Category: gifted

  • 7 Ways To Advocate For Your Gifted Child

    7 Ways To Advocate For Your Gifted Child

    Whether you have a gifted child, or one with learning issues or other disorders, it is important to be an advocate for them. You, as the parent, know your child the best. They are too young to speak up for themselves, and hence, you are the best person to speak up for them. There are some ways to advocate their right to learn.

    1. Read Up On Any Available Materials

    Some parents of gifted children have no idea their children are gifted until a teacher makes a comment. Others might have noticed that their children are different and have unusual memory. Some of them could read and write at an early stage. If you are still at the denial stage, do read up on any available information online. Some websites that were really helpful were Hoagies’ Gifted Education Page, SENG, Davidson Institute and even Kiasuparents (Singapore). Other personal blogs were helpful too. At that time I had no idea how to handle my child, because he had other issues. He could be extremely intense and sensitive, had issues with making friends, poor sleeping habits and asynchronous development leading to unhappiness and meltdowns. However, the more I read, the clearer it was for me to see that he could be gifted. It was when I joined groups that focus on gifted children, I finally got the answers I needed. I found a tribe that could provide support. It is only after you have sufficient knowledge, you are able to speak up and advocate for your child. If you do not have research to back up your points, people are not going to take you seriously.

    2. Work With Professionals

    I had spoken to my child’s paediatrician, and he mentioned that my son had asynchronous development. At that time, he could not talk, but was spelling words such as ‘c-a-t’ and ‘b-u-s’. That was when I had a little more direction to do research on my own.

    I took him to a sleep psychologist who happened to be an educational psychologist too and after observing him and hearing about his behaviour, she mentioned that he could be advanced intellectually, and proposed a few solutions, such as having lessons to build up routines for him. There were no tests for giftedness at the hospital I took him to, so I did not get him tested.

    In Singapore, there is nothing much you could do except wait until they are in Primary Three where they will sit for a screening examination held by MOE Singapore to test for giftedness. Only then would there be corresponding support given to the child. The exception is when your child is exceptionally gifted, which could be determined through psychologist tests such as Stanford-Binet 5 taken after age 5 or WISC-4 after age 6. Then there would be the possibility of skipping grades. However, it appears that MOE does not actively recommend acceleration, and feels that homeschooling for the gifted may or may not work. I believe they would prefer the children to have 10-12 years of education in the local school system. You could always speak to a psychologist, or even someone from the gifted education branch to find out more.

    Getting an psychologist evaluation may be helpful, as they are able to surface strengths and weaknesses of the child. I have heard of people getting referrals from polyclinics to go to KKH for testing. I have also heard that the National Institute of Education (NIE) provides evaluation as well. There are other commercial options available.

    3. Educate Your Family Members

    People in your family might not know how to handle a child that is different. They may think that you are pushing your child too much, or they are simply delighted they have a very smart grandchild. Since the brain is wired differently, gifted children may or may not have meltdowns that people could not understand. They will simply scold the children for acting up. Sometimes, it could be due to lack of sleep, or sometimes they have over sensitivities. In addition, while these children may be intellectually ahead of others, they may be behind others in other aspects due to asynchronous development. People forget that. Family members may also keep praising the children for being smart, but forget that effort is important as well. The children may refuse to do certain things because they find it too difficult, especially as they get older and are afraid to fail.

    Some may also keep praising the gifted child, without realising that the child is very advanced, and think that the sibling is stupid and slow, while that sibling is merely functioning at normal speed as other people. This creates unhealthy comparison between the siblings, and may lead to deteriorating ties. Hence, family members should be more aware in the way they speak to different children.

    My helper sometimes makes tsk-tsk sounds and goes ‘Wow’ to show she is amazed by how smart my child is. I do not agree with this because it will make him think that he is superior, and he may get impatient with other people who do not get him quickly. Hence, it would be important to gently remind people in your family who make intelligence a big deal to focus on other things.

