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    Can Gifted Education Help Higher-Ability Boys from Disadvantaged Backgrounds?
    by David Card, Eric Chyn & Laura Giuliano
    NBER working paper
    December 2024

    Quote
    Abstract
    Boys are less likely than girls to enter college, a gap that is often attributed to a lack of non-cognitive skills such as motivation and self-discipline. We study how being classified as gifted – determined by having an IQ score of 116 or higher – affects college entry rates of disadvantaged children in a large urban school district. For boys with IQ’s around the cutoff, gifted identification raises the college entry rate by 25-30 percentage points – enough to catch up with girls in the same IQ range. In contrast, we find small effects for girls. Looking at course-taking and grade outcomes in middle and high school, we find large effects of gifted status for boys that close most of the gaps with girls, but no detectable effects on standardized tests scores of either gender. Overall, we interpret the evidence as demonstrating that gifted services raise the non-cognitive skills of boys conditional on their cognitive skills, leading to gains in educational attainment.


    "To see what is in front of one's nose needs a constant struggle." - George Orwell
    1 member likes this: indigo
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    I find the abstract fascinating. If I understand correctly, gifted identification... the gifted label... while not raising standardized test scores of a studied student population, appeared to have a positive impact on strengthening the students' non-cognitive skills such as motivation and self-discipline.

    This makes me curious about the content and modus operandi of the gifted program and/or services these students were exposed to. Motivation, self-discipline, and other life skills such as resilience and persistence are indeed valuable traits to develop.

    Thank you, Bostonian, for finding and posting this working paper, which definitely deserves some thought among the gifted community.


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