I
always find myself gravitating toward the idea of gifted education as
very little is known about it up to this date. While equally small in
population, gifted children are probably less understood than those with
developmental disorders (e.g., down syndrome) and learning disabilities
(e.g., dyslexia). Being not a medical case, the knowledge that has been
generated about the phenomenon of giftedness explains why it’s nearly
an alien thing in the sphere of medicine. Ironically, even if giftedness
has been around since before the birth of Jesus Christ, it remains a
rare and delicate orchid that could go to waste if left unattended.
What is giftedness?
Answers
to this problem come from different convictions or assumptions. Whether
giftedness is something we are born with or it’s one of performance is
an issue for which a widely acceptable answer remains elusive. I
believe, however, that giftedness, though it defies total scientific
demystification, is nothing ghostly in the wider context of world pool
of knowledge.
If
one is gifted, is it then the case that his/her gift is something
he/she is born with? To be gifted, for me, is simply to be born with the
required (i.e., normal) faculty that could be used to advance one’s
learning and achieve extraordinary mastery in one or various areas of
human activity. While genetics seems to be central to this sense of
giftedness, gift is nothing but a simple potential to get one’s level of
functioning to surpass the highest level of mainstream’s performance in
certain activities. One’s gift or endowment could be in the area of
cognition, athletics, social relations, arts, practical living, etc.
One’s
gift, if inappropriately cultivated, could barely be translated into
something optimally useful. Gifted humans then are born, but great men
and women, those with extraordinary talents and skills, are made.
Neglect of one's gift may also have catastrophic effects on the life of the gifted. I need not say more about this.
Neglect of one's gift may also have catastrophic effects on the life of the gifted. I need not say more about this.
Elsewhere, I had addressed the matter on the content and arrangement of
home environment of pre-school-aged children who have the potential to
advance their learning in various areas of study or activity.
For now, I’d like to focus on what might having a gift means.
For now, I’d like to focus on what might having a gift means.
Gift (as a real potential) and high ability: Are they the same?
I
think the expression “gift” and its cognates, in the same linguistic
context, are more ambiguous than the expression “high ability.”
Consider the following:
1. High ability is what one has and is manifested in what he/she does. In the absence of relevant action, high ability could not be assumed.
2. High ability is something we cannot see, smell, touch, and so on; we infer high ability from a certain act. In the absence of an act, we cannot posit the presence of high ability.
2.1 One’s mathematical ability is discerned by means of analyzing one’s performance
in math test, for instance. Again, ability--high, average, or
low--could not be sensed, but it is indicated by what we may witness.
3. Compared with high ability, gift, in its potential sense, is more nebulous in meaning.
4.
The presence of gift, in its potential sense, may be assumed in the
absence of abnormality. Action may not be required to say that one has a
gift or is endowed with a certain potential.
5.
Gift, as a potential, is broader in scope in that it
applies--granting there is no abnormality--even to those who are not yet
highly capable of engaging in activities like reading, writing, and
doing arithmetic.
6. Many people are gifted (with the potential to acquire certain skills and maximize the development of their talents), but only few are capable of high-ability performance in certain areas of human activity.
7. Gifted people may not be capable of high-ability performance, but those capable of high-ability performance must be gifted.
8. It seems thus that high ability performance is nobler than just having a gift, i.e., potential.
8.1 This is not to suggest that high ability is more important than having a gift. Whether one is more important than the other is not an issue here.
6. Many people are gifted (with the potential to acquire certain skills and maximize the development of their talents), but only few are capable of high-ability performance in certain areas of human activity.
7. Gifted people may not be capable of high-ability performance, but those capable of high-ability performance must be gifted.
8. It seems thus that high ability performance is nobler than just having a gift, i.e., potential.
8.1 This is not to suggest that high ability is more important than having a gift. Whether one is more important than the other is not an issue here.
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