Webb, N. & Dietrich, A.
The Communicator
California Association for the Gifted
36(3&4)
2005
In this article Nadia Webb and Antara Dietrich discuss the challenges in being twice-exceptional; children being defined by their gifts or their deficits, but not both.
A neuropsychologist is not the first professional a family consults. I still
spend time correcting people when they ask if I am a “Nurse/Psychologist.”
Neuropsychologists work with neurologically-based behavior concerns such as
problems with inattention, memory, planning, judgment, emotional regulation, and
the like. Disorders of cognition and emotion are intertwined with neurobiology.
Sometimes problems are acquired through an illness or injury; sometimes they are
the expression of a genetic vulnerability. The gifted are not immune, although
they may present a more complicated picture.
Mind and brain are inseparable in sickness and in health. The nervous system
responds and adapts to the demands we place on it. Every skill we learn and
every memory we form lasts because of changes in the brain; it is stored as a
chemical and electrical trace. A whole child approach to the twice-exceptional
child should include a child’s social context (such as family, school, and
friendships); it will also include mental health and neurobiological wellbeing.
Neuropsychologists tend to see a wider range of issues, and the profession is
less perplexed by the idea the great ability and inability can sit side-by-side.
It is routine, and very few neuropsychologists doubt the idea of twice
exceptionality. We see physicians, artists, judges, and professors who have
suffered small strokes or brain injuries from low impact automobile accidents.
We see brilliance and deficits in combination as our profession. A gifted child
with an attention deficit, dyslexia or an auditory processing problem is another
variant. Not only do we find it plausible that a child can be twice exceptional,
we find it logical. This is not a common perspective; despite thirty-plus years
of documentation that gifted children can be learning disabled or otherwise
neurologically compromised (Baum and Owen, 1988; Fox, Brody, and Tobin, 1983;
Whitmore, 1980). One of the greatest difficulties in working with
twice-exceptional children is helping school personnel move beyond the “One
Label per Customer” model. Because of this mode of thinking, children tend to be
defined by their gifts or their deficits, but not both. Once one label has been
applied to a child, the quest for answers ends. The child identified as gifted
receives little support even when learning disabilities are identified. The
child identified as learning disabled is given remedial services, but rarely
challenged or offered acceleration. In fact, teachers’ usually lower standards
for children identified as learning disabled, even when they are intellectually
advanced (Richey & Ysseldyke, 1983).
Often the twice-exceptional child is identified as neither because an inferior
mediocre performance in a bright child can seem “average.” They tend to drift
through classes underachieving, but blending in. Their difficulties remain
unaddressed and their potential undeveloped. They receive nothing. However,
because they get by, the resources go elsewhere. The cumulative effect is slower
academic gains and falling further behind in expressing their potential.
Being gifted may allow you to compensate more gracefully, but it doesn’t buffer
us from the neurological vagaries of life. We tend to frame the question of the
twice-exceptional backwards, which contributes to our collective myopia. Instead
of asking why gifted children should have learning disabilities, we should be
asking, “Why shouldn’t they?” Giftedness provides no immunity against genetic
vulnerabilities or injuries. We are all susceptible to tiny chromosomal variants
and genetic repeats. Intellectual ability doesn’t protect from cancer, diabetes
or toxin exposure, nor does it cushion impact in a car accident. Gifted children
are not immune from any disorder. Michael Pyryt (2005), suggests it would be
reasonable to consider that gifted children would have at least the same
incidence of these disorders as would children in general, unless we find good
evidence to the contrary.
Anyone who has seen a brilliant colleague recover from a small stroke or
concussion has seen deficits and brilliance co-exist. Newton suffered from
mercury poisoning in 1677 and in 1692 as a consequence of his scientific
experimentation. Colleagues and friends noted progressive cognitive decline and
psychotic thinking after each episode – with only partial recovery (Klawans,
1990). Only Newton’s research on optics predated his first exposure. Although
impaired, he went on to reckon the movement of the planets, provide a foundation
for physics and the understanding of gravity, and independently derive calculus.
Newton himself observed that he lacked his “former consistency of mind.”
We are only marginally comfortable with the idea that the psyche dwells within
an internal organ. What we see is shaped by what we know, and we are blindest to
the disabilities that do not fit our preconceptions. Most of us have a narrow
perspective on the range of neurological “faults” in the wiring. For example,
few of us know that learning disabilities and psychiatric disorders can be
acquired. Learning about the twice-exceptional is often the unlearning of
suppositions. A gifted mind is housed in a delicate structure that has the
consistency of Jell-O. The long cables connecting one neuron to another have the
texture of wet spaghetti. A car accident at seven miles per hour can send this
soft mass careening around in the skull. The soft spaghetti-like strands are
pulled, twisted, and compressed – shearing and damaging many of them in the
process. The gelatinous brain slides and pivots across the knifelike ridges that
line basin of the skull, often bruising against the hard surface of the skull as
it ricochets.
