Gross, M.
Journal for the Education of the Gifted
Prufrock Press
29, p. 404-429
2006
In this article, Miraca Gross discusses the long-term outcomes of grade acceleration versus nonacceleration.
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.
Let me propose to you an experimental study.
Let us take a child of average intellectual ability, and when he is 5
years old, let us place him in a class of children with severe intellectual
disabilities, children whose IQs are at least four standard deviations
lower than his. The child will stay with this group for the duration of
his schooling and he will undertake the curriculum designed for the
class, at the level and pace of the class.
We will carefully observe and assess at regular intervals his educational
progress, his feelings about school, his social relationships
with classmates, and his self-esteem. We will also observe the child’s
parents and their interactions with the child’s teacher, school, and
school system. They will, of course, have had no say in the child’s
class or grade placement.
As one cannot generalize from a sample of one, the study will
be replicated with 60 children in cities, towns, and rural and remote
areas across the nation.
If this proposal appalls you, rest easy. Such a study will never be
undertaken. No education system would countenance it. No ethics
committee would approve it.
Instead, I will report some findings from a real-life study that
is ongoing and that mirrors the hypothetical study described above.
This study of 60 young Australians with IQs of 160 and above is in
its 22nd year, and the majority of the subjects are in their mid- to late
20s. Like the children in the hypothetical study, the majority undertook
their entire schooling in classes where the average IQ was 100,
at least four standard deviations below theirs. These children, and
their parents, were less than happy. The education systems were unresponsive
and no ethics committee raised a whisper, as this treatment
is common practice in Australia, as well as in the United States.
Terman “Versus” Hollingworth
As early as 1930, Terman and his colleagues (Burks, Jensen, & Terman,
1930) in the first few years of his landmark longitudinal study of
1,528 intellectually gifted children, warned that exceptionally gifted
(IQ = 160–179) and profoundly gifted (IQ = 180+) students are
children at risk. They pointed out that the intellectual functioning
of a 6-year-old with an IQ of 180 is on a par with the average 11-yearold,
and, by the time the child has reached 11, his cognitive development
is not far from that of the average high school graduate. Add
to this the accelerated socioaffective development generally found in
such children, and “the inevitable result is that the child of 180 IQ
has one of the most difficult problems of social adjustment that any
human being is ever called upon to meet” (p. 264).
Terman (Burks et al., 1930) had not originally intended to make
a special study of the very highly gifted; his interest was spurred by
the difficulties with socialization that parents and teachers reported
for these young people in adolescence and which appeared much less
severe in the gifted group as a whole. In the secondary study (above),
which he consequently made of subjects with IQ of 170+, Terman
noted that by 1930, when the mean age of the gifted group was 14,
60% of the boys and 73% of the girls were reported as being definitely
solitary or “poor mixers.”
Contemporaneously, Leta Hollingworth (1926, 1931, 1942)
was engaged in what is undoubtedly the most significant and influential
study of exceptional intellectual potential yet undertaken.
Hollingworth’s interest in the extremely gifted was sparked by her
association with “Child E,” a boy with an IQ of 187 whose academic
and social progress she followed throughout her life. Children Above
IQ 180 (Hollingworth, 1942), published posthumously, analyzed
the then current and previous conceptions of intellectual giftedness;
described 19 children with IQs of 180 and above reported by previous
researchers; and described in remarkable detail the intellectual,
academic, and social development of 12 New York children with
IQs of 180 and above whom Hollingworth herself had studied over
the 23 years from 1916 until her death in 1939.
Hollingworth was intrigued by the differences she noted in the
cognitive and affective development of moderately and exceptionally
gifted children. She defined the IQ range of 125–155 as “socially
optimal intelligence” (Hollingworth, 1926). She found that while
children scoring in this range were socially self-confident young people
who enjoyed the friendship of age peers, children with IQs of
160 and above experienced ongoing problems of social isolation. She
believed that these difficulties arose from the cognitive and affective
differences between the exceptionally gifted child and his or her age
peers (Hollingworth, 1931).
It has been suggested that Terman’s findings regarding extremely
gifted children conflicted with those of Hollingworth (Grossberg
& Cornell, 1988), but this is not so. Terman recognized the difference
between socialization and social adjustment. Children with
IQs between 170 and 180 tended towards “solitariness,” but Terman
interpreted this as a personal preference rather than the outcome of
peer rejection. However, while he reported generally positive social
adjustment within his highly gifted group—possibly because all but
two had been accelerated—Terman (Burks et al., 1930) noted that
his findings for the children who scored above an IQ of 180 were
highly congruent with Hollingworth’s.
