Dp. They can get bored. Gifted children are a diverse subset of people. |
Baloney! A gifted child left to their own devices may be able to avoid boredom, but kids at school are not left to their own devices. They are required to be attentive and do the task assigned regardless of whether they already know the material or even if it’s just busy work. If you had to spend 6-7 hours/day, every work day for 9 months in training you felt was pointless, completing assignments whose only purported purpose was to teach you what you already knew, I suspect that regardless of your individual brilliance you would eventually feel bored. The above examples themselves are contradictory. Apparently, if a child is bored it means they’re not gifted, because a gifted child would escape into their own head for distraction, but at the same time, if they do they’re being rude and need to focus their attention on the boring lesson. Finally, whether or not a child is gifted is not deterministic of the contributions they will eventually make to society. Someone may be greatly talented and choose not to fully exploit their talents. Similarly, someone may be less talented but more motivated to stretch their talents and ultimately accomplish phenomenal works. This is why rather than quibbling about why any given child may not be truly “gifted” we should give every child the opportunities, challenges, encouragement, and support to find and develop whatever talents they may have as far as they wish to pursue them. Knowledge is not a limited resource and it will ultimately benefit society to help children reach whatever heights they will. Ultimately, even if our “most gifted” end up “just” settling for a “normal” role like mechanic, baker, teacher, paralegal, secretary, nurse, SAHM, farmer, etc., think of how much they can contribute by being excellent in their chosen endeavor. |
Bill Gates is a pedo I would use him as anything. |
+1. Or try to change the subject? |
100% I’m a mom of 2 gifted children (and one gifted ADHD husband, which can also be difficult). |
Your cats are gifted too, right? |
:mrgreen: |
Nope. I mean, I guess if it makes you feel better to tell yourself that, whatever, soothe yourself with fantasy. But objectively, nope. |
It seems very important to you that this be true. It's not, but whatever. |
| None of your children are gifted. Sorry, but you're deluding yourself. |
| I have found that the people who talk the most about how smart their kids actually often don't know whether or not their child truly qualifies as gifted, which is usually defined as an IQ 130 or higher (top 2% of the population). These people sometimes find out that their kid is not in fact gifted and is just smart, and have a hard time dealing with it. |
You don’t make much sense. Gifted children still have to learn - they just absorb information at a higher rate and in more detail than other kids. My gifted children were not bored - one read books under her desk and the other stares out the window. This is not disruptive behavior, but it’s rude when you have to ask the teacher directions (again) because you weren’t paying attention. I’m not the one you responded to but the PP with a gifted child who skipped a grade. I might also mention the summer birthday, so she’s 2 years younger than the other kids - moving her ahead won’t solve the rude behavior problem. I’m not one of those parents who thinks my kids need to be held to a different standard of behavior because they were born smart. They need to learn manners like everyone else. If they zone in and out of lectures that’s fine as long as they don’t expect the teacher to give them personal instructions. If they take in an enrichment project instead of the classroom curriculum, that’s for the teacher to decide. This last one is why I send my kids to private school - more flexible with them. Your last paragraph is actually true. I went to gifted school and most of my peers did nothing exciting - park ranger, government work, political activist, piano teacher, SAHM, and biologist. Those are the ones I’m still in touch with. And me? I’m a cog in a large corporation’s wheel reporting to someone whose IQ is probably 40points lower than mine - it’s life - and I’m actually ok with it. Not all of us are driven to be the next CEO. I actually feel sorry for them making all the sacrifices that make life worthwhile. |
No fantasy over here. You make a lot of assumptions. Let's see if you can figure out all of them by yourself. |
| Tell the parent to check out the DCUM AAP forum, where she will find her tribe of similarly annoying people. |
IQ tests are bunk. This is not 1930. |