodoo, Bradley, Frontera, Pitts,
& Wright, 1989 ). Relying on separate prevailing definitions and identification
procedures for gifted students and students with disabilities makes identification
difficult when students possess characteristics of both groups. The separate
protocols
used identify students for gifted and special education fail consider the
to to
underachievers
and, and unmotivated students
less-flattering sometimes, terms such as
lazy are used to describe them (Silverman, 1993 ). By the time their performance
14 Twice-Exceptional Gifted Children
drops below grade level and someone suspects a disability, their gifted potential
may no longer be visible.
Stereotypical beliefs can hinder the identification of twice-exceptional
children(Bianco, 2005 ; Cline & Hedgeman, 2001 ; Johnson, Karnes, & Carr, 1997;
Whitmore & Maker, 1985 ). Gifted potential is seldom identified in students with
failing grades and incomplete assignments (King, 2005 ). Some educators
question
if a student with serious learning problems can be gifted (Brody & Mills,
1997 ). Research by Bianco (2005) found that once a child was identified with a
disability, teachers were reluctant to refer him for gifted programming. Gifted
students with emotional and behavior problems often are not referred for gifted
programs or they are terminated from gifted programs because of their behavior
(Reid & McGuire, 1995 ). Unfortunately, too many twice-exceptional students
fail to meet the eligibility requirements for either giftedness or learning
disabilities
because identification protocols fail to consider the special characteristics of
this population (Brody & Mills, 1997 ). Time and energy is wasted determining
if students are truly gifted and/or if they qualify for special education services.
Many twice-exceptional learners who are not identified for services provided
by gifted education or special education are later identified for personality and
behavioral problems (Waldron, Saphire, & Rosenblum, 1987 ).
Evidence of underachievement typically is required in screening for learning
disabilities (Beckley, 1998 ). Gifted students rarely get referred because they are
able to compensate for their learning problems (Senf, 1983 ). Although they may
be underachieving when compared to their potential, their above-grade-level
performance can
prevent their identification for a learning problem. The criteria for
identifying students with a learning disability in some states requires achievement
to be at least 2 years below grade level in at least one subject area. Therefore, it is
unlikely that a young gifted student with learning disabilities will be identified
(Reis & McCoach, 2002 ). Many educators view below-grade-level achievement
as a
prerequisite to a diagnosis of a learning disability (Baum, 1990 ). Even when
teachers recognize the student has issues that would lead them to believe there
is a disability, the determination that a student is not eligible for special services
means
they will remain in the general education program (Reid & McGuire,
1995 ). Selecting students whose achievement is in the bottom 20% of the class for
intervention will mean that gifted students with learning disabilities, who
function
at or near grade level, will not be identified. Achievement of gifted students
must be compared to their ability (Reynolds, Zetlin, & Wang, 1993 ; Siegel &
exceptional students can underachieve for many years before their achievement
Unique Learners 15
falls significantly below the average level of their age peers. In fact, some students
are never identified for either gifted or
special education programming.
NEW DIRECTIONS
the way educators assess, identify, and provide services to students with
disabilities.
The reauthorization of IDEA mentioned gifted students with disabilities for
the first time priority group whose needs can be funded in U.S. Department
as a
can
begin. Interventions can begin as soon as data analysis shows the student is
not progressing adequately. No longer will students have to “wait-to-fail” before
SUMMARY
needs. These unique learners require support from both gifted and special
education
specialists in order to achieve their potential. However, identification is
problematic because their unique characteristics are
atypical of a gifted student
and a student with disabilities. With no federal definition, the needs of
twice-exceptional
Response students often
changing are overlooked.
the way schools provide services for students with
to Intervention is