A 20-year longitudinal study has traced the academic, social, and emotional development of 60 young Australians with IQs of 160 and above. Significant differences have been noted in the young people's educational status and direction, life satisfaction, social relationships, and self-esteem as a function of the degree of academic acceleration their schools permitted them in childhood and adolescence. The considerable majority of young people who have been radically accelerated, or who accelerated by 2 years, report high degrees of life satisfaction, have taken research degrees at leading universities, have professional careers, and report facilitative social and love relationships. Young people of equal abilities who accelerated by only 1 year or who have not been permitted acceleration have tended to enter less academically rigorous college courses, report lower levels of life satisfaction, and in many cases, experience significant difficulties with socialization. Several did not graduate from college or high school. Without exception, these young people possess multiple talents; however, for some, the extent and direction of talent development has been dictated by their schools' academic priorities or their teachers' willingness or unwillingness to assist in the development of particular talent areas.
Subjects Not Permitted Acceleration. The remaining 33 young people
were retained, for the duration of their schooling, in a lockstep curriculum
with age peers in what is euphemistically termed the“inclusion”
classroom. The last thing they felt, as children or adolescents,
was “included.” With few exceptions, they have very jaded views of
their education. Two dropped out of high school and a number have
dropped out of university. Several more have had ongoing difficulties at
university, not because of lack of ability but because they have
found it difficult to commit to undergraduate study that is less than
stimulating. These young people had consoled themselves through
the wilderness years of undemanding and repetitive school curriculum
with the promise that university would be different—exciting,
intellectually rigorous, vibrant—and when it was not, as the first
year of university often is not, it seemed to be the last straw.
Some have begun to seriously doubt that they are, indeed, highly
gifted. The impostor syndrome is readily validated with gifted students
if they are given only work that does not require them to strive
for success. It is difficult to maintain the belief that one can meet and overcome challenges if one never has the opportunity to test oneself.
Several of the nonaccelerands have serious and ongoing problems
with social relationships. These young people find it very difficult
to sustain friendships because having been, to a large extent,
socially isolated at school, they have had much less practice in their
formative years in developing and maintaining social relationships.
Six have had counseling. Of these, two have been treated for severe
depression. If educators were made responsible to ethics committees,
as are researchers, such developmentally inappropriate educational
misplacement would never be permitted.
Miraca U.M. Gross, Exceptionally Gifted Children: Long-Term Outcomes of Academic Acceleration and Nonacceleration
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