In her book on gifted children Professor Hollingworth presents
case studies of a dozen children whose IQ’s equal or surpass
180. The data amassed in these studies would appear to
fully justify her generalization that the majority of children
testing above IQ 180 ‘play little with other children unless
special conditions such as those found in a special class for
the gifted are provided. They have great difficulty in finding
playmates in the ordinary course of events who are congenial
both in size and in mental ability. Thus they are thrown back
upon themselves to work out forms of solitary intellectual
play.’
The children in our gifted group whose IQs are over 180
tend to fall into the social pattern described by Hollingworth.
(pp. 173–174)
Terman (Burks et al., 1930) made the distinction between the
preference for solitude, which he believed characterized the majority
of his highly gifted group, and the loneliness imposed by peer rejection
or by the absence of a congenial peer group. Like Hollingworth,
he was aware that the likelihood of finding friends in the regular
school setting was remote unless the child’s high abilities were identified
as early as possible and unless special opportunities to meet
other gifted students were deliberately structured by the school or
the education system.
In the 1920s and 1930s, school systems grade-advanced gifted
students much more readily than they do now; by the time they graduated
from high school, 10% of Terman’s entire subject group had
skipped two grades and a further 23% had skipped one (Terman &
Oden, 1947). By contrast, the majority of the exceptionally and profoundly
gifted children in the present study have been retained with
age peers for the entirety of their schooling, and few of their schools
have actively structured socialization opportunities for them.
The Present Study
Longitudinal comparative case studies allow us to examine differences
both within subjects and between them on a range of variables
throughout the period of the study. Within-subject and betweensubject
differences on each variable are recorded at regular time
intervals. The researcher can examine changes over time; for example,
fluctuations in academic achievement as the subjects progress
through school and college, shifts in their attitudes towards their own
abilities, and alterations in their career or life plans. Investigations
may also include comparisons of the subjects’ relationships with parents
and siblings, the composition of their friendship groups, and
the effect of various interventions on academic and socioaffective
development. In the present study, this has included the effects of
two “passive” interventions: the “Leave him alone; he’s gifted, so he
doesn’t need help” response and the “Leave him alone; he’s leveled
out, so he wasn’t gifted after all” response. I believe that in education,
as in medicine, a decision to withhold treatment should be regarded
as an intervention.
In contrast to studies conducted in geographically small but
densely populated regions, the 60 young Australians in this study are
spread over an area similar in size to the 48 contiguous states of the
United States but with a population of only 21 million. Distances
between settlements are vast and travel costs enormous. Face-to-face
contact is not as frequent as I could wish and has been supplemented
by mail, phone, and, in the more recent years, e-mail. Seven of the
young people now live overseas; in five of these cases, the move was
for purposes of postgraduate study on scholarships at prestigious
research universities in Britain, Europe, or the United States.
Longitudinal studies are extremely time consuming, but frequent
and regular contact with subjects is essential both to maintain
the integrity of the study and also to minimize dropout rates, which,
as Subotnik and Arnold (1994) discuss, are a consistent threat to
longitudinal research. The researcher cannot ignore her subject families
for several years and then expect them to welcome her “home”
and kill the fatted calf ! However, dropout rates are, understandably,
significantly less in small-scale than in large-scale studies; only one
subject has dropped out of the present study.
As with most studies of populations that are characterized by
their scarcity, this study has not employed random selection. Young
people with IQs of 160 appear in the population at a ratio of fewer
than 1 in 10,000. With few exceptions, I have restricted membership
of the study to young people who were between ages 5 and 13 in the
years 1988–1989, the period during which much of the childhood
data was collected, and whose families were residents in Australia
during the child’s years of elementary schooling.
Given that Australia’s population in the late 1980s was only
16 million, with only 1.7 million children in the 5–13 age range
(Australian Bureau of Statistics, 1988), we should expect, statistically,
that only some 170 children would meet the study’s age and
IQ criteria. It is remarkable that more than 30% of the target population
has been identified. The study has no control group; a number
of short-term comparative studies (e.g., DeHaan & Havighurst,
1961; Gallagher, 1958), and longer term comparative studies (e.g.,
Hollingworth, 1926, 1942; Janos, 1983) had already established
that children with IQs of 160+ differ significantly from moderately
gifted age peers on a range of cognitive and affective variables, and I
wanted to follow the academic, social, and emotional development
of as many young people with IQs of 160+ as I could find in the
restricted population of my country.
