Articles & Resources

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Director's Corner


Author: Cheryl Ackerman From The SENG Update of: March 2005 Topic: Diversity in Giftedness
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"All cheddars taste the same." Have you have heard this radio commercial for Vermont cheddar cheese? Several ridiculously overgeneralized statements are made to a few women, all of which MUST be false, like, "all women are the same." While most people would disagree with these statements, most would probably NOT disagree if presented with the statement, "all gifted individuals are the same." Those of us in the field know that this is definitely not the case and that the diversity within the gifted population is enormous and something that is important to consider.

To start with a difference with which you may not be familiar, I am a "splitter," not a "lumper." If you've never heard these terms before, they refer to people who either prefer to lump things together in larger more holistic groups versus those who are more comfortable breaking groups up into smaller categories. Regardless of which you are, I am sure you will agree that when considering the individual differences within the gifted population, doing a bit of splitting can be helpful. For example, a gifted person might be male, an adolescent, and be very intense. Another gifted person might be female, an introvert, and have an attention deficit diagnosis. Each of these individual characteristics represents a different aspect of the individual that may need to be examined to help understand him or her. This is not to diminish the importance of looking at the whole person, but it is very difficult to find materials that will describe a complete person and all of his or her characteristics.

So, if you are interested in knowing more about specific characteristics, the SENG website provides a wealth of reading materials that focus on different topics. There are typically multiple articles that address each of the following areas, so please look beyond those listed below as you explore the online articles library.

Highly gifted: Exceptionally Gifted Children: Different Minds by Deirdre V. Lovecky
Adolescents: Helping Adolescents Adjust to Giftedness by Thomas M. Buescher and Sharon Higham
Introversion: Introversion: The Often Forgotten Factor Impacting the Gifted by Jill D. Burruss and Lisa Kaenzig
Male: Managing His Image: The Challenge Facing a Gifted Male by Thomas P. Hébert
Female: Social and Emotional Issues Faced by Gifted Girls in Elementary and Secondary School by Sally M. Reis
Intensity: Overexcitability and the Gifted by Sharon Lind
Attention deficit: Gifted Students with Attention Deficits: Fact and/or Fiction? Or, Can We See the Forest for the Trees? by Susan M. Baum, F. Richard Olenchak and Steven V. Owen
Depression: Existential Depression in Gifted Individuals by James T. Webb
Adult: Discovering the Gifted Ex-Child by Stephanie Tolan

Cheryl Ackerman is the President of SENG, a Senior Associate for Program Evaluation at the Delaware Education R & D Center at the University of Delaware, and has served on the SENG Board for over two years.