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Dr. Sylvia Rimm
is a child psychologist, clinical professor at Case
University School of Medicine, author, newspaper and
magazine columnist, and radio/TV personality. Her advice
column appears regularly in 2e Newsletter.
You can visit her website at
www.sylviarimm.com.
For a free newsletter
about
underachievement, send a large, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box 32,
Watertown, WI, 53094, or
read "Solving the Mysterious Underachievement Problem"
at
www.sylviarimm.com.
If
you have a question for Dr.
Rimm,
please send it to:
DrSylvia@2eNewsletter.com. |
Q |
My son is 17 and has been
a gifted underachiever since fourth grade. He got a
score of 30 on his ACT as a sophomore but is failing in
his classes, except Honors Chemistry III and Physics.
He’s in danger of not graduating this spring because he
fails to turn in classwork or homework, even though he
takes the tests and finals and gets A’s. He has a
medical diagnosis of Attention Deficit Disorder, but
medication doesn’t work and only causes depression and
anorexia.
My repeated visits with
teachers and guidance counselors have gotten me nowhere.
I find it ridiculous that my son might fail high school
because he’s disorganized and can’t focus, even though
he knows the material. Please give me some advice about
where to go or what to do to help my son.
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A |
Although
I can’t know for certain, it’s possible that your son’s
lack of focus comes from the curriculum. If he can earn
A’s on tests and exams without doing any homework, it
would seem likely that the work isn’t challenging
enough. Of course, tests don’t measure everything. For
example, report or creative writing isn’t usually
assessed with tests; so if he refuses to do those, they
could lower his grades in some subjects. There may also
be other emotional issues involved in his refusing to do
his work. You probably need an advocate who has
evaluated your son and knows about gifted education to
guide you through this problem.
My book Why Bright Kids
Get Poor Grades (Crown Publishing, 1995) will be
helpful in permitting you to determine if your son is
underachieving because the curriculum isn’t appropriate
or if he has gotten in some avoidance patterns that can
be harmful for him for the remainder of his education.
College could resolve his problems, or he could continue
his underachievement in college even when curriculum is
appropriate. It’s time for further evaluation.
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