Subject Identification
The formal commencement of the study was advertised during
1986–1987 in the Bulletin of the Australian Psychological Society,
in the newsletters of the national and state gifted children’s associations,
through letters to Colleges of Education in Australian universities,
through letters to psychologists in private practice, and
through informal contact with colleagues across the country who
had a special interest in gifted education. In 1987, I was honored
with the Hollingworth Award for Research and the media publicity
that ensued from this led to a considerable influx of referrals, especially
from psychologists who had assessed children who scored in
the criterion range on the Stanford-Binet: L-M (SB: L-M; the version
of this test then current), from parents of high-scoring children,
and from teachers who believed they had extremely gifted children
in their classes. By 1989, at which time the first phase of the study
was reported in my doctoral dissertation, the study comprised 40
children with SB: L-M IQ scores of 160 or above. The youngest child
was 4 years old on entrance to the study; the oldest was 13. (This girl,
with an IQ of 180, was referred to the study by the psychiatrist who
was treating her for severe depression; she had been retained with
age peers in the “inclusion” classroom for 8 years without even the
temporary relief of a pullout program.) An additional 20 students
entered between 1990 and 2002. Children entering after 1992, the
year in which Australian norms for the Stanford-Binet Revision IV
became available, took the SB: L-M as a supplementary test after
having ceilinged out on the Revision IV or WISC-III. From the
start of the study, mental age scores were computed for children who
reached the highest standard scores for their age listed on the normative
tables of the SB: L-M.
It is important to recognize that even though a pleasing 30%
of the theoretical population of the subjects was identified, these
children represent a minority within a minority—exceptionally and
profoundly gifted children whose abilities have been recognized.
Equally gifted children who have been successful in concealing their
abilities, who deviate significantly in their behavior and origin from
Australian teachers’ expectations of gifted children, or whose abilities
have been masked by learning disabilities, may be underrepresented.
Research has repeatedly shown that, as in the U.S., Australian
teachers generally believe that gifted children originate from successful
professional families within the dominant culture. The underrepresentation
of children from working class and socially deprived
families among my subjects is a matter for concern.
Data Collection
Full details of the data collection appear in Gross (1993); what follows
here is a short précis of the principal elements. To track their
academic progress through the school years, subjects undertook
regular assessment in several school subjects, including math and
reading, on standardized tests of aptitude and achievement; abovelevel
testing was required as subjects ceilinged out on virtually all
age-appropriate tests. Results were compared with teachers’ assessment
of the students’ academic progress as recorded in the written
school reports that Australian schools send home twice each year.
This enabled a comparison of teachers’ perceptions of the children’s
achievement levels against their actual achievements. As Australian
teachers in the 1980s were strongly opposed to standardized testing,
most had no idea of the true abilities of the study children.
Serious discrepancies were noted between ability and educational
response; several children who by age 10 had scored above the mean
on the Scholastic Aptitude Test-Mathematics (SAT-M) were doing
fourth- or fifth-grade math with their age peers while the level of the
children’s required reading in class and their leisure reading at home
varied by as much as 7 years.
Records of physical characteristics and health were taken
through childhood. A series of parent questionnaires elicited data
on early childhood development; family history; and the child’s
reading, computer use, TV viewing, hobbies, interests, play preferences,
and involvement in music and sport; these were triangulated
with child questionnaires and with regular parent and child interviews.
Subjects’ self-esteem was assessed through the Coopersmith
Self-Esteem Inventory (Coopersmith, 1981) and moral reasoning
through the Defining Issues Test (Rest, 1986).
Naturally, as the young subjects have moved through adolescence
into adulthood, the majority of my communication has come to be
directly with them, but after 20 years their parents still share with me
their perceptions of what is happening in their children’s lives. This
has developed informally as another form of triangulation.
Outcomes of Acceleration and Nonacceleration
I believe that all the young people in this study would have benefited
greatly, both academically and socially, from grade advancement,
while the considerable majority would have benefited from radical
acceleration. Sadly, only 17 were radically accelerated, and indeed,
the majority (33 of the 60) were retained with age peers for the duration
of their schooling.
Radical acceleration is defined as any combination of accelerative
procedures that results in a student graduating high school 3 or
more years earlier than is customary (Stanley, 1978). When thoughtfully
planned and carefully monitored, as is generally the case, it is
a highly successful intervention for highly gifted students who are
also socially and emotionally mature (Gross & van Vliet, 2005).
Interesting and disturbing differences appear when the study cohort
is examined in terms of the degree of acceleration they were permitted.
Two Examples of Radically Accelerated Students.
Christopher Otwa. Chris is a young man of truly phenomenal
ability. Testing on the SB: L-M one month short of his 11th birthday
revealed a mental age of 22. Five months later, he scored 710 on
the SAT-M. His remarkable talent in math and language was evident
from his earliest years; by age 4, he was capable of fourth-grade
math.
