REALIZING THAT YOUR preschooler is gifted can catch you unawares, especially
if the child is your firstborn.
If you are lucky you may have a partner, relatives or friends who
act as resources, or at least sanity-preservers, as you face the ultimate
hands-on, independent learning challenge - parenting. If you are more
fortunate still, these support people or some other source of information
might give you the perspective that enables you to detect when you have
a youngster that is developing faster than normal.
Identifying giftedness in young children
Perhaps the most useful first piece of advice is to keep good, dated
records of your child's development, not just of sitting and walking,
but of the less glamorous stages too, such as grasping an object with
finger and thumb, first using a two word sentence, and first turning
of the pages of a book etc.
Children clearly progress at different rates in the various areas
of development. A child may mature quickly in the area of gross motor
skills but may be slower in his or her mastery of the cognitive milestones.
Of course individual milestones are not, on their own, a good basis
either for diagnosing giftedness or for concern. It is the overall pattern
of development in the area, with due allowance for cultural and personality
factors, that should form the basis of judgement. On this basis the
adjacent tables showing normal developmental milestones, and those significantly
advanced, may be useful.
| Development milestones |
|
|
| |
Normal Development
|
30% Advanced
|
| Gross motor |
|
|
|
Rolls over
|
3 months
|
2.1 months
|
|
Sits alone
|
7
|
4.9
|
|
Stands alone well
|
11
|
7.7
|
|
Walks alone
|
12.5
|
8.8
|
|
Walks up stairs
|
18
|
12.6
|
|
Turns pages of book
|
18
|
12.6
|
|
Runs well
|
24
|
16.8
|
|
Jumps with both feet
|
30
|
21
|
|
Rides tricycle using pedals
|
36
|
25.2
|
|
Throws ball
|
48
|
33.6
|
|
Skips with alternate feet
|
60
|
42
|
| Fine motor |
|
|
|
Plays with rattle
|
3
|
2.1
|
|
Holds object between finger and thumb
|
9
|
6.3
|
|
Scribbles spontaneously
|
13
|
9.1
|
|
Draws person with two body parts
|
48
|
33.6
|
|
Draws recognisable person with body
|
60
|
42
|
|
Draws person with neck, hands & clothes
|
72
|
50.4
|
| Language development |
|
|
|
Vocalises two different sounds
|
2.3
|
1.6
|
|
Says first word
|
7.9
|
5.5
|
|
Responds to name
|
9
|
6.3
|
|
Babbles with intonation
|
12
|
8.4
|
|
Vocabulary of 4-6 words
|
15
|
10.5
|
|
Names an object
|
17.8
|
12.5
|
|
Vocabulary of 20 words
|
21
|
14.7
|
|
Combines several words spontaneously
|
21
|
14.7
|
|
Uses simple sentences
|
24
|
16.8
|
|
Uses personal pronouns
|
24
|
16.8
|
The above details were taken from Harrison (1995) pp 24 & 33,
with Harrison attributing her information to Hall, EG & Skinner,
N (1980) Somewhere to turn: strategies for parents of the gifted
and talented children. New York: Teachers College Press.
It is in the cognitive and social areas of giftedness
that some of these milestones are often more difficult to assess.
In addition to language development, Milner-Davis (1996) suggests
notice be taken of a child's
- advanced knowledge
- advanced thinking or reasoning
- particular creativity
- humour and joke telling
- spontaneity
- demands for independence
- being competitive
- persistence in completing tasks, and
- advanced social maturity (such as in sharing, invitations, reminding
others about rules, and role-playing).
A parenting response
It has been said that parents of gifted preschoolers should just do
what all parents should do - feed their child's interests and respond
to their needs as they change, and stay loose (ie flexible). (The normal
follow-on advice is to enjoy this time, for problems undoubtedly start
when the child reaches school!)
While there may well be truth in this, Milner-Davis (1996) suggests
it is important to realise that the needs of the gifted youngster may
not all be ones of simply finding the right materials or enrichment
activities, and moreover that interaction with preschools and day-care
staff can be demanding.
For instance a child may have a need for independence and leadership
at an age where his or her chronological peers may not generally be
ready to be led - this can lead to intense frustration unless there
are other opportunities for appropriate social interaction. And the
frustration and difficulties may well lead to problem behaviours, such
as bossiness, which might need to be addressed and modified.
Problems with day-care and preschool arrangements can include those
which may seem trivial to the adults involved. The organisationally
efficient practice of having a line of little toilets without privacy
might offend the sense of dignity in some advanced preschool children.
(Or alternately it might appeal to the humour of others.) Some emotionally
mature children might find being talked about by adults in their hearing
offensive. Alternately children who have passed the need for an afternoon
nap might find a timetabled slot for one a real problem.
The same flexibility we need in ourselves as parents we also need
to look for in a preschool or care setting. This includes flexible groupings
to allow a child to find their appropriate cognitive, physical and social
challenges, and flexible use of resources, without certain materials
being withheld simply due to age. Arguments for early admission or transfers
from one stage to another apply equally in the preschool setting as
they do at school.
