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Goodwin, Corin Barsily; Gustavson, Mika – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
Gifted children are children first, and they have educational and social-emotional needs that run all over the map. Anyone who knows gifted children is familiar with the sudden shifts within a child who might be doing high school level scientific study, handwriting at a third grade level, display the wit and wisdom of a middle aged adult, and…
Descriptors: Gifted, Home Schooling, Cognitive Style, Educational Practices
Merrill, Jen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
The author is the proud parent of The Most Complex Child on the Planet[TM]. This has been confirmed by numerous teachers, administrators, doctors, therapists, specialists, friends, family members, and random strangers on the street. She has accepted her son's complexity (mostly) and is trying to work with it instead of against it. Now she is…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Sons, Gifted, Parents as Teachers
Rivero, Lisa – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
Homeschooling parents worry a lot. And homeschooling parents of gifted children seem to worry even more than most. Parents who homeschool intense, smart, sensitive, and perfectionist children and teens are often themselves intense, smart, sensitive, and perfectionistic, even if they don't always think of themselves as gifted. One shouldn't be too…
Descriptors: Gifted, Home Schooling, Parent Attitudes, Psychological Patterns
Schroeder-Davis, Stephen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
In this article, the author shares his own observations and experiences as a veteran GT coordinator in a large school district that includes several charter schools and several families who have opted for home schooling. Specifically, he recounts several occasions when parents requested a hybrid educational model that combined home schooling with…
Descriptors: Gifted, Charter Schools, Home Schooling, Special Education Teachers
Wessling, Suki – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
When the author started homeschooling, she would listen jealously as other parents discussed curriculum for reading and math, two subjects that her daughter never needed any instruction in as a young child. She was eager to try out curriculum, but her visual spatial daughter was not quite ready for learning on paper. She found out that searching…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Curriculum Development, Adjustment (to Environment), Pacing
Eisele, Evelyn – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
The author's parents taught her that merely "adequate" is not sufficient. The author began homeschooling halfway through her 5th-grade year partly because of this philosophy. One reason why the author's parents chose homeschooling was because of her dedication to classical piano. The author and her parents agreed that she would probably be able to…
Descriptors: Public Schools, World Views, Gifted, Home Schooling
Rivero, Lisa – Understanding Our Gifted, 2004
Today's after-school programs and sports are often year-round activities, and children are pressured to focus on one activity to the exclusion of others. Homework for students who attend highly competitive high schools can take three to five hours per night. Not only schools, but the whole culture is different. People listen to music through…
Descriptors: Homework, Home Schooling, After School Programs, Student Attitudes
Rivero, Lisa – Understanding Our Gifted, 2003
This article offers the following advice for parents of gifted students who wish to home school: have patience with the children and with yourself; practice the arts of home schooling and parenting; and persist in the face of complexity. Parents are urged to be flexible in accommodating changing learning style preferences. (Contains 2 references.)…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Home Schooling, Parent Student Relationship
Morse, Karen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2001
This article discusses home schooling for gifted children and describes the most common teaching strategies or pedagogical approaches that home schoolers have successfully used, including: classical, lifestyle of learning, schooling at home, structured/mastery learning, unit studies, unschooling, worldview, and curriculum-based. The benefits of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Home Schooling
Silverman, Linda Kreger, Ed. – Understanding Our Gifted, 1993
The six issues of this newsletter have the following themes: (1) home schooling, (2) promising practices, (3) parent advocacy, (4) the young gifted child, (5) "being out of sync," and (6) philosophy of giftedness. Major articles include the following: "Homeschooling for Gifted Primary Students" (Patricia Linehan); "Learning to Fly: A Home…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Acceleration (Education), Child Advocacy, Child Rearing
Goodman, Laura, Ed. – Understanding Our Gifted, 1997
This document consists of the four quarterly issues of the journal "Understanding Our Gifted" published during 1997. Each issue of this journal generally has a single theme in the education of gifted and talented children around which all the articles are focused. The themes of these four issues are, respectively,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted