Thursday, 16 October 2008 07:19 pm
Member name:   Password:   
home
about us
register online
nz education
articles
international
kids & parents
links
faq
contact
NCEA subject resources
04 Oct 2008
More Youth Apprenticeships
21 Sep 2008
One Stop Career Shop
15 Sep 2008
Safety and accountability
14 Sep 2008
UCOL Nursing
08 Sep 2008
Electronic text books
07 Sep 2008
Success is a State of Mind
07 Sep 2008
Praises for literacy numeracy
31 Aug 2008
Kristin Sounds High Definition
26 Aug 2008
TEC Board Appointments
20 Aug 2008
More articles...
 
Reactivate Your Child
06 Oct 2008
Theories of Dyslexia
29 Sep 2008
Librarians online
02 Sep 2008
Brain Food
02 Sep 2008
PhD Scholarship
27 Jul 2008
Asperger making sense
18 Jul 2008
Websites for youth
15 Jul 2008
Good Literacy Start to School
13 Jul 2008
"I have a Dream"�
30 Jun 2008
Picking Up the Pace
12 May 2008
More articles...
 
Adult Education Area
Apprenticeships
Associations/Orgs
Behaviour
Distance Education
English Second Language
General NZ Educ
Gifted/Talented Ed
Home Schooling.
ICT
Maori
Parents + Families
Pre-school Info.
Primary/Intermediate Schools
Profess Development
Scholarships
Secondary Schools
Special Education.
Teaching
Tertiary
Research
More articles...
 
  edusearch articles
You are here > Sections > Gifted/Talented Ed > The Mystery Condition: Detection and Intervention

print this article

The Mystery Condition: Detection and Intervention Article images
- click to enlarge -
Author : R Cathcart







Created : 20 Jul 2004
Last Revision : 20 Jul 2004

There is a group of children in New Zealand who have a condition which severely impacts on their learning but which is very difficult to diagnose. It is so difficult, in fact, that some researchers believe that over 50% of children with this condition are never diagnosed and never receive appropriate help. Misdiagnosis is not uncommon, with children being given other labels and inappropriate and sometimes harmful treatments. Furthermore, researchers say, a number of children are said to have this condition, when in reality they do not, again sometimes with harmful outcomes.


This condition is giftedness.


In almost any other situation - if, say, these statistics applied to children with hearing problems - we would surely be expressing considerable professional concern.


But giftedness? Given all the other traumatic problems that children can face, does it really matter if some very bright children who are surely going to succeed anyway are not immediately picked up by their schools?


These are the opening paragraghs of an interesting and informative article.  It can be found at  http://www.georgeparkyncentre.org/documents/articlemystery.html


 


 

Comments on this article:  

Need help? call on (09) 4730034 or fax (09) 4737034
EduSearch.co.nz © 2001 | advertise | legal | privacy | site maintained by Virtusoft Ltd.