As a neuropsychologist, I know that I am one blow away from being a janitor with
three advanced degrees. We can protect our child’s gifts by requiring sports
helmets and teaching that seat belts are not optional. We can also acknowledge
that high fevers, anoxia from asthma, mild head injuries, seizures, and the like
may have surprisingly significant consequences. The brain can have precisely
located skills as well as more complex systems. Recently, researchers found
neurons in the visual area of the cortex that fire only to pictures of Jennifer
Anniston (Quiroga, Reddy, Kreiman, Koch, & Fried, 2005). While the loss of a
Jennifer Anniston neuron might not be a complete tragedy, the idea that some of
our skills hang by such a fragile tether is justifiably unnerving.
It does not make it easier to identify learning disabilities and similar
neurologically-based issues when they arrive in a variety of strange
permutations. When someone says they have dyslexia, the correct response should
be “which one?” There are nine identified subtypes of dyslexia, as well as five
identified kinds of attention problems, each of which responds best to a
different intervention. These subtypes have been identified in a normal
population, on and for whom the tests were developed. Gifted children can be
even more challenging to identify because their coping strategies can help or
hinder identification.
We are blind to the disabilities we are unfamiliar with or those we think that
we understand. Preconceptions shape what we observe. For example, we have no
difficulty imagining a brilliant child with a speech impediment but we struggle
to imagine a brilliant child with a reading impediment. Listening involves
hearing and blending sounds into words; speaking involves making and blended
sounds into words. Reading is correctly perceiving and sequencing visual marks
that stand in for sounds that can be blended into words. Reading is the more
complicated task.
Identifying the problem
Given all of this, the challenge is how to provide a practical, whole-person
understanding. Most twice-exceptional children would respond well to minor
accommodations and a better understanding of their relative strengths and
weaknesses. Ironically, the assessment process itself can sometimes hinder
understanding a child because it is usually superficial. It is based on limited
time, limited resources, and limited insurance reimbursement rather than the
actual requirements needed to make the diagnosis.
Attention Deficit Disorder
Attention Deficit Disorders are the “poster children” for the problem of
misidentification and misdiagnosis. Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are the most commonly diagnosed
childhood disorders; it is rare that a child comes through my door who does not
have someone championing the diagnosis. ADD is supposed to be a “diagnosis of
exclusion,” meaning physicians and psychologists are supposed to rule out every
other disorder or problem that might disrupt attention before making the
diagnosis. Yet most children are given the diagnosis after a 15-minute
appointment with the pediatrician and a behavior rating scale. Inattention is
easily disrupted by any number of other core problems. It is difficult to attend
when a child is depressed, anxious, fatigued, under-challenged, learning
disabled, hearing or vision impaired, preoccupied with problems at home, head
injured, madly in love, hungry, ill, or otherwise compromised. There is only one
mention of gifted in the entire Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV TR),
the book used to codify and guide the diagnostic process. The listing is under
the ADD section and specifically mentions assessing the fit between a child of
high ability and an under-challenging classroom. Children who have attention
problem in one setting or with one teacher have a problem of fit, not a Ritalin
deficiency.
A diagnosis should help drive good treatment decisions and should be part of a
whole-child perspective. Often, because of the “one label per customer”
thinking, the inquiry often stops once a child is identified with a disorder.
However, children are complex little people. Forty percent of children correctly
identified as having ADD also have learning disabilities. Even more of them have
problems with conduct, oppositional behavior and depression. A correct diagnosis
is not a solution or a treatment; it is a start.
Understanding Behaviors
Parents bring children to be assessed, not disorders. Gifted children, being
their own quirky selves, tend to present in any manner by the classic
presentation of anything. They are complicated little people, usually being
cared for by thoughtful, intelligent parents. These parents have usually spoken
with teachers, friends, pediatricians, and relatives long before the come to see
me. Yet the complexity of the gifted children often flummoxes parents as well as
professionals. Often the starting point for understanding a child’s difficulties
begins something like this:
“We were asked to come in for a parent teacher conference. Our son’s teacher
said his book report was awful. He did half the required number of pages.
What he handed in was chaotic and disorganized, and he didn’t seem to care
about doing it. The school counselor suggested he might be ADD because he
just doesn’t seem to focus when he is asked to do in-class assignments. He
doesn’t do them, does them badly, or just makes up his own assignment and
does that instead. Getting him to do homework is a struggle. Do you think he
has ADD? Or is he in the wrong place in a GT program? Are we asking too much
from him or does he need a kick in the rear?”