Fortunately, the principal of Chris’s primary school had visited
Johns Hopkins University on a Churchill Fellowship. He had met
several young people from the Study of Mathematically Precocious
Youth (SMPY) who had been radically accelerated and had familiarized
himself with some of the research on acceleration. Accordingly,
he was responsive to Chris’ academic and social needs. While in
Grade 1, Chris was accelerated to work with fifth-grade students for
math and sixth-grade students for English. The following year he did
math with seventh-grade students. This proved so successful that
at the end of his second-grade year Chris made a full grade skip to
fourth grade but took math with the eighth grade. By age 12, he was
theoretically enrolled in 9th grade but took five subjects (physics,
chemistry, English, math, and economics) with 11th-grade students
5 years older than he. He was extremely happy, loved school, and was
popular with his classmates despite the difference in age.
The following year, Chris then took the rather unusual course
of “repeating” 11th grade with an additional five subjects—English,
legal studies, Australian history, accounting, and biology. This was
by no means an attempt to reverse the acceleration process; it was
Chris’s decision because he felt he would be too young to enter university
at age 13, and this alternate plan would give him a breadth
of studies that would be otherwise unavailable. Chris repeated this
process in 12th grade, doing twice the number of subjects spread
over 2 years, and thus graduating with 10 university entrance subjects
instead of 5. In both his 12th-grade years, he was one of the
top-scoring students in his state. He entered university at 16 years 2
months, graduating with Bachelor of Science (First-Class Honours)
in computer science and mathematics at age 20.
Chris won a scholarship to a major British university and graduated
with a Ph.D. in pure math at age 24. Since then, based in
London, he works for a worldwide consultancy assisting other companies
with financial strategies.
Sally Huang. Sally was born in Australia to Malaysian parents.
She scored 165 on the SB: L-M at 6 years 11 months. Unfortunately,
the psychologist stopped the test before Sally had reached her ceiling,
and I believe her true IQ is significantly higher than this.
From her earliest years, Sally displayed phenomenal gifts in math
and English. Her elementary and high schools, in a large country
town, arranged a series of carefully planned and monitored grade
skips coupled with subject acceleration. Sally entered second grade
at age 6, fourth grade the following year, seventh grade at 9, and compacted
the 6 years of high school into 4, graduating at age 13.
Sally’s path through school was assisted by her math teacher and
the elementary school principal, who had a strong interest in gifted
education and has since earned a postgraduate degree in this field.
She entered university, on scholarship, at 13½ years old, as one of the
top scoring 12th-grade students in her state.
Sally’s studies focused on the physical and mathematical sciences,
but she also studied Chinese, Japanese, and music. She was allowed
to skip first-year university math and enrolled in the science faculty’s
second-year pure and applied math classes. Her enrollment in university
required her to move to the city, and stay, during the week, in
the home of friends of her parents. This gave her access both to the
social life of the university and to her family. She gained a Bachelor
of Science (First-Class Honours) at 16 years 8 months, and, like
Chris Otway, won a full postgraduate scholarship to a major British
university.
Sally gained her Ph.D. in theoretical physics at age 21 with five
publications in major journals. She participated fully in the academic
and social life of the university and had many warm and supportive
friendships. She speaks fluent Chinese and Japanese, is an accomplished
pianist, and holds a first-dan black belt in Tae Kwon Do.
The following year, at a major European university, she completed
a postdoctoral MBA aimed specifically at postgraduates with a science
and engineering background and in 2004 accepted a management
appointment with the firm in which she did her internship.
Sally is certain that acceleration has brought her nothing but
benefits:
If I had not been accelerated, I feel sure that I would have
become quite frustrated, as indeed I often did at various
stages and still do when I attend things like mixed-ability
language classes. . . . But the frustration in that case would
have been prolonged and severe, having a detrimental effect
not only on my love for learning but also on me as a person.
Given the existing educational framework, acceleration was
the best option for my particular situation, and I certainly
don’t feel that I’ve suffered any ill effects as a result; indeed,
all the effects have been beneficial. But this is only because of
the support and watchful eyes that were kept trained on my
progress academically and as a person all throughout.
Young People Who Have Been Radically Accelerated. Surprisingly,
given the wariness with which Australian teachers regard acceleration,
17 of the 60 young people were radically accelerated. None
has regrets. Indeed, several say they would probably have preferred
to accelerate still further or to have started earlier. Lubinski, Webb,
Morelock, and Benbow (2001) report similar findings from a study
of profoundly gifted SMPY accelerands.
Some of the children had an unfortunate start to school before
their abilities were recognized; others were fortunate enough to
enroll in schools where a teacher or school administrator recognized
their remarkable abilities and almost immediately argued for
a strongly individualized program. In every case, these young people
have experienced positive short-term and long-term academic and
socioaffective outcomes. The pressure to underachieve for peer acceptance
lessened significantly or disappeared after the first acceleration.
Despite being some years younger than their classmates, the majority
topped their state in specific academic subjects, won prestigious academic
prizes, or represented their country or state in Math, Physics,
or Chemistry Olympiads. The majority entered college between ages
11 and 15. Several won scholarships to attend prestigious universities
in Australia or overseas. All have graduated with extremely high
grades and, in most cases, university prizes for exemplary achievement.
