Unlocking Potential: Identifying and Serving Gifted Students from Low-Income Households


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Description

Winner of NAGC's 2021 Book of the Year Award

This edited book, written by authors with extensive experience in working with gifted students from low-income households, focuses on ways to translate the latest research and theory into evidence-supported practices that impact how schools identify and serve these students. Readers will:

  • Learn about evidence-supported identification systems, tools, and strategies for finding students from low-income households.
  • Discover curriculum models, resources, and instructional strategies found effective from projects focused on supporting these students.
  • Understand the important role that intra- and interpersonal skills, ethnicity/race, families, school systems, and communities play.
  • Consider the perceptions of gifted students who grew up in low-income households.
  • Learn how educators can use their experiences to strengthen current services.

Unlocking Potential is the go-to resource for an up-to-date overview of best practices in identification, curriculum, instruction, community support, and program design for gifted learners from low-income households.

Author: Tamra Stambaugh, Paula Olszewski-Kubilius
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 11/15/2020
Pages: 344
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.65lbs
Size: 9.90h x 7.00w x 1.00d
ISBN13: 9781646320806
ISBN10: 1646320808
BISAC Categories:
- Education | Rural
- Education | Multicultural Education
- Education | Special Education | Gifted

About the Author

Dr. Tamra Stambaugh is the Director of Programs for Talented Youth at Vanderbilt University. She is the coauthor (with Dr. Joyce VanTassel-Baska) of Comprehensive Curriculum for Gifted Learners, Overlooked Gems: A National Perspective on Low-Income Promising Students, and the Jacob's Ladder Reading Comprehension Program.

Paula Olszewski-Kubilius is currently the director of the Center for Talent Development at Northwestern University. She has more than 24 years of experience designing and conducting educational programs for learners of all ages including summer programs, weekend programs, distance learning programs, programs for underrepresented gifted students, as well as workshops for parents and teachers. She is active and has had leadership positions in national- and state-level advocacy organizations for gifted children. She was the recipient of the Early Scholar Award from the National Association of Gifted Children in 1987 and selected as the Esther Katz Rosen lecturer in 1997 by the American Psychological Foundation. She has conducted research and published more than 80 articles and book chapters on issues of talent development, particularly the effects of accelerated educational programs and the needs of special populations of gifted children She recently served as the editor of Gifted Child Quarterly and formerly was a coeditor of the Journal of Secondary Gifted Education. She has served on the editorial advisory board of the Journal for the Education of the Gifted, and Gifted Child International, and was a consulting editor for Roeper Review. She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy and currently is a member of the boards of the National Association for Gifted Children and the Illinois Association for Gifted Children.

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