    4. Work With Your Child’s Teachers
    In Singapore, being gifted is equivalent to being very smart. There is a difference. Smart children are smart, but gifted children are wired differently. They make connections at a faster speed and think differently. Smart children could provide answers, while gifted children could come up with questions. Some question both the questions and answers. They see patterns others do not see.

    Instead of applauding the child for being smart, we should applaud the child when he puts in the effort to do something well. Some gifted children may not perform well in school depending on how gifted they are. Some are eager to please, and they will do the work for their teacher even if they are bored. Others may simply refuse to do. I am sure some of you might have heard of children losing marks because they refuse to write down the working, because they had already calculated that mentally. In many situations, the higher the scores in intelligence, the harder it is for such children to function ‘normally’.

    Not many teachers are trained in gifted education. They are not trained to look out for gifted children. They may notice some of their students are different, but they do not have the means to fully engage them. With large class sizes in Singapore, it is difficult to truly have differentiated learning for children of different abilities.

    You need to let your child’s teachers know what they are capable of, and what they need help in. There are teachers who roll their eyes when parents say their child is gifted, and they think the parents are deluded because the child is an average performer, or even misbehaves in their classrooms. I had seen how teachers at a Facebook group for teachers laugh at such parents recently. It was quite distressing to see that behaviour.

    You could ask your child’s school for support. Some schools are better than others in stretching the top students. Some provide more support for others with special needs. It is important to be respectful. I had a parent of a child with ADHD request for a meeting with the child’s teachers. Another parent with a special needs child also tries to help me keep her child on task. Other parents may think that such parents are demanding, but when done properly, teachers will know how to engage the child better. Not everyone is trained or experienced enough to engage different types of children properly.

    Some teachers may think your child is not gifted, because your child is different from their own children who are gifted. That is why you need to engage the teachers more, but at the same time, be aware of the limitations they have, in terms of manpower, resources and time.

    It would be great to write thank you notes for these teachers, or administrators who had taken time to respond to you, or to do some testing. Everyone likes to feel appreciated, and your note may go a long way.

    5. Keep Records
    School reports are useful documents for those who wish to accelerate their children or request for special accommodations. If there are interviews for admissions in the future, evidence of work and other records of interactions would be very useful.

    Some teachers may not be able to see how advanced your child is. If you could show the teacher what your child is capable of with the previous teacher, or at home, the teacher would have a clearer picture.

    Some children may regress academically when they go to primary schools. This is because they are unable to sit still for long and they get told to keep quiet and sit still. They lose the intellectual curiosity. They may also get a teacher who may not challenge them adequately. That is when the records would come in useful.

    6. Monitor Your Child’s Progress
    After meeting with your child’s teachers, do request for feedback on a regular basis. Some teachers meet parents of students who misbehave or are weak academically only. If your child does not pose a problem in the classroom, it does not mean the needs are well met. Do find out from the teacher how your child interacts with others socially. Does the child work well in groups? Does the child have any fine or gross motor issues? Is the child able to speak up in a large class? Does the child participate fully? Sometimes the child may be great in certain classes with certain teachers, but not in other subjects.

    If you could have the time to volunteer for events, it would be good as you get to see your child in the school setting. It was only when I volunteered to take my son and his friends on an excursion that I realised he had made some improvement in his social skills.

    Another way is to meet up with other parents of your child’s classmates. They offer valuable information on what is happening in class. One parent, who is non-Chinese and I had met her at a class excursion to Kampong Glam, told me that the other children had been going for Chinese enrichment lessons. That was when I realised I needed to do something about my child’s poor command of Chinese.

    7. Spread Awareness
    gifted advocacy 3
    I had not specifically stated my son is gifted, because he had not been tested. Some peers of mine are also uneasy with this, because it makes them feel bad that their children are not achieving the same things as my son could do, and some think that I am bragging. Life is too short to be affected by what others say.

