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Title: A Counselors Perspective on Parenting Gifted Kids


1
A Counselors Perspective on Parenting Gifted Kids
  • Jean Peterson, Ph.D.
  • Purdue University
  • jeanp_at_purdue.edu

2
Where Im Coming From
  • 19 years in the classroom (English)
  • 5 years as HS program director (Gifted)
  • Parent of two (very different from each other)
    gifted kids
  • Several years clinical experience (including with
    gifted kids and their families)
  • 1300 small discussion groups related to
    social/emotional development of gifted kids
  • Research related to the burdens and
    vulnerabilities of capabilities (at risk?)
  • Research of under-studied gifted populations
    (underachieving, extremely high-achieving,
    traumatized, bullied/bullies, low-income,
    cultural minority, gay, developmentally
    stuck) What is the subjective experience of
    these phenomena?

3
Socially Emotionally . . .
  • Sensitivity (re developmental or family
    transitions, events, change, relationships,
    loss)
  • Overexcitabilities (Dabrowski/Piechowski)
  • Intensity
  • Stress
  • Denied, controlled emotions
  • Control of environment
  • Protection of Image
  • Fix yourself
  • Cant ask for help/Always ask for help
  • Bullyingas bully, victim, or bystander

4
Social Emotional, continued
  • Existential Concerns
  • Little Room to Rebel
  • Sense of differentness
  • Interpersonal Problems
  • Perfectionism
  • (re risk-taking, doinggtbeing, unreasonable
    standards, cant begin/end/enjoy,
    productgtprocess, hung up on mistakes, focused on
    right way, self-critical, critical others,
    need for control)
  • Educators and counselors pathologizing behavior
  • Parentified

5
Peterson Survey of Parents of Gifted Children
Adolescents
  • About what have you wished to consult someone
    regarding issues related to giftedness?
  • 1. Perfectionism 7. Tolerance of others
  • 2. Underachievement 8. Behavior problems
  • 3. Stress 9. Depression
  • 4. Boredom
  • 5. Sibling issues
  • 6. Problems with authority

6
Survey of Gifted Junior High Students (N45)
  • 1/3 had experienced depression
  • 1/3 had experienced suicidal ideation

7
Perfectionism Greenspon View
  • Perfectionism a relational issue (not good
    enough in eyes of others)
  • Perfectionists could achieve more flow states
    without it.
  • Perfectionists feel fundamentally defective and
    unacceptable.
  • Perfectionists often feel disappointed and
    discouraged.
  • Failure might be unfamiliar to perfectionists
    if theyre not challenged earlier.
  • Perfectionists dont take mistakes in stride,
    dont enjoy pursuit of excellence.
  • Perfectionists feel burdened (regardless of where
    it is channeled)by anxiety and hypervigilance.
  • Perfectionism can kill passion (for something
    of interest).
  • Perfectionism is fed by the typical world of
    gifted kids
  • School offers a chance to attempt perfection.
  • Many gifted kids homes may have pressure to
    perform.
  • Gifted kids may be in contexts where
    acceptability is based on doing well.
  • Both gifted and non-gifted kids can be
    perfectionistic.
  • Unreasonable goals can be a problem for
    non-perfectionistic people, too.

8
Informal Survey of Gifted Kids
  • 32 highly critical of others
  • 51 highly self-critical
  • 15 very hard to begin something
  • 29 very hard on self when make mistakes
  • 11 definitely dont play well in life
  • 18 dont enjoy doing a task, project at all
  • 32 feel very inferior to others, generally

9
Overexcitabilities
  • Heightened response to stimuli that do not
    affect other children similarly.
  • Profoundly gifted persons may have several of
    these.
  • Intellectual
  • Imaginational
  • Emotional
  • Psychomotor
  • Sensual

10
A Perspective on Dabrowkis Theory of Emotional
Development
  • Can help students understand their emotional
    sensitivity inability to fit in with their
    peers intensity concerns about morality,
    justice
  • The path to higher development is not an easy
    one. It is filled with conflict and struggle.
    But to pursue it increases the probability that
    society will be endowed with leaders with moral
    values, a superior perception of self, and
    empathy, concern, and compassion for others.

