college planning – Institute for Educational Advancement Connecting bright minds; nurturing intellectual and personal growth Wed, 15 May 2024 20:40:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2021/12/ieafavicon-e1711393443795-150x150.png college planning – Institute for Educational Advancement 32 32 College Selection and Admissions for Gifted Students: Resources /blog-college-selection-and-admissions-for-gifted-students-resources/ /blog-college-selection-and-admissions-for-gifted-students-resources/#respond Wed, 20 May 2015 05:50:05 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-college-selection-and-admissions-for-gifted-students-resources/ Kate Duey is the Director of Admission Planning, LLC. She has worked with 优蜜视频 supporting gifted students since 2009 and has a wealth of knowledge about their unique challenges and their wonderful potential. Kate has a BA from Harvard College and an MBA from Harvard Business School. She earned College Counseling Certification from the University of California, Los Angeles. Kate is a member of the National Association of College Admission Counselors, the Western Association of College Admission Counselors, and the California Association for the Gifted.

Gifted students and their families face special challenges during the college search and application process. 优蜜视频 parent and supporter Kate Duey recently spoke to a group of parents and students about these challenges during an 优蜜视频 Gifted Child Parent Support Group Meeting.

Below聽are some of the resources Kate聽recommends聽on college selection and admissions聽for gifted students.

Online Comprehensive Resources

Books for Gifted Applicants聽

Interesting Webpages for Gifted Applicants

Books for All College Applicants

Like this page? to get more gifted resources and information聽delivered straight to聽your inbox.

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When I Grow Up: Multipotentiality and Gifted Youth /blog-grow-multipotentiality-gifted-youth/ /blog-grow-multipotentiality-gifted-youth/#respond Thu, 05 Mar 2015 04:38:29 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-grow-multipotentiality-gifted-youth/ By Zadra Rose Ibanez

鈥淲hen I grow up, I want to be an astronaut, a doctor, a movie star, a teacher, a fireman and president!鈥

Many gifted students are faced with a dilemma 鈥 鈥淚 love everything, so which do I choose?鈥 In the 1920鈥檚, Lewis Terman first postulated that many gifted students have difficulty choosing from their many interests and narrowing their focus to a few activities. (6)

What is multipotentiality?

Multipotentiality affects many highly able individuals:

Gifted learners are frequently offered the advice 鈥榊ou can be anything you want.鈥 This may seem desirable for the learner, but for many, this plethora of opportunities amounts to a major crisis. Berger (1989) raises this issue, coining the term multi-potentiality, where the highly capable student participates in many different activities to satisfy their interest. (1, 9)

In their paper 鈥淢ultipotential Abilities and Vocational Interests in Gifted Adolescents: Fact or Fiction?,鈥 Milgram and Hong conclude that identifying young people with multipotentiality – those who are 鈥渋nterested in many different vocational areas and having the requisite high abilities to succeed in many of them鈥 – may be difficult and that, perhaps, gifted youngsters have 鈥渟imply reached the ceiling, the highest level measured, in all their subjects鈥 (7). They recommend observing how each individual is spending his or her time during 鈥渇reely chosen leisure activities.鈥 Milgram and Hong regard the term 鈥渕ulti-potential鈥 as the inability to choose and/or the equal desire and ability to participate in many subjects or areas of interest. Therefore, if an individual indicates a clear preference, or 鈥渄ifferentiated interests,鈥 he or she is not demonstrating multipotentiality. If a preference is apparent, the issue of multipotentiality is no longer relevant, according to Milgram and Hong, though not all agree with this point.

What does MP look like?

In A Handbook for Counseling the Gifted and Talented, Barbara Kerr lists characteristics of multipotential individuals. Here are a few (1999, p. 87):

  • Difficulty with decision-making
  • Difficulty with follow-through
  • Excellent performance in multiple subjects or academic areas
  • Multiple hobbies and activities
  • Schedules packed with a wide variety of social, recreational, and academic activities as determined by the student (not mandated by the school or encouraged by the parents)
  • Little free time
  • Chosen for leadership roles in a variety of groups and organizations
  • 鈥淥ccasional signs of stress and exhaustion: absences, frequent or chronic illnesses, periods of depression and anxiety, particularly during busiest times鈥
  • 鈥淒elay or vacillation about college planning and decision making鈥 in high school

Why does it matter?