    I have decided to be part of Hoagies’ monthly Blog Hop, by writing articles that are relevant to the topic of the month. It means that I have to open a little more, and be more explicit when I talk about my son. At first, I was still a little unsure whether I was doing the right thing or not. Then, my friend contacted me, and said she felt a sense of relief after reading my post(s). She has a child who is likely to be gifted, and she has faced a lot of stress from others who do not show much understanding. That was when I realised that even if my posts only help just one person, I would continue to blog about gifted children and education.

    I was telling my friend that among our circle of friends, we may have more children who are gifted than we care to admit or identify. I had talked about them in my previous post about different faces of gifted people. Some of these friends may know their children are gifted, while others may not. It is through bringing the topic up that more could benefit.

    This is my way of advocating for gifted children. If more people know about them, perhaps they could be more understanding and less judgemental. I hope they do not see a pushy and demanding mother, but one who simply wants to understand her child more. If people could recognise some attributes in their children, they know there is one more person to talk to.

    Some of you may choose to start your own Facebook group. Others may speak to politicians who could effect changes. Some, like me, could just choose to blog. I know, because some bloggers who had blogged about their gifted children, especially those in Singapore and many in other countries, had helped answer some of the questions I have, as I trawled through the internet for information. The more people know about issues close to your heart, the better it is.

    This is part of the monthly blog hop from Hoagies.
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    Click on the image below and check out other blogs on the blog hop.

  • Playing Dinosaur Charades

    Playing Dinosaur Charades

    Somebody once mentioned her child wanted to play charades, of dinosaurs no less. I never thought that it would happen to me.

    stegosaurus costume
    El in his ‘Stegosaurus costume’ made by me when he was in N1.

    El, the boy who loves dinosaurs, suddenly announced we were playing dinosaur charades, and started acting like a dancing chicken and said ‘pretty jaw’.

    “Pretty jaw? Sounds familiar. I was just playing the brain box game with him,” I thought.

    “Is it gallimimus?” I asked, taking a gamble.

    “No,” he replied with a slight frown.

    He then told me it was a Compsognathus.

    Compsognathus
    “Compsognathus BW” by Nobu Tamura (http://spinops.blogspot.com) – Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 via Wikimedia Commons –

    Oh. I thought he was done, when he started stomping around and roared.

    Ah, this was easy, I thought.

    “T-Rex,” I enthusiastically said it aloud.

    “No!”

    “Give me some clues,” I asked, as I continued to watch the goggle box which someone just called it the idiot box the day before.

    “It has a thumb,” he said.

    Still clueless, so I asked what the name means.

    “Ok, it means iguana tooth,” he chirped, with enthusiasm still unwavering.

    Iguanodon!”

    “Correct. Next,” he said and got on all fours.

    He moved very slowly, and as he moved his bottom, I had the impression that there was a heavy tail, perhaps one that was clubbed, and could kill predators.

    “Anggkylours,” I guessed or whatever it was pronounced. It was a spiky armored dinosaur.

    “Ankylosaurus, but no. It was from that family though.”

    "Ankylosaurus magniventris reconstruction" by Emily Willoughby (e.deinonychus@gmail.com, http://emilywilloughby.com) - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
    “Ankylosaurus magniventris reconstruction” by Emily Willoughby (e.deinonychus@gmail.com, http://emilywilloughby.com) – Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

    He mumbled something which I could not recall. If you must know, I am currently writing this recount with the help of google.

    He was not done. He acted again and this time round, I guessed it was a sauropod (four-legged, long neck, long tail, relatively small head in proportion) as he was on all fours. Occasionally, he looked up and stretched his neck to reach for higher branches.

    Shucks, I remembered watching Dinosaur Train where they showcased different sauropods. Some kept their necks up and reached the higher branches while others kept their necks low (diplodocus), depending on the type of necks they had.

    I could not think of any sauropods, and so I asked for the first letter.

    “B,” he shouted.

    “Erm, baryonyx,” I said, forgetting I had just seen it earlier when I was googling information on different vores.