11
Dabrowski, continued
  • Intense experience can lead to depression, and
    much of the depression stems from the
    individuals inability to reconcile his or her
    emotional experience with expected norms. Gifted
    individuals often feel they should not have
    conflicts or negative feelings. They have been
    labeled too sensitive, too intense, too
    perfectionistic, and they have internalized the
    message that there is really something wrong with
    them.
  • (L. K. Silverman)

12
Positive Disintegration
  • . . . the disintegrating and reintegrating power
    of emotions influences personality development .
    . .
  • When individuals in crisis try to cope by
    applying previous learning to resolve distress
    from uncontrollable situations and discover that
    previous learning does not apply, some seek other
    solutions, which may lead first to disintegration
    and then to the possibility of advanced
    development. Not moving to this next level may
    mean psychoses or suicide. Moving ahead involves
    deliberately selecting higher values, developing
    responsibility for self and others and a strong
    sense of justice, and connecting to others with
    empathy, self-education, and self-correction.
  • (Mendaglio, 2008)

13
Negative Life Events
  • (94) Death in immediate or extended family
  • (77) Serious illness in immediate or extended
    family
  • (15) New or chronic illness self
  • (13) Change in family constellation
  • (10) Injury and/or surgery
  • (10) Death of a friend (adult or age peer)
  • (6) Car accident (driver, passenger)
  • (6) Moving to school for gifted students
    (grades 2-5)
  • (4) Incarceration of parent (3) or well-liked
    teacher (1)
  • (3) Family relocation (remained in city and in
    study)
  • (3) Mental-illness diagnosis self
  • (2) Family financial reversal
  • (2) Substance-abuse treatment driving under
    the influence
  • (1) Severe personality conflict with teacher
  • (1) Sexual abuse self as victim

14
Career Development, Career Concerns
  • Early interest, concerns, anxieties about careers
  • Early/premature foreclosure
  • Multipotentiality (loss/grief issue?)
  • Fit Interests, Values, Skills/Talents,
    Personality
  • Interests developing into a career
  • Being able to SEE a career
  • Field trips, one-day shadowing (of engineers,
    etc.)
  • Not needing to know NOW
  • Exposure to new areas during college, jobs,
    internships
  • Needing to select a major in college
  • Teaching as a career for gifted individuals
  • Underachievement vis รก vis career development

15
Anxieties about College
  • Knowing the jargon (e.g., major/minor, core
    course, advisor, bursar, Dean, Department,
    professorial ranks, adjunct, TA, registrar,
    residence hall, )
  • Eating alone, sharing a room, being ill, getting
    lost
  • How to become known
  • Loss of identity (the October syndrome)
  • Self-discipline (how parents can begin the
    transition)
  • Large/small city large/small university/college
  • Distance from home
  • Application essays
  • Protocols, accessibility to professors (related
    to recommendations later)

16
Cultural Values Gifted(Who should be
identified?)
  • Appreciating diversity here, too (parent
    modeling)
  • What standard is used in schools, programs?
  • Teacher culture, student culture, program culture
  • A study of 5 cultures related to gifted education
  • White, middle-class
  • African American
  • Latino
  • American Indian
  • Low-income White

17
Dominant-Culture Teachers as Gatekeepers
Preferences
  • Individual, competitive, conspicuous achievement
  • Organization, precision
  • Production (of a familiar variety)
  • Strong work ethic (of a familiar variety)
  • Eagerness to learn, high motivation (of a
    familiar variety)

18
Individual, Competitive, Conspicuous Achievement
  • Academic achievement
  • Hard-working, conscientious, productive, extra
    effort, going beyond
  • Competitive
  • Highly organized
  • Domain-specific strengths
  • perfectionthorough, detailed, precise
  • top, winning awards

19
Knowledge, Learning
  • Strong knowledge base
  • Memory
  • Higher-level thinking skills
  • Quickness
  • Eager learner
  • Highly motivated, challenge-seeking
  • Being interested (in the subject matter)

20
Social Skills
  • Good behavior
  • Being cooperativeteam player
  • Assertivenessshowing the talent
  • Verbal strengths
  • Sense of humor
  • Good personality
  • Being willing to help others, share ideas,
    volunteer
  • Ideas and opinions
  • A certain spark (A Bright Spot for Me)
  • Maturity
  • Great kid

21
Involvement
  • Involvement in activities, extra-curriculars
  • All-around strengths
  • Well-rounded

22
Themes in Teacher Language
  • Behavior
  • Verbal ability, articulateness, assertiveness
  • Family and socioeconomic status
  • Work ethic
  • Social skills
  • Who is likely not to be identified?

