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    Joined: Mar 2009
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    For those of us that only have young children, and no concrete *proof* of GT ability -with testing being unfeasible at this age, you're primarily left with unqualified observation/instinct by default - there are very few sources of useful information, other than sites like this.

    I regularly follow this wonderful board not because I want to know if my children are GT (I guess I wouldn't be here if I didn't already think it), but to try and understand them better and to help make meaningful decisions regarding their future. This site also allows me to feel my family is 'normal', despite my intense children's far-from-typical behavior.

    That being said, I would like to weigh-in on the early speech/gross motor skills topic. My two children are both physically advanced for their respective ages (DS3 is currently perfecting a sequential running/dribbling/hoop shot with the basketball, and DD18mos can now ride a two-wheel bike with training wheels. DD spoke 2+ word sentences from 6mos and is now at 5+ word sentences. She can sing both words and melody for more songs than I can count (not just nursery rhymes either). DS was a later talker (around 2yrs) but now speaks in paragraphs with advanced vocabulary. These particular facts alone however, are not the reason that I believe my children are GT (although they are probably the biggest conversation starter's with strangers!). It's what DD and DS are talking about or trying to do, that is more telling, IMHO. The other key factor here is that across the board, the gap between their abilities and normal development milestones widens almost daily. I guess in relation to my two, I feel this is something like the 'all children even out in reading by 3rd grade'... It'll be interesting to know if what we have seen in these younger years correlates down the track. Maybe that's what you're wondering too, Faithhopelove19?


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    lol yes i suppose that was the reason for the question... really just wondering if it correlates with what they do later...

    as far as my other two i am often uncertain but you are right it is not just their earlyness that makes me think they could be gifted its just one of those things where you would have to know them to understand.....and because no one knows them as well as i do (im a SAHM) its often hard to explain short of giving a list of what they can do which while its an impressive list its not why i think gifted its part of it but not all of it

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    In hindsight... the thing that was most telling for us, was our DD7's intense curiosity.
    All kids are full of questions but, most kids only require a short answer to satisfy their curiosity.
    Our DD's questions only get deeper with answers, and it can take weeks for her curiosity to move to a new subject.
    I notice the same trend with my DS who just turned 3


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