From the Week of April 19th
THE
MANAGED CHILD. An article in the
Montreal Gazette
describes the pressures on today's children,
their sense of entitlement, and their place on a
pedestal. Also covered are changes and contrasts with
previous generations in terms of such issues as media,
structure of life, and expectations. Along with the
observations and some of the implied parenting advice
(too late for us), we liked the terms we found: "affluenza"
for the sense that happiness is linked to material
possessions; "severely gifted" for a child thought to be
(rightly or wrongly) to be exceptionally smart of
talented; "trophy child"; and others.
Read the article.
THE NEXT DSM. If you're interested in getting a preview
of the next edition of the
Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, check out
an article at Clinical
Psychiatry News. Some of the participants in
building the next edition reportedly say that the DSM-V
will place "a greater emphasis on the disability and
functioning associated with psychiatric illness." This
and other changes are supposed to make it easier to take
into account co-morbidities (and those of you involved
with twice-exceptional kids know how many are really 3e
or 4e) and the "NOS" (not otherwise specified) dilemma.
Publication is still three years off, but you can
read the preview here.
2e IN LIFE, ART. The movie "The Soloist" is about a
homeless, extremely talented musician who also may have
schizophrenia. The talented British director of the
film, according to an interview in the
Houston Chronicle,
is dyslexic and directs films with complex story lines.
The director, Joe Wright, says his dyslexia, which was
undiagnosed for most of his school career, leads him to
"think about things in different ways and create
different connections." He says he thinks "in moments of
film." ["I am a
clown," says the main character in Heinrich Boll's book
The Clown, "and
I collect moments." Sequitur? Non?]
Read the article (and find how Wright's reaction to
a friend's psychotic breakdown led Wright to deny the
label of "mental illness" in favor of "personalities and
perspectives of realities.")
LD AND GENDER. Science
Daily reported on a study uncovering nine genes
that apparently cause learning disabilities when the
genes are "knocked out." These genes are all on the X
chromosome, of which males have one and females two. LDs
are more common in males, and researchers speculate that
an X-chromosome genetic mutation has more impact on
males. The research should affect future diagnosis,
genetic counseling, and treatment development.
Read the article.
GIFTED LEARNERS is the topic of what is probably the
longest interview by Michael Shaughnessy (of Ednews.org)
that we've ever seen. The interview, with authors Joanne
Foster and Dona Matthews, covers a new edition of their
book on gifted education; why and how parents should be
involved in their gifted child's education; and gifted
girls. The interviewees also offer opinions on such
topics as labeling (of programs versus the kids),
acceleration and enrichment, and how to best serve
borderline-gifted kids.
Find the interview.
AD/HD AND COLLEGE. In its "Education Life" section on
Sunday, the 19th, The
New York Times offered tips and advice for
families who will be sending an AD/HD child off to
college in the fall. The article suggests that
medications may have to be adjusted to adapt to a longer
study day, that away-at-college students will lose
family support, and that colleges should be chosen with
support services in mind. The article also notes that
college is often the time when undiagnosed AD/HD comes
to light.
Read the article.
WE MIGHT HAVE MISSED THIS item in March -- an article in
the Dana Foundation's
BrainWork newsletter on the effect of AD/HD
stimulant medications on the brain. According to the
article, apparently those drugs do not adversely affect
the development of the cortex, which undergoes
"thinning" during adolescence. Instead, the drugs may
normalize the
brain's development. Researchers speculate that
stimulants encourage the use of areas of the brain
related to attention, which in turn makes the maturation
process seem similar to that in "normal" children -- a
"use it or lose it" proposition that involves the
brain's plasticity. If you've got a gifted and AD/HD kid
who's resisting meds, show'em
this article.
From the Week of April 12th
MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES is the topic of a collection of
videos and articles on the
Edutopia site, some of the material very recent (i.e,
this month). If you're an
aficionado of this approach to learning and
teaching for high-ability kids,
check it out.
SHOULDA KNOWN THE WRITER WAS DAN BARRY when we
got partway into an article in
The New York Times
on April 15th.
Once you start one of his articles, you usually finish,
and this article about Tiffany Clay, an academically and
musically gifted high school senior in Ohio, was no
exception. The young lady in question, according to the
article, "Should be going to a top college, on
scholarship. Should be, but won't be..." The reason: she
supports herself by working 35 hours a week on roller
skates at a Sonic drive-in, gets months' worth of free
meals there for being employee of the month, pays for
her own apartment, but doesn't know what role music will
continue to play in her life after high school.
Read the article and be depressed. [Or be
encouraged. By late afternoon on the 15th,
the following note appeared in the online "Comments"
section for the article:
The "This Land" column that appeared on April 15th
prompted an outpouring of support for both Tiffany Clay
and the Newark High School
Sinfonia. For those who want to help in some way,
here is the e-mail address for Susan Larson, the
school's music director, and the addresses for two funds
being established to help this young lady and her
school....
Find the addresses.]
THE USE OF IQ. The London
Financial Times
profiled the woman
who has the world's highest recorded IQ, Marilyn
vos Savant, who writes the "Ask Marilyn" column
in
Parade Magazine.
The article recounts how, in the mid-1980s, publicity of
her IQ score of 228 changed her life. The article also
covers "detractors" of Savant, critics who feel she
should be doing more in life than writing a Q&A column,
and gives background information on intelligence testing
in general. If nothing else, this article brings
perspective to the issues that may attach to profound
giftedness.
Read it.
TWITTER GOES GIFTED. Joel McIntosh of
Prufrock Press has apparently broken the Twitter
barrier for the gifted world. In a recent email, he
explains how members of the gifted community might be
able to use the technology to communicate, advocate, and
participate. He also offers access to his own tweets.
Find out more, and if you think Twitter can apply to
the 2e community as well, let us know.
ADVICE FOR GT EDUCATORS. A new blog by the organization
Ingeniousus offers tips for GT professionals. The
first posts cover "four B's" of partnering with parents:
be empathetic, be open and available, be wildly
creative, and be consistent.
Find the blog.
GIFTED IN NEW JERSEY? The site of the New Jersey
Parents' Interactive Network for Gifted Education (NJPING)
might be of interest to you. The goal: local networking
to "change the state of education for all gifted
children."
Go to the site.