support group – Institute for Educational Advancement Connecting bright minds; nurturing intellectual and personal growth Wed, 28 Feb 2024 21:38:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2021/12/ieafavicon-e1711393443795-150x150.png support group – Institute for Educational Advancement 32 32 The Gift in Gifted Support Group /blog-the-gift-in-gifted-support-group/ /blog-the-gift-in-gifted-support-group/#respond Sat, 07 Aug 2021 05:21:23 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-the-gift-in-gifted-support-group/ By Amber McClarin

All parents and teachers, not just those who work with gifted kids, are often concerned about how to make the best decisions for each unique child. All children need custom attention to help them grow up resilient, flexible, and compassionate. The challenge of working with gifted children is that it can feel isolating and lonely without proper support and resources. Sometimes just a little advice, validation, or encouragement, can go a long way towards working through the tough spots. Because of this 优蜜视频 offers complimentary Gifted Support Group (GSG) meetings during the school year.

GSG meetings invite leading professionals to share their knowledge and experience. These meetings provide support and community in a space specifically for shared discovery and exchanging resources and ideas. Someone else is going through or has gone through the same struggles. The GSG meetings offer a community eager to share what they have learned in their journey through not only gifted education, but also gifted living.

Talking about common struggles together is a great way to brainstorm solutions. Maybe something that didn鈥檛 work for one student is the fix another family is looking for. Sharing experiences with other parents and educators who interact with gifted children has proven to be enormously helpful in supporting gifted students strive towards reaching their full potential.

Sharing what we have learned may help someone else forego the struggles the community has encountered. But the right community of like-minded people can provide more than just new information, it allows you to be yourself. You can enter the space with no fear of judgment.

Join our community as we work together for continued success.

Here are some recording and resources from last year鈥檚 GSG meetings.

Linda Powers

 

Jill Stowell

 

Cynthia Molt

 

Susanna Pollack

 

Bethany Kwan

 

Maya Sissoko

 

Bonus

  • with 优蜜视频 President, Betsy Jones sits down with Jill Stowell of The Stowell Learning Center.
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Why We Need the Label /blog-why-we-need-the-label/ /blog-why-we-need-the-label/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2020 03:59:16 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-why-we-need-the-label/ by Jennifer de la Haye

When I summarize 优蜜视频鈥檚 work to people outside our network: 鈥溾e are an educational nonprofit that works with gifted kids,鈥 I am often met with skepticism and confusion. The most common response I have received is, 鈥淚 believe all kids are gifted.鈥 I do too! All kids have special giftings. As a mother of a four-year-old and one-year-old, I exist in a state of perpetual awe as I watch the personalities of my own children and the children in my community unfold. My preschooler has a remarkable propensity for language; she has been holding elaborate conversations since before turning two, and through language, she has been able to reveal a deep understanding of her own emotion and the emotions of others. One of her best friends, who wasn鈥檛 interested in speaking as early, has LEGO architecture skills that could land him a job designing hoverboards and intricate skyscrapers and giant ships right now, at age four. A three-year-old I know can draw a Mr. Potato Head picture that he could easily slip into a book of 1920s surrealist art and no one would know the difference. And every child I meet astounds me with either a wild and creative imagination, a surprisingly sharp sense of humor, a well of empathy, or all of the above.

Yes, of course all kids are gifted, in that all kids have creativity, beauty, love, special talents, and unique modes of intelligence comprising their very being.

But this is not what we mean by 鈥済ifted.鈥 As a society, we needed a word to describe people whose experience of life is measurably different than their peers. I like the definition created by the Columbus Group in 1991: 鈥淕iftedness is asynchronous development in which advanced cognitive abilities and heightened intensity combine to create inner experiences and awareness that are qualitatively different from the norm.鈥 When we dismiss the term 鈥済ifted鈥 because we have disdain for labeling children, or because all children are gifted, we are denying the existence of an entire body of people, whose inner workings are remarkably different than most.

california schools for gifted leanersA few years ago, Dr. Patty Gatto Walden, Yunasa Senior Fellow and psychologist, presented at the Beyond Giftedness Conference in Colorado. I had the privilege of listening to her speak. One idea from her discussion especially stood out to me: she talked about the incoming 鈥渃hannels鈥 that each person experiences. In a classroom, a child might take in several channels at once 鈥 the message of her teacher, the mutterings of her classmates, the sound of the shifting leaves on the pavement outside, the feeling that her desk-mate is melancholy, the way the new piece of art on the left wall of the classroom makes her want to paint. A person whom we have deemed 鈥済ifted,鈥 whose 鈥渋nner experience and awareness is qualitatively different from the norm,鈥 takes in hundreds of channels. Hundreds. Not several. She might be absorbing the message of the teacher while feeling that something is happening in the teacher鈥檚 life that is new and exciting; she feels her desk-mate鈥檚 melancholy, and her skin starts to tingle and her tummy begins to sink; she listens to the mutterings of her classmates and feels their emotions, too; she hears every sound in the classroom and outside, and each sound makes her body feel something different. For the sake of time, I won鈥檛 describe all 200 or 400 channels that our gifted child might be taking in. Dr. Patty took it further and said that a highly gifted person takes in thousands of channels.聽 That is a lot for anyone. It is a lot for a child who is still learning who she is.

When we say someone is 鈥済ifted,鈥 we are not inferring that he is 鈥渂etter鈥 or 鈥渕ore special鈥 than other children. We need a label, though. We need a label because we need special programs. We need different types of classes, camps, workshops, counseling sessions, support groups, books, retreats, scholarship options, learning centers, and more, so we can help these children understand themselves and flourish. And at 优蜜视频, we want to provide gifted kids and their families with a community of people who deeply connect with them, so they don鈥檛 feel alone.

about 优蜜视频’s definition of “giftedness”. You can also learn more about how to understand, spot and address聽

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