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Cooper, Carolyn R.; Baum, Susan M.; Neu, Terry W. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 2004
Can students with learning and attention difficulties in school actually be talented scientists in disguise? This article presents a model that was highly successful in identifying and developing scientific talent in these special students. The factors that contributed to the success of the model were the following: The emphasis was on helping…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Talent Development, Science Education, Models
McGuire, Carson; And Others – 1968
The cultivation of talented behavior necessitates identification of (1) the personality attributes inherent in the individual that can serve as predictors of subsequent talented behavior; and (2) the processes by which personality attributes can be reinforced or modified to produce subsequent socially valued behavior. A longitudinal study of Texas…
Descriptors: Creativity, Grade Prediction, Individual Characteristics, Intelligence
Feldman, Marvin – Community, Technical, and Junior College Journal, 1987
Describes the Fashion Institute of Technology's (FIT's) 2 + 2 curriculum, in which students complete an associate degree in applied science degree before applying for selective admission to a baccalaureate program. Considers the relevance of creativity to the mission of FIT. Quotes well-known creative people about the sources of creativity and the…
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Associate Degrees, College Curriculum, College Environment
Peer reviewedAlvino, James – PTA Today, 1983
The right kind of learning and environment at home and in school can often turn an "average" student into a "gifted" one. Parents can help ignite the motivating spark by encouraging the development of critical thinking skills, creativity, and leadership ability. Educational strategies parents can use are suggested. (PP)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMaker, C. June – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1979
The article describes C. Taylor's "multiple talent" approach for gifted children which states that schools have traditionally tapped only one type of talent, academic, and that many more children would have a chance to excel if schools increased emphasis on other areas. (PHR)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Communication Skills, Creativity, Decision Making
Peer reviewedSnelson, Kenneth; And Others – Roeper Review, 1991
This panel paper includes discussions from professional artists on pivotal stages and forces in their artistic and career development. Factors identified and recommended for emphasis in curriculum development are motivation, confidence, discipline, basic skills, structure, and studying with gifted teachers. Numerous possible roles for the art…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Art Teachers, Creativity
Clark, Gilbert; Zimmerman, Enid – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
All programs for the gifted and talented should incorporate visual and performing arts, so that students' natural interests and creative abilities are not stifled. Many gifted and talented high school students not classified as artistically talented can achieve in discipline-based curriculum areas stressing nondiscursive art-making activities.…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Academically Gifted, Creativity, Educational Benefits
Peer reviewedRea, Dan – Roeper Review, 2001
This article explains how the theory of the motivated mind conceptualizes the productive interaction of intelligence, creativity, and achievement motivation and how this theory can help educators to maximize students' emergent potential for giftedness. It discusses the integration of cold-order thinking and hot-chaotic thinking into fluid-adaptive…
Descriptors: Creativity, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Peer reviewedMeeker, Mary N. – NASSP Bulletin, 1971
Educators, by making aspects of school other than academic achievement desirable, can motivate children to achieve in diverse areas. We need not, and we must not, limit the feeling of school success to the top two-percenters in academic accomplishment. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Creativity, Curriculum Development, Exceptional Child Education
Peer reviewedYunghans, Marian – School Arts, 1983
The program for academically gifted and talented at Kellogg Elementary School in Michigan includes an open house for parents. Students teach workshops in activities like painting and weaving, and parents become the students. Parents learn how to encourage creativity and how to help their children learn. (CS)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Creativity, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedEdmunds, Alan L.; Noel, Kathryn A. – Roeper Review, 2003
This article presents the case of Geoffrey, a prolific 5-year-old writer. It examines his writing and how his intrapersonal factors and propitious environment contribute to his prodigious output. Childhood precocity is presented as an age-based comparable rather than as an adult-based predictor. A developmental theory of precocity is considered.…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Creativity, Elementary Education, Environmental Influences
Siler, Todd – Understanding Our Gifted, 2001
This article questions whether current practices in gifted education are excluding groups of natural learners who don't fit our vision of giftedness or standards of high ability. It urges gifted education programs to reach out to different learners who live on the outskirts of the circle of academically gifted learners. (CR)
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Academically Gifted, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education
Harlan, Jane E. – 1993
This paper attempts to make explicit some assumptions about the creative abilities of people with developmental disabilities, and offers constructive strategies for replacing negative ideas and attitudes with positive attitudes. The paper points out that: a high degree of artistic ability can coexist with considerable impairments in other areas of…
Descriptors: Adults, Art Activities, Attitude Change, Children
Council for Exceptional Children, Arlington, VA. – 1969
Articles included in the collection of convention papers discuss a creativity score from the Stanford Binet and its applications, performance based instruction, methods for maximizing the development of talent among the urban disadvantaged, and talent potential among the disadvantaged. Abstracts of papers are provided on the following topics:…
Descriptors: Abstracts, Conference Reports, Creativity, Disadvantaged Youth
Miller, Phyllis, Ed. – Mensa Research Journal, 1999
This issue of a research journal on gifted education explores the concept of intelligence and giftedness, talent development, gifted education, and educational research. Specific articles include: (1) "Spearman Revisited: Contemporary Views of g" (Milton Dehn); (2) "Exceptionally High Intelligence and Schooling" (Ellen Winner), which argues for…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Cluster Grouping, Creativity, Educational Research

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