Sunday, February 27, 2011
The Hidden Gifted
12:05 PM | Posted by
Lisa Van Gemert |
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I read an article about the pervasively pale nature of gifted programs. Let's speak what it is: racism. The article focused on one young woman who faces stereotype threat from both communities (school and her race) because she is what society tends to think is rare: a gifted child of color. The article was about one particular school system, and the data isn't pretty. The truth is that it is typical of districts around the country.
Why is this? There are so many reasons, and they are deep. Let me share just one scenario. The old Stanford-Binet (I'm 44, and it was THE test for admission to gifted programs when I was young) was clearly racially biased. The images below appeared in the 1960 test. So, if I were a young black child taking this test in 1960, and I'm asked which person is more attractive, I can answer incorrectly (they say) and choose the person who looks more like me, or I can give the answer they wanted and internalize the idea that I'm not attractive. Bam!
So let's say I answer it incorrectly (along with other similar questions), and I don't get into the gifted program. That means that even if I had high potential, it was not nurtured, so when I have children, even if I see the same sparks of intelligence I showed, I never assume that they may be gifted because they are like me, and I was told I wasn't gifted. And so on and so on.
We do not yet have a level playing field with regard to giftedness, and we won't ever have one until we start seeing ourselves as talent scouts rather than gatekeepers.
Kudos for addressing it well and head-on in this article.
Read the article here.
Watch a video of the anthem, "Young, Gifted, and Black" here:
Why is this? There are so many reasons, and they are deep. Let me share just one scenario. The old Stanford-Binet (I'm 44, and it was THE test for admission to gifted programs when I was young) was clearly racially biased. The images below appeared in the 1960 test. So, if I were a young black child taking this test in 1960, and I'm asked which person is more attractive, I can answer incorrectly (they say) and choose the person who looks more like me, or I can give the answer they wanted and internalize the idea that I'm not attractive. Bam!
So let's say I answer it incorrectly (along with other similar questions), and I don't get into the gifted program. That means that even if I had high potential, it was not nurtured, so when I have children, even if I see the same sparks of intelligence I showed, I never assume that they may be gifted because they are like me, and I was told I wasn't gifted. And so on and so on.
We do not yet have a level playing field with regard to giftedness, and we won't ever have one until we start seeing ourselves as talent scouts rather than gatekeepers.
Kudos for addressing it well and head-on in this article.
Read the article here.
Watch a video of the anthem, "Young, Gifted, and Black" here:
Welcome!
Lisa Van Gemert is the gifted youth specialist for Mensa, and a professional development facilitator for teachers of the gifted. She blogs about issues in GT education, parenting, and achievement.
About Me
- Lisa Van Gemert
- Gifted kids are my professional and personal passion.
Helpful Links
- LISA'S WEBSITE
- State Department's (who knew?) list of resources - good reading!
- World Council for Gifted and Talented Children
- http://www.cectag.org/
- SENG - Supporting the Emotional Needs of the Gifted
- National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented - Renzulli's Crowd
- Government's site with lots of free resources for teaching
- Duke Talent Identification Program
- Council for Exceptional Children's Gifted and Talented Arm
- Mensa for Kids - resources for parents, teachers, and children
- National Asssociation for Gifted Children
- Interpreting CogAT scores
- Davidson Institute for Talent Development
- Wrights Law - fairly comprehensive article on testing
- Hoagies' Gifted Education page
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