Gifted Education
An excerpt from the Virginia Homeschool Manual
By Beth Wright Bess, www.smartkidathome.com
Looking back at our first section about giftedness characteristics, we notice that many gifted children learn very differently from non-gifted children. This fact requires parents to meet their children’s academic needs through methods that accommodate that difference. Forcing your gifted child to learn through methods that are alien to him will not only frustrate him, but could turn him off to learning entirely.
Lateral thinking, global thinking, abstract thinking, visual-spatial thinking, and other terms have been used to describe the way that gifted people think. From the top down, or the opposite of sequentially, the gifted child’s learning process requires an overview before the details, the big picture before the first puzzle piece. What are the implications of such neural “hard-wiring”?
These kids are bored silly by repetition, A-Z fact accumulation, sequential skill mastery, and other popular public school pedagogy. They become frustrated with textbooks that break information down into bite-size pieces because they are starving for the whole story. This need for speed flies in the face of all conventional academic wisdom. Children have to be led to the facts, told what to believe, and then drilled until they memorize them. Right?
Wrong, if your child is gifted.
Gifted children are capable of understanding complex subjects intuitively. They grasp underlying patterns of logic. They see the theory, the concept, and the gestalt.
How then, is the homeschooling parent to teach such an unusual learner? Respect for the child’s learning process is a first step in the right direction. Believe in his ability to make intuitive leaps. Know that he wants to achieve. Then, present him with the tools to do so.
SO MANY HOMESCHOOLING METHODS!
Which method should parents choose for their gifted child? The answer
to that question depends upon too many factors to allow for a one-size-fits-all
answer. The child’s learning style, personality, birth order, and any
attendant disabilities combine to form unique academic requirements. However,
some generalities may be made about the three methods that represent
the homeschooling method spectrum.
TRADITIONAL TEXTBOOKS
Parents love traditional textbook-based curricula because they are all-inclusive
and help parents to avoid those dreaded “holes” in subject-skill
mastery. However, traditional textbook-based curricula can become black
holes for gifted kids in the homeschool when parents are afraid to allow the
child to learn outside the tightly controlled circle of chapter readings, chapter
tests, workbooks, and such. Many parents feel like failures when their
gifted child wants to stop following the prescribed order for subject study
and move on to more exciting subjects. When parents force the child to stick
with the curriculum’s schedule, some gifted children develop behavior problems
and parents may think that sending them to regular school is the answer.
UNSCHOOLING
The opposite extreme from textbook-based curricula, unschooling may
provide the gifted child with the freedom to pursue any subject he wishes, to
the depth he desires. Often, when combined with mentorships, apprenticeships,
lots of museum and library study, unschooling is a fine educational
method that meets the needs of the ever-changing gifted child. Most appropriate
for the family that is less-structured, rigid, or schedule-oriented,
unschooling suits parents with little investment in “acting like a school.”
However, not all gifted children thrive when unschooling. Some may need more structure in order to find their momentum. Some, due to disabilities, may need parents to establish order and rules for their learning. Some children with especially concrete sequential learning styles may need a more orderly presentation of academic materials.
ECLECTIC HOMESCHOOLING
This method seems to offer the best of both worlds. The eclectic method
offers the parents control over core subjects. The 3 R’s become the cornerstone
for the homeschool and parents insist on the child’s mastery of each.
Parents tailor the type of materials and approach to the child’s learning
style and keep the child on track with respect to work accomplished. Eclectic
method is flexible enough to allow for the very visual-spatial child who
learns math with manipulatives, the sequential child who prefers workbooks,
and the highly intuitive global child who learns through radical acceleration
with a mentor.
Beyond the 3 R’s, eclectic method allows the child to choose the subject focus for science and history, enjoying a collaborative process of choosing materials, venues, and enrichment with the parent. Eclectic method may be the perfect homeschooling method for gifted children as it keeps mom and dad in charge of the direction, focus, and scheduling of learning, while affording the child as much input as he desires.
HOW TO TEACH GIFTED CHILDREN?
Homeschooling affords parents the luxury that public school teachers
never have. No gifted program can approximate the same wonderful circumstances you possess in your home. What is your advantage? You can spend
time with your child; one-on-one, concentrated, focused time. Research indicates
that tutorials are the most effective mode of information
communication. Just one more reason why homeschooling is the best way
to educate your child!
Because many gifted children, especially high-IQ children, hate to write, spell badly, and love to play with math, there are specific accommodations and strategies parents may use to facilitate their child’s academic success from an early age. Very abstract children may need special accommodations in other subjects, as well. The following list suggests some tips and strategies:
For more information on teaching your gifted child, see the Virginia Homeschool Manual or check out some of the other resources in the HEAV Store.