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    Joined: Aug 2010
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    Speaking for our DD8, who is HG, the most important decision we made for her was to place her in a classroom with a lot of other gifted children.

    For DD the priority has always been fitting in and feeling comfortable with who she is. We had no idea how miserable she was until the tail end of 2nd grade when she was finally able to express it. It wasn't the intellectual boredom, which was present but not her priority; it was wondering why her friends didn't laugh at her humor, or why they gave her blank stares when she said something she thought made perfect sense. She was thinking something was wrong with her and did not feel comfortable in her own skin.

    All that to say, we overlooked her social and emotional needs because we were focused on her intellectual potential. I thought the cure would be feeding her intellect, when finally a wise educational psychologist told us to get her around gifted children. And now we're thinking it is a two-birds-with-one-stone thing and she's going to start focusing on the intellectual side now that her heart feels right.

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    Very interesting point. My son has very recently started having behavior issues at his playschool. I was surprised that the teacher linked it to the fact that he is intellectually really far beyond the other three year olds. What struck a chord with me in your post was your mention of the kids not getting your daughter's jokes. My son as a surprisingly adult sense of humor, coming up with jokes and observations that are genuinely funny but definitely not something other 3-year-olds would laugh at.


    Also... previous comments about gifted schools being places where upper class kids who like to do homework excel (or something like that). Good observation. I could see that description fitting in - to some degree - with the private gifted school we visited. I really am not sure they could handle PG kids any better than a public school. PG kids are just so different in so many ways than kids that schools usually label as gifted.


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