23
Twice-Exceptional Kids
  • High intelligence masks learning disability
  • Learning disability affects performance
  • (i.e., Missing Services at Both Ends of
    Spectrum)
  • Gifted and Physical Disability
  • Gifted and Emotional Disability
  • Missed diagnosis (for example, Aspergers,
    depression)
  • Misdiagnosis (of characteristics associated with
    giftedness)

24
Why Normal Developmental Transitions May Be
Difficult in High-functioning Families
  • Parental Anxieties
  • HypersensitivityParents and Children
  • Memories!
  • Parents Reliving Own Transitions
  • Old Issues
  • Control!
  • Cross-generational Modeling?
  • Catastrophizing!

25
Parental Anxieties at Significant Developmental
Junctures
  • Entering Schoolparental-control issues
    child-as-extension-of-parent issues
    perfectionism Am I doing enough?
  • Age 9-10less parental control peer-group
    influences catastrophic visions mirror images
    tendency to keep em busy, fears regarding
    doing enough?
  • Pubertytaking it personally, insecurely being
    needy, reliving own adolescence creating what
    is most feared?
  • When achievement really mattersno other topic
    of conversation doing valued more than being
  • Launchingleaving home focus on the marriage

26
Child Anxieties at Developmental Junctures
  • Control! Change! (and therefore loss! grief!)
  • Uncertainty! No map!
  • Unknown Territory (and little tolerance for
    ambiguity?)
  • Perfectionism (being used to being able to
    control)
  • Sexuality (troubling thoughts, past
    embarrassments, androgyny, no sense of
    commonality with others, no chance to articulate
    the concerns?)
  • Peer Relationships (new demands, concerns, peers
    gt adults, unfamiliar territory)
  • Future-Fear (afraid of asking dumb questions
    about college relocation perfectionism re
    direction, major, roommate, college, marriage
    leaving childhood behind others expectations
    managing the complexities of adulthood)
  • Fear for Parents, Parents Marriage, Family
    Safety
  • Internalization of Parents Concern Messages

27
Helping Them Become Anxious, Unbalanced . . .
  • Focusing only on achievement, performance
  • (Parents How did you DO todayon the test?)
  • Creating dependence, overfunctioning
  • Insisting on perfection
  • Demeaning the concept of play
  • Overstructuring their lives
  • Sending mixed, paradoxical parenting messages
  • Forgetting their age (teachers, parents, coaches)
  • (re social/emotional development)
  • Assuming that all undesirable behaviors are due
    to giftedness
  • Talking about products more than process

28
StrategiesAt Each Stage
  • Listen! Normalize the difficulties.
  • Pay attention to the marriage.
  • Pay attention to the self (what is going on?).
  • Practice talking!
  • Seek assistance, if necessary.
  • Promote discussion groups at schoolsocial/emotion
    al focus.
  • Focus on strengthssend message of confidence
    (Youll figure it out).
  • Reframe problems as a positive
  • It makes sense that you responded like that.
  • You were smart enough to talk to someone. Im
    glad you chose your counselor.
  • You had courage not to achieve. Thats probably
    difficult in our family.

29
Listening and Responding
  • Nonverbal communication
  • Reflecting feelings
  • Paraphrasing
  • Checking for accuracy
  • Summarizing
  • Open-ended questions
  • Poiseno matter what you hear!
  • Not focused on fixing
  • Respectful, nonjudgmental, nonevaluative
    attention

30
Practicing . . .
  • 1 Something that happened in the past week or
    two that was a little complicated
  • 2 Something that happened in the past year that
    can easily evoke strong feelings
  • 3 A situation that requires telling what
    happened in some sort of sequence.
  • 4 A parenting transition you have experienced

31
The Art of Listening
  • Nonverbals, posture, attitude
  • Eye contact (?), show respect (no matter what is
    said), head nods, full attention, no rush, wow,
    ooo, um-hmm
  • Reflect back the feeling
  • Sounds like you . . . That sounds awful I can
    feel how upset you are I can feel how
    disappointed you are It sounds as if it hurts
    bad Im listening I can only imagine how much
    it hurts.
  • Check for accuracy
  • Let me see if I have this right Theyre going
    to be leaving today? You were upset then, but not
    now? (Use their words A dirty look? Complicated?
    Upset?)
  • Repeat what they said, but in new words
  • So youve had a terrible week Your dad was
    upset, and you gave up trying to explain You got
    an F and you
  • Ask for more
  • You said threat. What did you mean, exactly?
    I dont understand. What else happened? What do
    you mean? Is there anyone else youre worried
    about?

