Archive for October, 2011

October 31, 2011

Q & A: Motivating an Underachiever

by Mariam

The following post is featured in the most recent NAGC Parent & Community Network Newsletter. Are you a parent member of NAGC?  For $30 a year you will receive membership, discounts, newletters, and 8 issues of our PHP magazine!  Join us!

Do you have a question about parenting your gifted child?   Visit our NEW Parenting for High Potential Blog to send questions and share experiences.

Q.           My gifted teen is an underachiever.  He makes mediocre grades at school and is generally disinterested in meeting his potential.  How can I motivate him?

When we spoke, this mom said her son loves skateboarding.  He even designed a new skateboard course for the local skate park by researching the dynamics of how different angles would create the opportunity for skaters to perform various stunts.  While hanging out at the park, he made conversation with the owners, showed them his designs, and eventually a course similar to his designs was built.

A.          Parenting is tricky business.  We receive so many messages from society about what will make our children a success.  When motivating your gifted child it is critical to determine whether you are seeking to inspire, discipline, or motivate.  Attempting to inspire or motivate with the language of discipline can shut down the gifted at any age and may create a life-long underachiever.

Inspiration is the process of planting seeds of possibility and is best shared with no strings attached.  One of the best ways to inspire your gifted child is to support what they love, like skateboarding, even if you do not “get” it.  Meaningfully connecting with your child on his ground is likely to lead him to be interested in meaningfully connecting with you on your ground.   When engaging your child, listen closely for opportunities to help him grow his unique interests by identifying resources, setting goals, or finding like-minded peers.  However, leave the follow-through to him unless he asks for help.

Discipline, on the other hand, is better thought of as behavior training.  Consider:  You may want your child to care for their space and belongings in a certain way, to be punctual, or to approach negative emotions with self-control.  This is discipline, which is about being able to follow through when motivation or inspiration is not present.  In this case, it sounds like you want your son to be disciplined in his approach to school so that he can achieve good grades.

Finally, motivation is a driving force, a feeling that can be stimulated by internal or external rewards.  We can be motivated by experiences, belonging, grades, money, stickers…  The key to stoking the fires of self-esteem and life-long success is noticing and supporting the experiences that intrinsically motivate your son.  Intrinsic motivation is often the natural state of being for the gifted.  Sometimes external rewards can be established to achieve a short term goal, but without intrinsic drive the gifted child’s movement toward the goal may diminish.  Keep a long term perspective.  Value your child’s unique drive above academic achievement.

When context is removed, it sounds like your son is an intrinsically motivated, high achiever.  Celebrate him!  Then address discipline for academic success, if necessary.

Additional resources:

Carol Brainbridge, Board Member, Indiana Association for Gifted Children, Top 10 Ways to Motivate Gifted Children

Lisa Van Gemert,Gifted Youth Specialist for MENSA    Underachievement: the label that keeps on taking

On skateboarding, Dr. Tae, Skateboarding Physics Professor

Skate Like a Girl

October 30, 2011

Spotlighting Sessions NAGC 2011: Homeschooling

by Mariam

Homeschool Families: A Starting Point

DATE: Saturday, November 5, 2011     TIME: 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.

ROOM: Trafalgar

Michael Matthews, Associate Professor, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Jonathan Nester, Graduate Student/Gifted Teacher, Louisiana State University

Jennifer Jolly, Assistant Professor, Louisiana State University, Editor-in-Chief of NAGC’s Parenting for High Potential Magazine

In gifted education much attention has been granted to the gifted identification process, yet relatively little has been devoted to examining parents whose children would qualify for gifted programming but have chosen not to attend public or private schools. In this pilot study, we examine the reasoning why parents decided to pursue homeschooling despite the availability of public/private schooling. Preliminary analyses of approximately 15 semi-structured interviews suggest that parental dissatisfaction with public school policies and climates or teacher/staff attitudes may be equally important as perceptions of academic quality in guiding parents’ decisions to pursue non-public educational options.

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October 29, 2011

Spotlighting Speakers: Lori Camallie-Caplan, SENG President Elect

by Mariam

Successfully Parenting Your Gifted Child Using the SENG Formula

DATE: Saturday, November 5, 2011     TIME: 10:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.

ROOM: Grand Salon Section: 18

Lori Comallie-Caplan, President Elect, SENG-Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted

Sheri Plybon, Educational Consultant, SENG Board of Directors

This session is an interactive discussion on the challenges of parenting gifted children through their unique social emotional issues such as asynchronicity, motivation, self-discipline, intensity, perfectionism, and idealism. The facilitator provides and elicits from session participants strategies for parents to use to help their gifted child with stress management, communication skills, underachievement, and peer and sibling relationships. Special attention is given to the challenges of disciplining gifted children. The facilitator also educates parents on finding the right mental/medical health provider for their gifted child and the potential for misdiagnosis of gifted children.

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SENG (Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted) We’re Here for You!

DATE: Saturday, November 5, 2011     TIME: 1:45 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.

ROOM: HEC

Heidi Molbak, Independent Educational Placement Consultant, MS Counseling 2012, Former SENG Director, Loyola University New Orleans, Heidi Molbak Educational Consulting LLC

Tiombe Bisa Kendrick, School Psychologist and SENG Secretary – Director, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Private Practitioner

Lori Comallie-Caplan, President Elect, SENG-Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted

Rosina Gallagher, Psychologist and Educational Consultant, Adjunct Faculty in Gifted Education, SENG President, Northeastern Illinois University, SENG

SENG is the premier international organization committed to the social and emotional aspects of giftedness. Social and emotional issues of gifted children are receiving more attention in recent years as evidenced by SENG’s rapidly growing community. SENG provides resources to all 50 states and many foreign countries. This session describes the programs and services SENG offers including: local parent support groups, webinars, professional CE for mental health professionals, annual conference and publications. This session also describes SENG’s commitment to understanding the unique needs of diverse populations.

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