Helping Gifted Children Soar: A Practical Guide for Parents and Teachers (2nd edition)

January 17, 2020 - Comment

Parenting gifted children is “…the world’s biggest, highest, longest roller coaster…a theme park full of thrill rides. Sometimes you smile. Sometimes you gasp. Sometimes you scream. Sometimes you laugh. Sometimes you gaze in wonder and astonishment.” This updated, user-friendly guidebook educates parents and teachers about important issues facing gifted children and the adults who guide

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(as of April 19, 2020 1:39 pm GMT+0000 - Details)

Parenting gifted children is “…the world’s biggest, highest, longest roller coaster…a theme park full of thrill rides. Sometimes you smile. Sometimes you gasp. Sometimes you scream. Sometimes you laugh. Sometimes you gaze in wonder and astonishment.” This updated, user-friendly guidebook educates parents and teachers about important issues facing gifted children and the adults who guide them, such as selecting appropriate schools, expanding and differentiating the curriculum for gifted learners, and supporting children who experience stress, depression, perfectionism, friendship issues, and more. The information and useful advice contained in this book make it an ideal resource for those just starting to learn about gifted children, as well as seasoned veterans.

Topics include:

Is my child gifted or just smart? Characteristics of gifted children How schools identify gifted children Types of gifted programs Learning options and the ideal classroom How parents and teachers can work together Parenting approaches Social and emotional needs

Comments

Anonymous says:

Excellent manual for teachers and parents of gifted children in school If you’ve ever felt like you needed a manual to figure out how to help your children or students succeed in school, this is it. Starting with a firm grounding in who gifted children are, how they learn, and what problems they face, the authors explore every facet of the gifted child’s meandering path through school. For teachers and administrator: What would be the ideal classroom for gifted children? Since this world isn’t ideal, what else can we do to help gifted students in less-than-ideal…

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