32
Well-Functioning Parents . . .
  • Dont organize family around gifted label
  • Expect their children to be involved in life
  • Are eager to learn about the potentially
    handicapping gifted conditionand apply their
    learning to their own lives
  • Become informed consumers of educational
    services
  • Focus on complementing the school program, not
    supplanting it
  • Nurture talent development in all of their
    children
  • Do not make the gifted child the focal point of
    the family
  • Move beyond the overpowering sense of
    responsibility so that family interaction is not
    affected
  • Dont make one parent peripheral regarding
    achievement or discipline
  • Dont put pressure for excessive performance on
    themselves or their children
  • Do not make the child a problem to mask their
    own problems

33
Suggestions for Parents of Highly Able
Children/Adolescents
  • Model a good level of assertiveness. Know where
    you begin and where you end. Be clear about
    what is their responsibility and what is yours.
    That will help them to take care of themselves
    when you are not available.
  • Beware of overfunctioning. Let them make
    mistakes, fail, create their own style, arrange
    their own room, learn to problem-solve. These are
    important, educational experiences. You will be
    contributing to their resilience and
    self-confidence.
  • Know that it is normal for them to be angry with
    you at times, especially during adolescence. It
    helps them become separatebut connected
    eventually.
  • Model respect for others, other kinds of
    intelligence, other views.
  • Model support for the system. Help them to
    understand the system. Teach them how to advocate
    for themselves. Be wise advocates when you feel
    the need to intercede.
  • Encourage them to be selfish regarding the
    system. They need to have it work for them. You
    had to learn how to deal with your world, and
    they also can use their intelligence to figure
    out how to deal with theirs.
  • Model clear expression of feelings. They need to
    know that feelings dont have to be feared,
    denied, or displaced.
  • Help them know that their being loved doesnt
    depend on their performance or achievement.
    Assure them with your actions that your love is
    unconditional.
  • Be a parent, but also a human beingimperfect,
    vulnerable, sometimes insecure, sometimes strong,
    sometimes weak. They need permission to be human
    as well.
  • Value them as sons and daughters, not just as
    fulfillers-of-dreams or as central to your
    self-esteem. Value them for being, not just
    doing. Have enough of a life not to be
    dependent on, or to overvalue, their
    accomplishment.
  • Support effort. Give extended, not terminal,
    feedback.
  • Encourage activities that arent graded. Beware
    of overscheduling. Help them learn to conquer
    boredom themselves.
  • Model play. Model balance. Model appropriate
    risk-takingi.e., in areas where you are not sure
    you can be excellent.
  • Model kindness to yourself when you make
    mistakes.
  • Be a parent-friend, not a peer-friend. Above all,
    be a parent. Let them be kids.
  • Encourage them to talk with someone when they
    feel they cant talk with you.
  • Model good copingwith stress, challenge,
    competition, mountains. You are an important
    teacher of coping skills.
  • Take note of your negative, critical messages.
    They are heard and have impact.

34
More Suggestions for Parents
  • Networkingfinding kindred spirits
  • Family Tempomonitor it
  • Family Stabilityrituals, sense of place, sense
    of safety
  • Family Hierarchyparents and children in
    appropriate positions
  • Parental Availability
  • Listeningnot rushing in to fix, asking
    open-ended questions, reflecting back the
    feelings
  • Parental Modelingof coping
  • Focusing on the Marriage communication, modeling
    of relationship
  • Building Resiliencelet them learn to cope
  • Achievementmake it theirs!
  • Family Counseling
  • Emotional Hypersensitivity reframe it as a
    positive
  • Cross-generational Anxiety
  • Gifted Children, Gifted Parents affirm your own
    strengths!
  • Resilient Children, Resilient Parents
  • Complexityembrace it!

35
Recommended Books
  • The Essential Guide to Talking with Gifted Teens
    (Free Spirit, 2008) (Peterson)
  • Dabrowskis Theory of Positive Disintegration
    (Great Potential Press, 2008) (Mendaglio)
  • Misdiagnosis and Dual Diagnosis of Gifted
    Children and Adults
  • (Great Potential Press, 2005)
  • (Webb et al.)
  • Models of Counseling Gifted Children,
    Adolescents, and Young Adults (Prufrock Press,
    2007)
  • (Mendaglio Peterson)
  • Living with Intensity (Great Potential
    Press, 2009) (Daniels Piechowski)
  • Mellow Out, They Say. If I Only Could
    (Yunasa Books, Madison, WI, 2006)
    (Piechowski)

36
Great Potential Press Free Spirit Publishing
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