All 17 are characterized by a passionate love of learning and
almost all have gone on to obtain their Ph.D.s.
In every case, the radical accelerands have been able to form
warm, lasting, and deep friendships. They attribute this to the fact
that their schools placed them, quite early, with older students to
whom they tended to gravitate in any case. Those who experienced
social isolation earlier say it disappeared after the first grade skip.
Two are married with children. The majority are in permanent or
serious love relationships. They tend to choose partners who, like
themselves, are highly gifted.
Two-year accelerands. The five young people who accelerated by
2 years report as much, or almost as much, personal satisfaction with
their education as do the radical accelerands although, like the radical
accelerands, the majority say they would have liked to have been
accelerated further. Only two have taken Ph.D.s, but the remaining
three have taken Bachelor Honours (research) degrees. Like the
radical accelerands, they have entered professional careers, many of
which utilize their remarkable abilities in math and the sciences.
In general, they have enjoyed satisfactory personal and love
relationships.
However, those who were retained with age peers until
fourth grade or later tend to find socializing difficult. Exceptionally
and profoundly gifted students should have their first acceleration
in the early years of school before they experience the social rejection
that seems to be a significant risk for such students retained
in mixed-ability classes. The skills of friendship building are first
learned in the early years of school, and children who are rejected
by their peers may miss out on these early and important lessons in
forming relationships.
Subjects accelerated by one year. The five young people who were
permitted a single grade advancement are not deeply satisfied with
their education. Their school experience has not been happy, and
they would have dearly loved to have been accelerated further. After
the euphoria of having new, challenging work, school became just as
boring as it had been before the acceleration.
These children’s schools had been reluctant to accelerate them
and were afraid that, while the grade skip had been successful, further
acceleration might lead to social or emotional damage in later
years. In two cases, the school told the children’s parents that they
were concerned for the self-esteem of other students because the
accelerated student was performing so much better than they were!
This group has tended to take undergraduate degrees and stop
there. Because they have not had the experience of pitching themselves
successfully and over a period of time at work that is truly
challenging and demanding, they have no idea of the full extent of
their capacities. Perhaps because of this, they have tended to enroll in
undemanding academic courses and have consequently found university
intellectually unchallenging. It is with this group that a serious
dissatisfaction with friendships and love relationships starts to
appear. Two have had severe problems with social relationships.
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.
Factors Influencing Schools’ Decisions
to Radically Accelerate Students
In the 20-year update of this study (Gross, 2004), I commented that
possibly the greatest gift we can give to a gifted child is a teacher who
recognizes the gift, who is not threatened by it, but rather rejoices
in it and works with joy to foster it. The majority of children who
were radically accelerated benefited from the guidance, support, and
friendship of such a teacher. Perhaps unsurprisingly, in many cases
these teachers had a preexisting interest in gifted children or, in a
few cases, academic qualifications in gifted education. This echoes
the findings of Southern, Jones, and Fiscus (1989) who noted that
educators with professional or personal experience of acceleration
had more facilitative attitudes towards acceleration than those who
had not.
The considerable majority of radical accelerands have extraordinary
abilities in mathematics that were evident from the earliest
years of school. At 5 years 5 months, Roshni tested at the 99th percentile
for 7-year-olds on a standardized test of math achievement;
her school responded by accelerating her to second grade. By fourth
grade, at age 7½, she was taking math with the sixth-grade students.
She entered university at age 15. Hadley taught himself to add,
subtract, multiply, and divide before school entry, and at 7 years 9
months tested at the 78th percentile for 12-year-olds. He scored 730
on the SAT-M at 11 years 8 months, and at age 9 entered seventh
grade, where he promptly topped his year of 125 students in math.
He achieved three university degrees by age 20 and has a successful
career as an actuary. Adrian, who by age 4 could multiply two-digit
numbers by two-digit numbers in his head, scored 760 on the SATM
before his ninth birthday, by which time he had graduated from
elementary school and was enjoying dual enrolment in secondary
school and university.
By contrast, equally gifted children whose most visible talents lie
in English are much less likely to be significantly accelerated. Jade,
who was talking in sentences before her first birthday and who at
5 years 2 months of age obtained a mental age of 9 on the SB: LM,
was allowed early entrance to school but was offered no further
acceleration or even enrichment. Her school experience, academically
and socially, has been deeply unhappy. The psychologist who
tested Rufus on the SB: L-M at age 5½ (his IQ was 168, at the test
ceiling for his age) assessed his reading at a 10-year-old level. His
only educational provision in elementary school was a short-lived
pullout program, and he has never been accelerated.