    “No! Baryonyx was a piscivore. It ate fish,” he explained.

    “Erm, brac…” I muttered.

    “It’s brachiosaurus,” he said after I kept trying to say it.

    "Brachiosaurus DB" by Богданов dmitrchel@mail.ru - Own work. Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons
    “Brachiosaurus DB” by Богданов dmitrchel@mail.ru – Own work. Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons

    One more. He held his two arms up and stretched them and flapped his wings. He even said ‘rawk’, which was the sound made by the main characters in Dinosaur Train.

    “Ptero… Pteranodon!” I shouted excitedly as I finally got one correct.

    Charades with children was tough enough but charades about dinosaurs were even tougher! Where is he going to find a friend to play dinosaur charades with him?

  • Different Faces Of Gifted People

    Different Faces Of Gifted People

    When I was in secondary school, I made a friend who was acting as Inspector Goole in An Inspector Calls. The delivery was great. She was excellent in literature and drama. I did not know her mathematics and ability to crunch numbers was even better until decades later, since we lost contact. She was from the gifted stream, and excelled in her studies.

    My classmate had introduced me to her friends and a couple of them were from the gifted stream as well. They spoke a third language. Far from the introverted geeks that many people think gifted people are, they are very balanced individuals and seem to excel in many areas such as law, medicine, and finance.

    Perhaps these are the ones who have managed to excel in the education system in Singapore. When we reach 9 years of age, we sit through a screening test to test for giftedness. Many of my Primary 3 classmates got through the first round. I managed to get in, but when I went for a second round, the questions were just way too challenging and bizarre for me and I did not understand most of them. Apparently the test focuses on English, maths and general reasoning. Of course I did not get through the test.

    However, there are many more people who are gifted, and some who never knew they are gifted, just because they did not fit the narrow definition provided by the Ministry of Education in Singapore. Some may not have gone to top schools and top classes, but you cannot deny they are different.

    I have met artistes, who can play the piano and sing at the same time, have astute sense of comic timing, and are great at improvising and memorising lyrics and lines.

    I have met people who could unscramble letters in seconds.

    I have met people who remember vivid details of movies and can bring the movie alive through verbal descriptions.

    I have met people who could analyse political situations and explain them in an easy manner.

    I have met people who could easily play the devil’s advocate and let me see issues from another viewpoint.

    I have met people who are so passionate about their causes that I want to find out more about.

    I have met people who have great people skills and can make anyone feel at ease.

    I have met people who write with great introspection, that I could really get under their skin and feel their turbulent emotions.

    I have met quiet people who surprise others with their vast knowledge and creativity.

    I have met people who take such great photos.

    I have met people who can classify things easily and identify the exact breed or species of flora and fauna.

    I have seen people who can create such beautiful drawings and art work.

    I have seen pre-schoolers who read thick books.

    I have seen a pre-schooler with culinary talent.

    I have met an autistic boy who excels at scrabble.

    I have met people who are very serious in whatever they do.

    I have met young children who are so at ease on television and have managed to act and charm people.

    I have met people who are extremely witty.

    I have met people who create extremely lifelike costumes from Lord of the Rings by doing reverse engineering.

    I have met people who can pick up exotic instruments in a short period of time.

    I have met hawkers who remember the long list of complicated orders without writing them down.

    I have met people who could speak multiple Chinese dialects on top of other languages.

    I have met people who have already mentally played many steps ahead of you in a game, with multiple possible scenarios.

    chess2
    You cannot identify these gifted people just by looking at them, learning which school they have gone to or finding out where they are working at. You have to get to know them.

    There are so many people whose minds work differently from me. They are able to process information much faster, make more connections than others, and they really want to know everything they want to know about their pet topics. The insatiable thirst for learning and tinkering on their favourite things is something to emulate, as we promote self-directed learners as part of the 21st century competencies.

    This is part of Hoagie’s Gifted Blog Hop for September on Gifted: How? Click on the link to see more posts on the different faces of gifted people.
    gifted how

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