Although it is a deviation back to my roots as a family therapist, parents tend
to come in with a difference in opinion. Usually the father is the one who
thinks he needs to buck up and the mother thinks he would do better with more
support. Both parents are usually bright, dedicated parents who have read
several advice books and talked to several professionals before walking through
my door. When they walk in, they bring conflicting advise and opinions, and
often several possible diagnoses (formal and informal.) Inevitably someone
thinks he has ADD. But the range of problems that could explain this child’s
difficulties would fill a shopping list.
Emotional Health
As with the issue of misdiagnosis, there are no precise statistics on the number
of children who are gifted and carry a psychological diagnosis, even though some
advocates for gifted children (e.g., Boodoo, Bradley, Frontera, Pitts & Wright,
1989; Coleman & Gallagher, 1992; Tallent-Runnels & Sigler, 1995) have estimated
that between 4.5% (Davis & Rimm, 1994) and 20% (Minner, 1990) of gifted students
may suffer mental health problems. Depression and anxiety can dramatically
undermine cognitive performance on standardized IQ tests; they also disrupt
motivation, focus, and creativity. In children, depression can present as
irritability, which often alienating those who care most.
Language
Children can have a wide range of disorders, including problems in understanding
and using expressive language or problems with written expression (the
articulate child who becomes plodding and tongue-tied when asked to write the
same ideas). Some wrestle with reading, struggling to grasp the relationship
between sounds and symbols or tracking and sequencing the information in the
line of text. Twenty-five to fifty percent of these children have a dyslexic
parent (DSM-IV TR). A parent may watch his daughter struggle with the same
problems that he did in school, which often evokes painful memories and
resentment that can color interactions with teachers and administrators. Most
children with dyslexia also have broader language problems, which may not be
identified once the label “dyslexia” has been applied.
Other children have “prosody” problems: they seem to have the words but not the
music of a conversation. Tone of voice and nuances of body language are lost on
them. Imagine being the teenager who misses all the cues that it is time to go.
His friend looks at his watch and says, “It’s been great talking to you.” He
stands up and walks towards the door. All of this is opaque, until the friend
finally becomes exasperated and says, “You really need to go!” This child lives
in a world where others seem clumsy, abrupt and perplexing. Often this kind of
problem is associated with Autistic Spectrum Disorders or Non-Verbal Learning
Disabilities, but it is not unique to them. Prosody problems can stand alone.
Auditory Processing
Central Auditory Processing Deficits (CAPD) have become a popular concern in the
gifted community, but few people understand the definition or how it is distinct
from a hearing loss. CAPD is a listening problem that is not measured by the
hearing test at school. Most of us remember trooping onto the school bus with
the little black headphones. We raised our hands when we heard the tone. The
test did not include trying to pick out one conversation against ambient noise
or competing conversations, or following along despite a neighbor’s heavy
accent. Children with CAPD can seem like they have attention problems because
they eventually fatigue and tune out. As a useful analogy, remember the last
time you attended the long, loud company party. Eventually, you may have found
yourself nodding politely and making appropriate “hmm” and “um” noises, while
glazing over. Children with auditory processing problems have the exact same
difficulties as part of their daily life; they spend their days trying to screen
out conversations at normal volumes that most of us can simply ignore without
effort. These children are, experientially, trying to going to school at a
cocktail party. It results in all of the same fatigue, disinterest and avoidance
that happens to adults in that setting, but eight-year-olds handle the problem
with the usual grace and social skill of eight-year-olds.
Learning and Memory
Children with learning or memory problems may have superb auditory recall and
poor recall of visual information (or visa versa). It is helpful to know which
channels of communication are strengths and to use these when the goal is
learning content. Basic questions that an assessment can illuminate include:
- Does repetition help?
- Is recall accurate or distorted?
- Is recognition memory intact?
- Does this child group information meaningfully or try to learn it in
random fashion?
- Is short-term or long-term recall compromised?
- Do cues help or do they make no difference?
Attention
The average gifted child enters the classroom knowing 2/3 of the material that
will be taught in the coming year. Few seven year olds use their free time
constructively when they are bored. This is easily misunderstood as a behavior
or attention problem, when it is a problem of poor academic fit. Inattention is
a problem if it interferes with a child’s ability to interact with his peers,
learn, and demonstrate what he knows. Inattention can include problems with:
simple focus, sustaining over time, sustaining attention under distraction,
shifting attention between tasks, or allocating attention wisely. Often children
are paying attention--they just are not pay attention to what you want them to.
Jeremy is attentively drilling a hole in the top of his desk with a pencil.
Elaine is mentally refining her imaginary world, and is currently tinkering with
its political structure. Children with a correct diagnosis of an Attention
Deficit Disorder tend to have higher rates of specific co-occurring conditions,
such as learning disabilities, oppositional behavior, and even a pattern of
disregard for the rights of others.