MP students often feel confused, lost, and uncertain about direction:

A multipotential student may take a vocational test only to learn that he or she is 鈥榮imilar鈥 in interests and abilities to biologists, librarians, musicians, reporters, English teachers, and ministers. Attaining straight A’s and uniformly high achievement test scores means that the student cannot make decisions based on what he or she 鈥榙oes best.鈥 After graduation from high school, the multipotential student may vacillate between career choices, delaying career decisions until financial need and the end of a nonfocused education drive the student to take a job by default鈥 Parents, teachers, and counselors continue to insist, 鈥楤ut you could be anything you want to be!鈥 not understanding that this is precisely the problem. (1)

Gifted education specialist Tamara Fisher quotes a graduating senior: 鈥溾業 find it difficult to choose between careers because I fear how large the choice is. Having many options available is pleasant, but to determine what I will do for many years to come is scary.鈥欌 (3)

Pursuing a life of meaning is important to the gifted mind, and selecting a career that provides meaning is difficult for the person whose interests and gifts are extensive and varied. Author Emilie Wapnick notes,

My resume reads like it belongs to ten different people. Music, film, web design, law, business, personal development, writing, dance, sexuality, education鈥 all of these are or have been interests of mine. They come and go (and sometimes come again). Would I have to settle on a 鈥榩ractical job鈥 and pursue my various passions on the side or choose among my interests and just commit to one thing? Both options made my heart ache鈥 I knew I could be doing more 鈥 that I had more to offer the world. (4)

How can I help my child master MP?

In 鈥,鈥 Nicholas Colangelo suggested that we help individuals in four ways (2):

  1. Remind students that they do not have to limit themselves to one career.
  2. Use leisure activities as a way to continually develop areas of abilities and interest, apart from one’s career.
  3. Use career counseling as a value-based activity, exploring broad categories of life satisfaction.
  4. Emphasize peer discussions and group work with other multipotential youth so that one can see that he/she is not alone with concerns.

Because gifted individuals often have the ability to excel in many different areas, focusing on values and then discovering activities and career paths that support those values can often provide a more fulfilling and clearer path towards happiness.

In an interview with Charlie Rose in November 2013, James Franco discussed his choice to create art / work that allowed him to combine several of his interests into one project. He stated that he wasn鈥檛 trying to do everything; he just wanted to be able to utilize each of the areas he enjoyed at one time.

There is a current trend in hiring towards individuals with multi-faceted abilities. In his book, To Sell Is Human, Daniel Pink says:

Large operations discovered that segmenting job functions didn鈥檛 work very well during volatile business conditions鈥攁nd because of that, they began demanding elastic skills that stretched across boundaries.鈥hen organizations were highly segmented, skills tended to be fixed. If you were an accountant, you did accounting. The same was true when business conditions were stable and predictable. However, in the last decade, the circumstances that gave rise to fixed skills have disappeared. (10)

This is great news for the multipotential individual because it means that various interests can have value in career and artistic endeavors and may be better appreciated than they had previously been.

Do you feel you or your child exhibits multipotentiality? What challenges or opportunities have you experienced because of this? We鈥檇 love to hear your story!

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References

1. Berger, S.L. (1989) College Planning for Gifted Students. [Online.] Council for Exceptional Children.

2. Colangelo, Nicholas. 鈥.鈥 The University of Iowa, Fall 2002 Newsletter.

3. Fisher, Tamara. 鈥.鈥 Unwrapping the Gifted. Online.

4. 鈥.鈥 Developing Multiple Talents. 7 May 2012. Online. < http://developingmultipletalents.com>

5. Kerr, Barbara. A Handbook for Counseling the Gifted and Talented. 1999.

6. McKay, Robyn. 鈥淐areer Counseling.鈥 Encyclopedia of Giftedness, Creativity, and Talent. Edited by Barbara Kerr.

7. Milgram, Roberta M. & Hong, Eunsook. 鈥淢ultipotential Abilities and Vocational Interests in Gifted Adolescents: Fact or Fiction?鈥 International Journal of Psychology 34.2 (1999): 81-93.

8. 鈥溾 Talent Development Resources. 7 May 2012. Online. <http://talentdevelop.com>

9. Page, Jeremy S. 鈥.鈥 Student Pulse 2.11 (2010): 1/1.

10. Pink, Daniel. To Sell is Human: The Surprising Truth About Moving Others. 2012.

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