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Books > Social sciences > Education > Teaching of specific groups > Teaching of gifted children
Though nearly 5 million students can be characterized as gifted and
talented in the United States, many exceptional learners ""fly
under the radar."" Because they are not appropriately challenged in
the general classroom, they never meet their full potential in
school or in life. Author Jenny Grant Rankin equips general
classroom teachers with the information and strategies they need to
spot, advocate for, engage, and challenge exceptional learners in
their classrooms. Learn how to: Recognize the challenges of each
child. Identify the five unexpected traits of exceptional learners.
Adjust your teaching to meet the needs of all learners. Filled with
useful strategies and poignant personal accounts, this book gives
you the ""meat"" of what you need to prevent those students who
need to be challenged and engaged from slipping through the cracks.
Driven by a passion for music, for excellence, and for fame, violin
soloists are immersed from early childhood in high-pressure
competitions, regular public appearances, and arduous daily
practice. An in-depth study of nearly one hundred such children,
Producing Excellence illuminates the process these young violinists
undergo to become elite international soloists. A musician and a
parent of a young violinist, sociologist Izabela Wagner offers an
inside look at how her young subjects set out on the long road to
becoming a soloist. The remarkable research she conducted - at
rehearsals, lessons, and in other educational settings - enabled
her to gain deep insight into what distinguishes these talented
prodigies and their training. She notes, for instance, the
importance of a family culture steeped in the values of the musical
world. Indeed, more than half of these students come from a family
of professional musicians and were raised in an atmosphere marked
by the importance of instrumental practice, the vitality of music
as a vocation, and especially the veneration of famous artists.
Wagner also highlights the highly structured, rigorous training
system of identifying, nurturing, and rewarding talent, even as she
underscores the social, economic, and cultural factors that make
success in this system possible. Offering an intimate portrait of
the students, their parents, and their instructors, Producing
Excellence sheds new light on the development of exceptional
musical talent, as well as draw much larger conclusions as to
""producing prodigy"" in other competition-prone areas, such as
sports, sciences, the professions, and other arts. Wagner's
insights make this book valuable for academics interested in the
study of occupations, and her clear, lively writing is perfect for
general readers curious about the ins and outs of training to be a
violin soloist.
Gifted kids are so much more than test scores and grades. Still,
it's sometimes difficult to see past the potential to the child who
may be anxious, lonely, confused, or unsure of what the future
might bring. This book, now fully revised with updated information
and new survey quotes, offers practical suggestions for addressing
the social and emotional needs of gifted students. The authors
present ways to advocate for gifted education; help gifted
underachievers, perfectionists, and twice - exceptional students;
and provide all gifted kids with a safe, supportive learning
environment. Complete with engaging stories, strategies, Q&As,
essays, activities, resources, and discussions of ADHD, Asperger's,
and the Common Core, this book is for anyone committed to helping
gifted students thrive. Online digital content includes
reproducible forms from the book.
'Widening Horizons for Educating the Gifted and General Education'
is an eye-opening and inspiring guidebook for educators worldwide -
school teachers, teacher educators, researchers, educational policy
makers and administrators, and given its simple and lucid style,
also parents. The book examines vital issues that are relevant not
only for 'education of the gifted' but also for 'education in
general' and 'widens horizons' regarding both. 200 out of every
1000 children (who together constitute children who are in the top
10% of their age group on any ability) are gifted in some important
way and can make outstanding contributions in various fields. But
because most schools focus on the 'average' child, the rights and
needs of gifted children are ignored, resulting in failure to
identify, understand and nurture their talents adequately. As a
result, by the time these children leave school much of their
talents are lost, often irrevocably, both to themselves and to
society. In this enlightening book, Dr. Rao examines
comprehensively and in depth the myriad aspects of gifted child
education. She also critiques in Chapter 6 gifted programs in her
own native India. This serves as an in-depth example, of global
value, of what schools are doing in theory and practice to address
the educational needs of the gifted. Also very importantly, this
critique has been made against the backdrop of 'education in
general' and the views on education of Indian seer philosophers.
This brings to the fore some serious, fundamental lacunae in
educational systems all over the world which have led to the
lop-sided development of both individuals and societies. This
illuminating critique takes the book beyond the boundaries of
'education for the gifted' to 'education in general' and 'widens
horizons' regarding both.
Linguist Camilia Sadik discovered over 100 spelling rules. Logical
learners need spelling rules to know when to spell a sound one-way
and not the other, as in the final sound in fashion, ocean,
suspicion, complexion, superstition, expression, and musician.
Those with spelling difficulties are not learning disabled; they
can learn but their learning style is a logical learning style.
Logical learners have been learning the spelling of hundreds of
words at a time from 100 Spelling Rules. Visit SpellingRules.com to
learn Now the spelling of 240 words instantly 100 Spelling Rules is
a book to teach 12,000 long words to older children in the 4th
grade and up, adults, and ESL students. It can be used by teachers
or as a self-help book. Dyslexic persons are logical learners and
can now learn to spell logically. Dyslexia in spelling and in
writing letters in reverse ends, after learning to spell and after
slowing down to write words slowly. Each of the 105 spelling
lessons in 100 Spelling Rules begins with a spelling rule, followed
by a list of nearly all the words that follow that rule, and
students are asked to read aloud slowly to memorize the spelling of
hundreds of words at a time. The author, Linguist Camilia Sadik
spent 15 years intensely dissecting English, discovering over 100
spelling rules, applying the spelling rules in 600 phonics-based
spelling lessons, class-testing her discoveries, and preparing 10
breakthrough phonics-based spelling books. The 30 unique learning
features in Sadik's books make learning to spell inescapable.
Sadik's books are cumulative. To benefit from this book, those who
missed learning phonics need to start with the books Read Instantly
and Learn to Spell 500 Words a Day, which is in 6 volumes. For
sample lessons and much more, visit SpellingRules.com
This volume covers significant highlights in the history of gifted
education, addressing significant contributors to the field,
important political and policy concerns, and programs and practices
of note. The book's scope is holistic, using Ayn Rand's concept of
"men and women] of the mind" to frame giftedness as a quality of
individuals that extends beyond the academic or "schoolhouse"
setting and into a range of aspects of the lived human experience
of gifted individuals. CONTENTS:
This book is dedicated to the scholar and academic teacher Franz
Monks, who is considered internationally to be one of the most
brilliant 'giftedness' researchers. The wide spectrum of his
writings and activities is reflected in the number of renowned
international scholars who contributed to this unique collection of
essays on gifted education as a life-long challenge.
"Anderegg's clear-eyed look at a damaging cultural truism does
nerds and jocks-all Americans, really-a service." ("The Washington
Post").
Thick glasses, socially awkward, a math whiz with a pocket
protector- everyone knows what a nerd is. But where did this
stereotype come from? Children aren't born knowing what a "nerd" or
"geek" is, so why do they know by the age of five or six that they
don't want to be one? In this revised and updated paperback edition
of his thought-provoking book, family psychotherapist and
psychology professor David Anderegg reveals how the systematic
disparagement of "nerds" in our culture is bad for our children and
even worse for America. In "Nerds," Anderegg examines why science
and engineering have become socially poisonous disciplines, why
adults wink at the derision of "nerdy" kids, and what the cost of
this rising tide of anti- intellectualism is to both our children
and our nation. Drawing upon education research, psychological
theory, and his own interviews with nerdy and non-nerdy kids alike,
Anderegg argues that in order to prepare rising generations to
compete in the global marketplace, we need to revisit how we think
about "nerds."
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