Hollingworth (1931) pointed out that “society attends to that
which is socially annoying. The school attends to those who give
it trouble” (p. 3). Schools too often assume that exceptional ability
in language can be fostered purely through an open-ended curriculum.
Additionally, when elementary school children who are
ardent readers finish their work early, teachers tend to allow them
to “read quietly” rather than provide appropriate enrichment. The
mathematically gifted child, however, gives the school more “trouble.”
The teacher is unlikely to suggest that these students construct
math problems to keep themselves occupied (she would then have
to mark them!); consequently, the school is more likely to establish
structures within which their progress can be guided and monitored.
Additionally, school-based math tends to be more linearly structured
than English, and, from the teacher’s point of view, math performance
may be easier to judge, there being fewer “shades of grey”
in students’ responses. Teachers may feel it is easier to accelerate students
through math because the pathways are more clearly defined.
Despite their visible exceptionality in math, the radical accelerands
are what their teachers would probably call “well-rounded.”
They have a wide range of interests that are socially acceptable
within the Australian culture. Roshni is a talented actress and has
performed professionally. Hadley, Chris, Roshni, and Sally excel at
sports. Roshni, at age 5 but in the second grade, swam as well as the
majority of her classmates. Sally gained her first-dan black belt in
Tae Kwon Do at age 12. At age 14, Hadley captained the under-16
soccer team, and in 12th grade (age 15,) he played on the school’s
elite cricket team, which toured England, playing against a range of
English schools. Chris captained and played in several sports teams
at school and university. The majority of the radical accelerands
are musically talented. All are humorous and quick-witted, and all
deeply enjoy socializing with friends. They have been forgiven for
being intellectually gifted because they displayed a range of interests
that their classmates and teachers could readily relate to and feel
comfortable with. Schools were much more reluctant to accelerate
equally gifted students whose interests were more esoteric, like Ian
who, by age 5, had developed a consuming passion for cartography
and Fred who, by 11, was reading psychology textbooks. Both spent
their first 5 years of school with age peers in the mixed-ability classroom.
Interestingly, teachers also appear to be much less threatened
by exceptionally gifted students who have accelerated by more than
one year. Their academic achievements can now be viewed against
the performance of children 2 or more years older, and paradoxically,
appear less out of the ordinary. Additionally, the students now
require less curricular differentiation and are therefore easier to
teach. Teachers find their presence in the class less of an irritant.
Acceleration and Self-Esteem
The Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory, which the subjects completed
in childhood and adolescence, measures self-esteem along
four factors: home/family, academic, social, and general. The
young people in this study enjoy close and loving family relationships,
and the majority scored at, or close to, the ceiling on this subscale.
General self-esteem, likewise, was almost universally positive.
However, substantial differences appeared in academic and social
self-esteem between subjects who had been accelerated by 2 or more
years and those who were accelerated by only 1 year or retained with
age peers.
The social self-esteem of subjects who had been substantially
accelerated was at least one standard deviation above the mean for
their age. These young people were happily learning and socializing
with students at least 2 years older with whom they had more similarities
than differences. They were liked and accepted; indeed some,
like Hadley, had developed as social leaders. Social self-esteem was
particularly high for subjects who had earlier been deeply unhappy
with age peers and had subsequently been accelerated. “Kindergarten
and Year 1 were a slow death,” says Anna. “I came alive when I skipped
to Year 3, and the second skip to Year 5 was like getting to heaven.
I had friends for the first time—kids who shared my quirky sense of
humor, people who laughed with me, not at me.”
By contrast, the social self-esteem of one-year accelerands and
nonaccelerands was low, and in many cases, disturbingly low. Ian, the
cartographer, who ceilinged on every subtest of the WISC-III and
later was assessed on the SB: L-M with a mental age exactly twice
his chronological age, was deeply unhappy with age peers and scored
1.97 standard deviations below the mean. Anastasia, who had been
advanced by one grade but who was still socially rejected, scored 2.59
standard deviations below.
Differences were also noted in the academic self-esteem of substantially
accelerated subjects and the one-year and nonaccelerands.
While the academic self-esteem of almost all subjects during the
elementary and early secondary school years was above the mean for
their age peers, it was the nonaccelerands who scored more than one
standard deviation above the mean. By contrast, subjects accelerated
by 2 or more years have positive but moderate self-esteem—specifically,
between the mean for their age and .7 of a standard deviation
above.
In a critique of this study, Marsh and Craven (1998) claimed
that while the academic self-esteem scores of nonaccelerands were
“realistically high,” the more modest scores of the accelerands were
a function of the big-fish-in-the-little-pond effect (BFLPE)—a predicted
dip in academic self-esteem arising from the change in class
ranking that may occur when a gifted child is accelerated to be with
older students or is placed in an ability-grouped setting.