Executive Functioning
Executive functioning or complex attention includes: planning, judgment,
delaying gratification, self-monitoring, and impulse control. All children tend
to lack wisdom, but some seem to have remarkably bad judgment. They become a
problem for others because they careen along following each whim without holding
the larger perspective in mind. They are often unaware of the mayhem they leave
behind them, although the adults around them are not. The problem with bad
judgment is that you have bad judgment. However, this so-called “bad judgment”
is often driven by a compromised neurological system. Most children with ADD
will also have problems with executive functioning, although it is often not
addressed as a specific problem. It is also a particularly common consequence of
car accidents, particularly those in which the child or teenager is unbelted.
These accidents can be relatively minor while causing significant harm.
Sensory and Motor
Can the fingers do what the mind can imagine? Bright minds are often housed in
the bodies of six-year-olds. What they can conceive of has to be executed by
chubby little six-year-old fingers, with limited success and much frustration.
For children with fine motor delays or poor dexterity, the frustration is even
more pronounced. Imagine being asked to write for a day with your non-dominant
hand. Your memos and reports would probably start getting shorter along with
your patience. When the going is slow and laborious to write, book reports do
not get done. A colleague told me about one of his gifted clients who spent
five-minutes looking at a picture of a baby bird standing next to a broken
eggshell. He had been asked to write a sentence. When asked about the delay, he
explained that he was trying to figure out how to shorten the sentence. He came
up with, “It hatched.” If there was a way to shorten or avoid a drawing, craft
project, diorama or written assignment, he could come up with it, brilliantly.
Children with head injuries or neurological issues may have more esoteric
problems. For example, children with “apraxia” may be unable to mimic using a
hammer or a toothbrush although they could use each object correctly. The
connection between the motor pattern and the idea has been severed. The brain is
remarkable in the specific and narrow forms of difficulty injuries can produce.
Social Concerns
While most gifted children are well adjusted, academically misplaced or isolated
gifted children are at greater risk for depression, anxiety and other mental
health concerns. Students scoring in highest IQ ranges may experience greater
adjustment difficulties (Terman, 1959), possibly because their extreme abilities
contribute to their isolation and worsen the fit with their environment. For
instance, classmates may label them as the “geek” or they might find themselves
unable to interact with their peers. Similarly, the twice-exceptional child is
more likely to be misplaced and isolated from peers. This separateness is one of
the reasons that the gifted are prone to feeling dissatisfied with their
accomplishments and ultimately abandon their abilities (Buescher, 1985).
Gifted students often misunderstand what their giftedness means. This
misconception can lead to feelings of sadness, depression, and to the exhibition
of self-defeating behaviors (Kaplan, 1983). Perfectionism in gifted students may
cause them to feel that none of their efforts are adequate (Delisle, 1990). If
you can never perform to your standard, then what is the point in trying? Again,
back to the six-year-old attempting to translate to paper the image in their
mind. The perfectionist six-year-old rates himself a “failure” again and again
in his effort to draw what he see so clearly. Soon frustration sets in, leading
to depression, which in turn feeds the lack of trying. The less well-adjusted
gifted students avoid growth opportunities including risking failure, setting
standards for their work, and setting or meeting goals (Jenkins-Friedman &
Murphy, 1988).
Intervening: Why we fail
Understanding the problem is a basic step toward designing an intervention, yet
we often fail at the second step. An Independent Educational Plan (IEP) tends to
be a document of flaws, problems, and failures. A child sits in a room
surrounded by his parents, teachers, guidance counselor and principal reviewing
all of the things he is doing badly. Goals are often cryptic, although precise
(“Will demonstrate on-task behavior 80% of the time.”) Few of us would be
enthused participants in such a process, particularly when it rarely includes
any mentions of strengths, abilities, charm, talent, quirks, and good points. It
is a group discussion about Jeremy’s failings in elaborate, painful and specific
detail.
Most teachers automatically reduce their expectations of kids labeled learning
disabled, which can compound the initial deficit with a setting that fails to
ask them to perform to their own capabilities. But what Salmaan requires for
achievement is motivation (Nickerson, 1999). He needs to be employed in a long,
effortful apprenticeship where he is allowed to practice, develop, experiment,
learn and practice some more (Simonton, 1994). Yet, this practice should be
encouraged not with the mindset of perfection, but with a willingness to risk
doing badly in the service of learning. Effective support focuses on effort,
learning processes, and strategies. In the end, it matters most that we find out
what we can do, that we find those who share our passions and affinities, and
that we learn to put the development of character and talent above our fear of
looking foolish. That is a lesson we can learn in childhood, and relearn in
adulthood.
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