Editor Sally M. Reis presents students, academics, researchers, and educational professionals working in a wide variety of contexts with a collection of academic papers and scholarly articles focused on over forty years of research on the teaching of talented and gifted children throughout the world. The editor has organized the twenty-two contributions that make up the main body of the text in five parts devoted to a general approach to the study of giftedness and overview of major models, conceptions and identification of giftedness, systems and models for the development of giftedness and talents, and a wide variety of other related subjects. The editor is a faculty member of the University of Connecticut. Annotation ©2015 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)
In this compelling book, more than 40 years of research and development are highlighted in a collection of articles published by Joseph S. Renzulli and his colleagues. Renzulli's work has had an impact on gifted education and enrichment pedagogy across the globe, based on the general theme of the need to apply more flexible approaches to identifying and developing giftedness and talents in young people. This collection of articles and chapters has strong foundational research support focusing on practical applications that teachers can use to create and differentiate learning and enrichment experiences for high potential and gifted and talented students.
Preface An Introduction, Some Personal Stories From Some Very Special People, and a Reader's Guide |
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Part I A General Approach to the Study of Giftedness and Overview of Major Models |
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Chapter 1 Examining the Challenges and Caveats of Change in Gifted Education |
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3 | (28) |
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Chapter 2 Reexamining the Role of Gifted Education and Talent Development for the 21st Century: A Four-Part Theoretical Approach |
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31 | (24) |
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Part II Conceptions and Identification of Giftedness |
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Chapter 3 The Three-Ring Conception of Giftedness: A Developmental Model for Promoting Creative Productivity |
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55 | (36) |
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Chapter 4 Defensible and Doable: A Practical, Multiple-Criteria Gifted Program Identification System |
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91 | (38) |
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Chapter 5 Intelligences Outside the Normal Curve: Co-Cognitive Factors That Contribute to the Creation of Social Capital and Leadership Skills in Young People |
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129 | (22) |
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Chapter 6 Assumptions Underlying the Identification of Gifted and Talented Students |
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151 | (22) |
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Part III Systems and Models for the Development of Giftedness and Talents |
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Chapter 7 A Theory of Blended Knowledge for the Development of Creative Productive Giftedness |
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173 | (20) |
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Chapter 8 The Enrichment Triad Model: A Guide for Developing Defensible Programs for the Gifted and Talented |
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193 | (18) |
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Chapter 9 The Multiple Menu Model for Developing Differentiated Curriculum |
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211 | (40) |
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Part IV Implementation Components and Strategies |
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Chapter 10 The Schoolwide Enrichment Model: A Focus on Student Strengths and Interests |
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251 | (20) |
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Chapter 11 Curriculum Compacting and Achievement Test Scores: What Does the Research Say? |
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271 | (14) |
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Chapter 12 A Time and a Place for Authentic Learning |
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285 | (10) |
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Chapter 13 Academies of Inquiry and Talent Development |
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295 | (28) |
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Chapter 14 A Technology Based Program That Matches Enrichment Resources With Student Strengths |
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323 | (22) |
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Chapter 15 Savoring Reading Schoolwide |
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345 | (10) |
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Chapter 16 Nurturing Young Student Mathematicians |
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355 | (18) |
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Part V Contemporary Issues, Challenges, and Commentary |
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Chapter 17 The Achievement Gap and the Educational Conspiracy Against Low-Income Children |
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373 | (18) |
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Chapter 18 From High Potential to Gifted Performance: Encouraging Academically Talented Urban Students |
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391 | (20) |
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Chapter 19 An Infusion-Based Approach to Enriching the Standards-Driven Curriculum |
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411 | (18) |
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Chapter 20 Reversing Underachievement Through Enrichment |
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429 | (14) |
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Chapter 21 Commentary on Contemporary Issues |
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443 | (14) |
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Chapter 22 A Biographical Portrait of Joseph S. Renzulli: Scholar, Gifted Educator, and Visionary Leader |
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457 | (18) |
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About the Editor |
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Joseph Renzulli is a professor of educational psychology at the University of Connecticut, where he also has served as the director of the Renzulli Center For Creativity, Gifted Education, and Talent Development.
Sally M. Reis is the Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, the Letitia Neag Morgan Chair in Educational Psychology, a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor, and a University Teaching Fellow at the University of Connecticut. She was a teacher for 15 years, 11 of which were spent working with gifted students on the elementary, junior high, and high school levels. She has authored or coauthored over 250 articles, books, book chapters, monographs, and technical reports.