Almost certainly there will be problems and parents may seek to charge
in and set things to right. This might not always be wise. One parent,
for whom I have great respect, says it is important for the child to
receive the message that the parent can do something about any problem
the child faces (King, 1996). But she continues to say that one of the
choices the parent may make, after considering the choices, is to do
nothing and to leave facing the problem to the child.
Parents and other adults can facilitate language and social development
by talking with the child about such issues and problems that he or
she might be facing. The child can be encouraged to raise some of different
solutions and then to predict the likely consequences. Ideally this
process gradually becomes the child's, with the adult gradually withdrawing
and leaving the child a strong tool with which to face problems in school
and later in life.
Parents can also use real life examples to show how different people
can have conflicting opinions and still be good people, and how varying
standards of behaviour and language might reasonably apply in different
circumstances. Unfortunately gifted children can expect a range of problems
through schooling and learning to cope with them can be a preschooler's
parent's greatest gift.
Activities for gifted preschoolers
Now for some immediate practical ideas. Things to do in that rare
commodity, "quality time". Or in the queue at the supermarket.
Most of the following ideas come from an article "Ideas and activities
for parents of preschool gifted children" by Laura Siegelbaum and
Susan Rotner, that appeared in Gifted Child Today in Jan/Feb
1983.
- Compare and contrast - ask you child what is different and
what is the same about things like two dogs, two characters in a book,
two people he or she knows, two TV shows, two cereals
- Different ways of grouping - ask your child to find different
ways of grouping things like favourite TV shows, people he or she
knows, toys, drinks, hours of the day, feelings, clothes, different
geometrical shapes
- Educated guesses - ask your child to make guesses like what
will happen next in this TV show, or in this book, or what do you
think that man does for a living, or why do you think that child is
angry
- What ifs - ask your child what would happen if we leave this
piece of bread outside on the grass, or if we send a letter to grandma,
or if people could fly, or if he or she was angry with all her friends
- Scrambled animals - ask your child to choose a couple of
animals he or she knows and then ask him or her to scramble some of
the parts together, then see if he or she would like to draw the result
or model it in plasticine or tell a story about it or suggest some
things that the new animal could or couldn't do well
- Taping a story - show your child how to use a portable cassette
recorder with microphone, and encourage him or her to either tell
a story or sing a song or perhaps to go on a trip around the house
describing what he or she can see so that you can guess when you listen
later
- Create your own super hero - ask your child if they want
to create a super hero, just like someone else created Superman (or
whatever else is popular) in their imagination, then ask your child
to close his or her eyes and just imagine this new super hero for
a while, before telling you about it, giving it a name, drawing it
or making up a story about it etc
- Picture makers - give your child a good piece of paper with
some lines drawn on it that do not make anything in particular, or
make something like a wheel that can be used in many ways, and ask
your child to use these lines to make a picture of anything he or
she likes, and then to describe it to you
- Creative cooking - ask you child to create some interesting
dishes of his or her own, perhaps by starting with one or two suggestions
like, Jungle Jelly or Nut Salad
- Money, money, money - talk to your child about the way notes
and coins are used, and if he or she is interested let your child
set up his own shop with things from the pantry and with real coins,
and extending this to letting your child make one or two purchases
from the store and taking the change, or to working out the cost of
a meal you are eating, etc
- Recognising shapes - ask your child what basic shapes are
involved in some real life objects like a book or a milk carton or
a house, and to learn the names of common two and three dimensional
shapes and to recognise them when he or she sees them
- Step number lines - find a staircase and tie a coloured ribbon
on one of the middle steps, telling your child to imagine that standing
on this step means that there are no apples (or whatever) and that
going up a step means one more apple and so on, then give your child
some simple sums by going up and down steps, and while you are blind-folded
give him or her some continuing simple sums (such as "take away
two apples for the ones you ate for breakfast") that end up with
your child say on the step corresponding to his or her age, and ask
your child to check
- Use your own imagination
and good luck!
References
Harrison, C (1995) Giftedness in early childhood. Sydney: KU
Children's Services.
King, V (1996) Email message on TAGFAM mailing list.
Milner-Davis, Jessica (1996) The gifted child in the family: Responding
to the early childhood years. Talk given at the NSWAGTC 1996 Annual
General Meeting, Sydney.
Siegelbaum, L & Rotner, S (1983) Ideas and activities for parents
of preschool gifted children. Gifted Child Today Jan/Feb 1983.
For further reading there is an excellent set of references in Harrison
(1995) and Milner-Davis, in particular, quoted:
Barnett, LA & Fiscella, J (1985) A child by any other name
a comparison of the playfulness of gifted and non-gifted children. Gifted
Child Quarterly 29(2), 61-66.
Kitano, MK (1985) Ethnography of a pre-school for the gifted: what
gifted young children actually do. Gifted Child Quarterly 29(2),
67-71.
Moss, E (1990) Social interaction and metacognitive development in
gifted preschoolers. Gifted Child Quarterly 34(1), 16-20.
© David Farmer 1996