Articles

 

See also:    Books & Manuals, Free Resources, Links

 

"Parenting a queer gifted child" - Anonymous

Maori The Mana Model components - Webber & Macfarlane 2020

 

The World Council for Gifted & Talented Children has announced 10 Global Principles to guide your PLD in gifted education. Click here to see this important 24 page document!

 

The New Zealand Poster

This poster was developed for the International Gifted Symposium and Conference held in Denver, USA, in March 2022. It is included here as a brief overview of the recent developments in our philosophy as an organisation. View our Poster here.

 
Stephanie Tolan
Is It A Cheetah?

Is It A Cheetah?

View web page:    www.stephanietolan.com

The first article included above by Stephanie Tolan is one of the most influential ever written about gifted learners. Translated into over 40 languages, this article has made the cheetah an analogy for gifted students all over the world and has become the logo of many groups working on behalf of these children. Time and time again this deeply moving and vivid short article has helped teachers, parents and policymakers to grasp the different attributes of the gifted child and the need for specific provision for these children. Published here with the kind permission of the author and with acknowledgement to Diane Scanlon for the graphics. See also our Links page.

 

The other articles you can access here. The brief descriptors with each article will help you to see those most relevant to you right now.

Gifted and Proud: On Being Exceptional and Maori 2011.pdf (357 kb)

The Ruamano Project: Raising Expectations, Realising Community Aspirations, and Recognising Gifted Potential in Maori Boys.pdf (199 kb)

Real Engagement in Active Problem Solving for Maori boys. A case study in a New Zealand secondary school.pdf (1070 kb)

Aseta Set 2019_1_031.pdf (148 kb)

Rating Scale for High IQ Visual-Spatial Learners.pdf (83 kb)

How do I know if my child is gifted - Checklist.pdf (84 kb)

Joy and Challenge - the gifted introvert

Acceleration: A summary

Spirituality and the Highly Gifted Adolescent

The Education Review Office: the contribution of evaluation to the education of gifted children

Using rubrics for evaluating student work

Risk & Resilience in Gifted Young People from Low Socio-Economic Backgrounds

Grouping - Research Abstracts

Time to change the metaphor
(view PDF 200 kb)
What's the symbol that springs to mind when you think of gifted learners? A shining star? That's probably the most-used image for these youngsters, reflecting the expectation of their success and achievement. But is that really the best image for today's gifted youngsters?

The Gifted Child who is Maori 
(view PDF 1.7 mb)
Jointly written by Naida Pou (now Glavish) and Rosemary Cathcart. Two teachers, one Maori and one Pakeha, in a dialogue in which Naida helps Rosemary discover some unexpected cultural perspectives!
Presented originally as a workshop and then published in Gifted Children: Their Future: Our Challenge (now known as Tall Poppies). Vol. 17/3, 1992.

Mindset - a basic truth, fallacy, or muddled thinking
(view PDF 124 kb)
It's not, and it never ever has been, about one child being "better" than another. It's about recognising and celebrating the wonderful and exciting diversity of human ability and accomplishment. Don't you agree?

The Conundrums of Success 
(view PDF 206 kb)

What does success mean for gifted learners? This paper challenges the traditional interpretation of success as limited to academic or measurable performance. It puts forward an inspirational re-definition reflecting a whole-life vision for the gifted child.
First presented as the keynote for the Australian Assn for the Education of the Gifted and Talented national conference in 2008, then requested by Dr Linda Silverman for the US Gifted Development Center’s website, and more recently presented in an edited version for the NZAGC 40th Anniversary Conference in 2015.

Will this history have a future? 
(view PDF 249 kb)

An account of 30 critical years in building gifted provision for New Zealand, recognising the many individuals involved and recording many previously interesting unpublished details – and raising some questions for the future...
Published in the Australasian Journal of Gifted Education, 23/2, December 2014.

Conceptual Curriculum 
(view PDF 112 kb)

One of the most interesting challenges involved in developing a genuinely effective programme for gifted learners lies in finding an answer to the question, "What shall we teach them?" This paper puts forward an approach based on the gifted learner’s inherent approach to learning and offers some specific topics for exploration.
Originally published in Tall Poppies, Vol.25 No 1, 2000. Later integrated into the teacher’s manual “Differentiation Made Practical”, published by Essential Resources in 2010.

Aiming for Excellence – or Not?
(view PDF 36 kb)
“Excellence” is a perfectly valid objective for the high achieving student. Is it a valid objective for the gifted learner? This short paper explores this possibly surprising question and comes up with some thought-provoking considerations.

The Inclusive Classroom and the Gifted Child 
(view PDF 764 kb)

Based on the view that every classroom should be a good place to be for every child who enters it, this paper examines decades of research for and against grouping and reaches a clear conclusion on this debate, leading to a suggested thought-provoking revision of the notion of an “inclusive classroom”. The concept of a continuum of services is discussed, and some practical steps for provision are suggested.
Paper presented to Rising Tides, a National Conference on the Gifted & Talented, Wellington, 2006.

NB: A recent research study surveying a full century of research on ability grouping can be found at https://blog.tip.duke.edu/giftedtoday.

Whaia te maramatanga – seek enlightenment.
Thinking about Pakeha and Maori and Gifted Children

(view PDF 116 kb)
A Pakeha teacher reflects on the role of the Pakeha teacher in relation to giftedness in Maori. What do we need to know? What can we as Pakeha learn from Maori to further enhance our own concept of giftedness?
First presented as a workshop in Kaitaia in the Far North of New Zealand.

I had a dream... 
(view PDF 88 kb)
Children at One Day School in Wellington were studying Martin Luther King’s famous speech and discussing how people turned dreams into reality. They decided to ask Rosemary Cathcart how she had gone about turning her dreams into One Day School. The question surprised Rosemary who admits that like most Kiwis, she’s not too comfortable about discussing personal history. But on reflection, she saw it as a valid question from children who also had dreams and aspirations which other people didn’t always understand. This is the resulting interview.
Published in Tall Poppies, 31/3, November 2006.

The Mystery Condition: Detection & Intervention
(view PDF 328 kb)

There are some children who have a condition which impacts very significantly on their learning but which is very difficult to diagnose. What is it, and when we find it, what are we really trying to achieve through intervention?
First published in Kairaranga, Journal of the Resource Teachers of Learning & Behaviour, Vol. 3, Issue 1, 2002.

Gifted Is As Gifted Does 
(view PDF 96 kb)

Why is this quote so apt? How can it help us to cater for the gifted learner?
First published in Education Today, Issue 5, 2004.

Choosing A School 
(view PDF 544 kb)

A parent’s guide to finding the right school for a gifted child.
First published in Tall Poppies, March 1996, and re-published in another format in 2004.

 
See also:    Books & Manuals, Free Resources, Links