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Keys
to Raising a Gifted Child
Love,
laugh, listen, and learn. Raising and nurturing a gifted
child can be an exciting yet daunting challenge.
·
Learn to be positive. Giftedness can be an
exciting challenge or a chore, depending on how you see
a child's characteristics. For example, persistence and
stubbornness are the same
trait.
· Understand
the way that your child's giftedness affects his or her
needs: Intellectual, social, emotional, and physical
needs. For example, ideas forged by eight-year-old minds
may be difficult to produce with five-year-old hands.
· Be
a knowledgeable advocate. The brighter the child is,
the greater is his or her emotional complexity and
potential vulnerability. You might have to educate the
educators.
· Read
aloud to your child. It is important that parents
read to their gifted child often, even if the child is
already capable of reading.
· Help
your child discover personal interests. Stimulation
and support of interests are vital to the development of
talents. Parents should expose their child to their own
interests and encourage the child to learn about a wide
variety of subjects, such as art, nature, music, and
sports, in addition to traditional academic subjects
such as math, reading, and science.
· Encourage
the support of extended family and friends. As an
infant, a gifted child can exhaust new parents because
he or she often sleeps less than other babies and
requires extra stimulation when awake. (It can be
helpful to have extended family in the home,
grandparents who live nearby, or close friends in the
neighborhood who can spend some time with the child so
the primary caretakers can get some rest and to give the
infant added -- or different -- stimulation.)
· Speak
and listen to your child with consideration and respect.
From the time he or she can talk, a gifted child is
constantly asking questions and will often challenge
authority. "Do it because I said so" doesn't
work. Generally, a gifted child will cooperate more with
parents who take the time to explain requests than with
more authoritarian parents.
· Teach
your child how to find information and resources in a
variety of ways. Gifted children need to know, to
learn, to solve, and to ponder. There will be times when
your child's expertise on a topic will be greater than
yours, and you will not be able to provide answers or
solutions.
· Be
a welcome person in your child's school or educational
environment. If educators know you first as a
willing volunteer, they will be more responsive when you
want something for your child.
· Become
involved in a local, state, or regional parent group.
Or join an email list. Parents of gifted children need
opportunities to share parenting experiences and problem
solving strategies with one another. And it takes the
persistence of large groups of parents to ensure that
provisions for gifted children are kept firmly in place.
· The
key to raising gifted children is to respect their
uniqueness, their opinions and ideas, and their dreams.
It can be painful for parents when their children feel
out of sync with others, but it is unwise to put too
much emphasis on the importance of fitting in; children
get enough of that message in the outside world. At
home, children need to know that they are appreciated
for being themselves.
· Love,
laugh, listen, and learn.
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