Earlier in this paper, exceptionally gifted students retained in the
regular classroom were compared to children of average intellectual
ability who have been placed with age peers with IQs of 40 or below.
The average child would excel academically without effort in such a
setting and her academic self-esteem might well be high; however, it
would derive from a completely invalid comparison. Equally, the academic
self-esteem of students with IQs of 160+ can hardly be called
“realistic” when it derives from a comparison of their performance
against age peers whose cognitive ability is four or more standard
deviations below theirs.
The BFLPE theory rests on the assumption that gifted students’
class ranking will change with their new placement, yet this did not
happen for the majority of subjects in this study. Children and adolescents
who were accelerated compared their achievements against
older students, and they still outperformed their classmates! Gena
Leung completed her university entrance math qualifications at age
13, topping her school despite being at least 4 years younger than the
other candidates. Chris Otway ceilinged on the university entrance
math test at age 14. Sally entered university at 13 as one of the top
high school graduates in her state. Hadley topped his year of 125
seventh-grade students in math despite being the youngest by a margin
of 3 years. Roshni, a fourth-grade student at age 7, was in the
top ability group in every subject. Sean was dux (highest scoring student)
of his elementary school at age 9. Because, according to Marsh
and Craven (1998), the BFLPE depends on a change in academic
ranking, it was patently not operating with these young people.
I believe the positive, but not inflated, academic self-esteem
of students who were substantially accelerated may originate from
something quite different. In a study conducted during the 1990s,
I noted that academically gifted students were significantly more
likely than age peers of average ability to possess a task-involved,
rather than ego-involved, motivational orientation (Gross, 1997).
The modest academic self-esteem of substantially accelerated students
may not, therefore, have been associated with the ego-involved
process of wanting to outperform their older classmates (become a
very visibly big fish in a little pond), but with the task-involved goal
of wanting to master the more challenging work they were now presented
with.
William James (as cited in Campbell, 1984) proposed that selfesteem
derives from a comparison of one’s performance against one’s
expectations of how one should perform. Substantial acceleration
allows exceptionally gifted children to realize, often for the first time,
the full extent of their abilities and therefore what they can realistically
expect of themselves. Their moderate levels of self-esteem reflect
a realization of how far they still have to go if they are to become all
that they can be.
In this study, academic self-esteem in childhood has not been
shown to be predictive of academic success in adolescence or adulthood.
However, both the formation of good social relationships at
university and later success in professional occupations that involve
close and productive teamwork have been more reliably predicted by
healthy social self-esteem in childhood.
Lessons Learned From the Study
Issues of Multipotentiality
Multipotentiality is best defined as the possession of a range of
abilities
of such an order that the individual is capable of succeeding at
extremely high levels in several fields (Colangelo, 2003). It should
not refer simply to the possession of multiple interests. A significant
advantage of longitudinal studies is that the researcher can trace,
through an individual’s childhood, adolescence and young adulthood,
the development or underdevelopment of relative talent areas
and the reasons for these discrepancies.
Multipotentiality was clearly apparent in many of the subjects of
this study in the early years of school. As discussed earlier, most of the
children ceilinged out on age-appropriate tests of academic ability and
achievement in most elementary school subjects. It was only when
above-level testing was applied that relative “peaks and higher peaks”
became apparent (Gross, 1993, 2004). Follow-up studies of young
people in the various SMPY cohorts have found the same phenomenon
(see, e.g., Achter, Lubinski, & Benbow, 1996). It is important
that we do not misinterpret multipotentiality as equipotentiality.
Ironically, in many cases, the academic fields in which the young
people came to specialize were not dictated by the student’s area of
greatest talent or even by his or her own “passion area.” Rather, specialization
was generally dictated by what the school’s teaching staff
viewed as the most important of the student’s multiple talents. In
cases where students showed outstanding ability in both math and
the humanities, they were almost invariably encouraged to accelerate
in math and were thus “steered” into math specialization; reasons
for this are discussed above. Sometimes the practices through which
teachers manipulated this were less than admirable. When, at age
11 years 4 months, Chris Otway scored 710 on the SAT-M and 580
on the SAT-V he was astonished by his verbal score and asked me to
have the test rescored. “I couldn’t have done as well as that,” he told
me. “The teachers reckon I’m just average in English.”
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Australian educators were
strongly influenced by Gardner’s multiple intelligence theory (MI),
which encouraged the perception of human abilities as discrete or
quasi-discrete (Gardner, 1983). Before this time, teachers observing
a student with outstanding potential in one cognitively mediated
subject, such as math, would have been philosophically open to
the idea that this might indicate superior ability in other academic
subjects. Now, however, many adherents to MI theory assumed that
the field in which a child’s talent was most readily observed was that
child’s “intelligence”—and ceased to look further. The strong egalitarian
sociopolitical focus of the times (see Gross, 1993) did not
help; heaven forbid that a bright child should possess more than her
“fair share” of talent.
In many cases, subjects followed their alternate passions outside
school. Chris, aged 12, while taking five subjects with 11th-grade
students, was devouring Dickens, the Brontës, Thomas Hardy, and a
range of the more “serious” science fiction authors. When he enrolled
in university shortly after his 16th birthday, he joined the science fiction
club and was promptly elected to the committee. Sally Huang,
who entered university at age 13, and Jonathan Otway, Chris’s
younger brother who accelerated by 2 years, were able to pursue their
passion for music outside their academic program. While justifiably
proud of his academic successes (he completed his Ph.D. in artificial
intelligence and now holds a research position at a British university),
Jonathon, a talented pianist, recounts as one of the peak experiences
of his life playing Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue to an audience
of 200; one of Sally’s peak experiences was giving a recital on the
great organ in the chapel of the famous English university college
where she obtained her Ph.D.
I most certainly am not suggesting that we should not accelerate
students in their areas of special talent; however, we should
not require young people with multiple talents to make decisions
regarding specialization before they have explored possible pathways
through which several of their talents might be optimized. It was
Chris Otway’s awareness of this that led him to take the last 2 years
of high school over 4 years rather than 2, broadening his range of
subjects from 5 to 10.
When I was a young teacher, the slang word for a highly gifted
kid was “a whiz” (e.g., “She’s a math whiz.” or “He’s a science whiz.”)
Far from supporting the multiple intelligences theory of discrete
abilities, the subjects of this study are “g whizzes.”
The Necessity for Early Identification and Placement
Hollingworth (1942) reported that, in her longitudinal study of
profoundly gifted young people, the most successful interventions
occurred when the children were identified earlier, rather than later,
in their elementary schooling and were either accelerated or placed
in a class with other gifted children. She claimed that it was between
the ages of 4 and 9 that the social difficulties experienced by children
with IQs of 160+ were most acute.
The present study mirrors Hollingworth’s (1942) findings. The
seeds of what happened in later childhood, adolescence, and adulthood
have been sown in the first 3 years of school. Many of the young
people in this study who experienced social rejection in these early
years deliberately underachieved for peer acceptance through much
of their school career. Some deliberately moderated their performance in the hope that it
would make them more acceptable to theirclass teachers. Ian Baker, who a month before his
sixth birthday wasassessed with the reading and comprehension skills of a
12-year-old,developed what he called his “camouflage vocabulary” in an attemptto blend in.
It mimicked, with disturbing fidelity, the vocabulary andsyntax of his 5-year-old
classmates.
Several of the nonaccelerands cannot recall a time in their lives
when camouflage has not been an automatic survival mechanism,
accepted as a painful but necessary part of living. By contrast, young
people in this study who were accelerated by 2 or more years believe
that they were now more appropriately placed in terms of their academic,
social, and emotional needs.
In both Australia and the United States, schools tend to delay
acceleration and ability grouping until the middle years of elementary
school. This policy is fundamentally flawed. It is in the early
years of school that we should be identifying exceptionally and profoundly
gifted children and developing programs of acceleration and
grouping to provide a more effective response to their accelerated
intellectual and emotional development.
The earlier exceptionally and profoundly gifted children are
placed in a setting that is deliberately structured to allow them access
to children at similar stages of cognitive and affective development,
the greater will be their capacity to form sound friendships in their
later childhood, adolescent, and adult years.
For Roshni, who entered university at 15 and won major prizes
in her first and third years, academic success still takes second place
to social acceptance:
I cannot even begin to imagine how desperate I would have
felt to be left with my age peers. The best way to describe
how I anticipate I would have felt is to say that if I hadn’t
accelerated I would have suffocated. . . . My entire life and
happiness revolve around my satisfaction in personal relationships.
That is why, as a child, the hostility of the other
children had such a devastating impact on me.
Alice Marlow, even after a grade advancement, found much of
her primary and secondary schooling unrewarding. It was “not done”
to speak of, or take visible pleasure in, academic success. She spent
much of her time conforming to the culture of the school, “talking
down,” and concealing her grades so that the other students would
not feel bad. A second acceleration gave her access to more challenging
work and a small group of academically gifted classmates. The
following year, in law school at university, she felt she had finally
come home.
There is such a sense of belonging. I didn’t have that in primary
or high school, but here it’s such a joyful interaction.
It’s not just being interested in the same things, it’s being passionate
about the same things. Everything I hoped to find is
here—intellectual and emotional growth—an ongoing sense
of discovery—it’s world-expanding.
As educators, our goal should be to expand, rather than constrict,
the academic and social worlds of gifted students, including
the most highly gifted. Radical acceleration can provide a structured
pathway to a developmentally appropriate placement.
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