NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 8 results Save | Export
Beghetto, Ronald A. – Understanding Our Gifted, 2010
Most educators who work with gifted students acknowledge the importance of creativity and have found various ways to include it as part of the gifted education curriculum. In many cases, however, developing creativity is still viewed as something separate from academic learning. Students with undemonstrated creative potential often are excluded…
Descriptors: Creativity, Academically Gifted, Creative Teaching, Teaching Methods
Raulston, Cassie; Moellinger, Donna – Understanding Our Gifted, 2007
With the evolution of technology, students can now take online classes that may not be offered in their home schools. While online courses are commonly found in many high schools, WebQuests are used more commonly in elementary schools. Through the exploration of WebQuests, students are able to integrate the Internet into classroom activities. The…
Descriptors: Multiple Intelligences, Class Activities, Learning Activities, Student Interests
Freeman, Christopher – Understanding Our Gifted, 2005
There are two kinds of logical reasoning: "inductive" and "deductive". Inductive reasoning proceeds from effect back to cause, from special case to general principle. Detectives use it, examining the clues and conjecturing the actions that caused them. On the other hand, deductive reasoning proceeds from cause to effect, from principle to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Academically Gifted, Logical Thinking, Thinking Skills
Meador, Karen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2001
This article provides 20 principles to enable educators to identify meaningful creative activities for gifted students and avoid the superfluous "whistles". Activities should: value creative thinking, make children more sensitive to environmental stimuli, encourage manipulation of objects and ideas, develop tolerance for new ideas, and teach how…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Creative Development, Creativity, Educational Principles
DeVries, Arlene R. – Understanding Our Gifted, 2005
Often, bright young people languish in a setting where repetition and rote learning lull them into passivity. When students are not challenged, they fail to understand that true achievement comes with effort. Because of bureaucratic pressure, limited funding, and large class sizes, teachers often find themselves "teaching to the middle" or…
Descriptors: Reading Materials, Learning Activities, Gifted, Rote Learning
Flack, Jerry – Understanding Our Gifted, 2001
This article discusses how creative thinking can be encouraged in students through such classic tools as brainstorming and the productive thinking elements of fluency, flexibility, originality, and elaboration. It describes how fairy tales can be used to foster these thinking skills and suggests classroom activities. (Contains two references.) (CR)
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development, Creative Development
Smutny, Joan Franklin – Understanding Our Gifted, 2005
While not all gifted children love reading and writing and they do not all have access to books or grow up in literary families the great majority of these children crave the rich and imaginative world that literacy has to offer. Differences in culture, age, and geography influence this love of storytellers, poets, songwriters, and novelists, but…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Language Arts, Teaching Methods, Reading Instruction
Silverman, Linda, Ed. – Understanding Our Gifted, 1990
This document consists of six issues (all of volume 2) of a newsletter subtitled "Dedicated to Helping Gifted Children Reach their Full Potential". These issues deal with all aspects of parenting and educating gifted children. Major articles include: "Re-examining the Concept of Underachievement" (Joanne Rand Whitmore);…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Adolescents, Child Rearing, Elementary Secondary Education