"All it takes to be gifted is hard work. Those
gifted children are such high achievers; that’s why they do so well in school. Their
parents push them; that’s how they’ve gotten so far." Comments like these are pervasive, and overheard in schools, neighborhoods, and online discussions.
The accomplishments of gifted
children are often falsely attributed to overachievement. The notion is that mastery primarily stems from overachievement rather than innate ability. These children are
viewed as serious and goal-directed, their efforts driven by hard work, parental
coaching or outside pressure. This view is held by both parents and teachers alike
who fail to grasp the meaning of giftedness.
The media and recent
bestsellers have perpetuated this belief. Amy Chua’s “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” described a parent’s effort to encourage
achievement at all costs, and Malcolm Gladwell’s “Outliers: The Story of Success” proposes that hard work and
practice are more critical to success than innate ability. The backlash against
ability grouping in schools further highlights the assumption that we are all
alike; if we just try hard enough, are pushed relentlessly, or are exposed to
an egalitarian classroom setting, we have an equal shot at excellence.
Yet, gifted individuals are different. With
IQ scores at least two standard deviations above the norm, they not only
acquire knowledge more rapidly, they think more divergently and with more
complexity, and possess a range of emotional traits, such as heightened sensitivities.
These are innate characteristics;
they are unrelated to achievement or
success. While many gifted individuals actually work passionately and
diligently at what they pursue, this stems from an intrinsic desire to learn, create,
or perfect what is meaningful to them. Internally motivated, if a topic sparks
their interest, they will persevere. Otherwise, they may turn in a
lackluster or even inadequate performance. In fact, many gifted individuals are
underachievers who fail to live up to their potential. Confusing overachieving
with giftedness diminishes the needs of gifted children, and overlooks the many
underachieving or minimally challenged students misperceived as successful due
to their adequate or even exceptional grades
.
So, what’s wrong with overachievement?
Some gifted children
are overachievers, just like children who are not gifted. Highly motivated
children and adults who strive to achieve their goals are driven, ambitious, and
hard-working. They learn discipline and focus, and set high standards for themselves.
These are necessary qualities in successful adults, and certainly admirable in
children. Yet, the concept of overachieving
implies going above and beyond what is expected and necessary. Overachievement
in children often stems from outside pressure, a need to please others, or
underlying insecurity. While they may experience a fleeting sense of
accomplishment, when the excitement quickly fades, they feel compelled to pursue
the next challenge. Their self-worth rests on validation from others, being the
best, or gaining recognition. This may lead to burnout, extreme perfectionism,
or feelings of despair when goals are not met.
The emotional burden
that comes from overachievement is too high a price to pay. Although playing by
the rules, healthy competition, and striving toward an external goal are all
necessary learning experiences, they fail to instill an intrinsic drive. Harsh demands, unrealistic goals, and excessive coercion pressure children to achieve beyond what is developmentally appropriate. Encouragement
to achieve in a supportive, challenging, stimulating learning environment is
the most effective tool for enhancing any child’s academic success. It fuels
intrinsic curiosity about learning, and avoids the pitfalls of achieving merely
to conform, gain approval and bolster self-esteem. Finding this balance should foster
continued academic success and interest in learning.
Chua, Amy. (2011).
Battle hymn of the tiger mother. Penguin Group: New York.
Gladwell, Malcolm.
(2011). Outliers: The story of success. Little, Brown & Co.: New York.
As the mom of two highly gifted children I can attest - over achievement is currently not one of our problems! Gifted children are actually at a higher risk for not finishing high school. If that doesn't indicate that they are in need of some kind of service outside of the regular classroom I don't know what does. Today, while trying to get my son to finish a 4th grade science lesson we encountered the question - "does the sun ever stop shining?" The point of the question was to make sure kids knew that at nighttime the sun is still shining on the other side of the planet. My son was exasperated - "arg! of course the sun never stops shining." But then he half smirked half scowled at me and said "But they are wrong." And I asked why - I wanted to make sure he was understanding the concept that the sun is still shining when its nighttime. "Because in 5 billion years or so it will stop shining after it collapses under its own weight and dies." Oh. I guess he understood the lesson. And now I understand why he's always complaining that the schoolwork we do is boring. But we can't just jump straight to quantum physics (at least I don't think we can) so we carry on with the curriculum we have doing our best to accelerate it and waiting for the day when he is doing work that totally engages him. In the meantime he will do the barest of minimums as far as work goes, he is not interested or motivated and certainly would not be considered a high achiever. I can't imagine what his life would be like if he weren't homeschooling - if he was stuck in a regular classroom having to go at their pace.
ReplyDeleteJen,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments. Great example from your son, and so reflective of the complexity and depth of thought seen among gifted children.
It would be astonishing to witness what might occur if these underchallenged and underachieving gifted kids actually WERE high achievers.
Gail
Amen, and thank you. I'm going to post this on my blog, as well. www.SmartPeopleAreCoolToo.Blogspot.com.
ReplyDeleteJen
Thanks for adding it to your blog.
ReplyDeleteGail
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ReplyDelete