A Usenet persona calling itself frtzw906 wrote:
KMAN picks up something I missed. Thanks:
As to the other daughter, being gifted, she is unlikely to have as many
problems with socialization
Are you nuts? That's one of the groups that has the most problems with
socialization! Worse than software engineers! (Although sometimes one in the
same).
It's not the kids who have problems, it's the parents and schools which
create problems.
=========================
Exactly! As I mentioned, one of my daughters fits into the gifted
category. One of the most heart-wrenching experiences for me (I can't
even imagine how it must have been for her!) was picking her up from
school with a couple hundred kids playing on the playground and she,
always, by herself with no friends. High school was a relief. University
has been a godsend for her.
====================
This is why it's imperative that children be carefully socialized very
early, beginning when they are babies and toddlers, so that no matter how
bright they are, they are still well able to communicate and interact with
their peers. The problem with "gifted" children tends to be that their
parents, in their zeal to advance their child's intellect, unconsciously
isolate their gifted children from their peers, usually by focusing on
academics to the exclusion of socialization.
Kids simply do not grow up to be socially isolated all by themselves, it
takes parental complicity.
and will experience socialization at her new
school as well, and will receive a better education. Keeping her in public
school would be unfair to her, particularly so if its done *because* she has
a disabled sister.
Explain again.
The child who is gifted is better off in a specialized environment with
other people who are gifted, but the child who has a disability is not
better off in a specialized environment with other people who are disabled.
Why?
=================
Excellent question. Gifted minds need to know.
===============================
Because gifted students need specialized teaching and stimulation to fully
realize their *intellectual* potential. If they are unchallenged by ordinary
educational curricula, they become bored and often disruptive and their
intellect suffers. At the same time, gifted children also need socialization
time with "ordinary" children, so that they can also learn how to come to
grips with their intellect and learn how to integrate into a society that
may try to exclude them out of jealousy or merely because they are the
"green monkey." Gifted children must learn how to put on social camouflage
so that they can associate successfully with those who may not be as
intellectually advanced. But these lessons are much easier for gifted
students to learn, in part because of their intellect, but also because they
can learn to "hide" their intellect when necessary. It's not like being in a
motorized wheelchair or having some physical deformity.
Disabled children also need specialized instruction to help compensate for
their disabilities, but most of all they need socialization with others to
learn the skills of living in the world that they cannot receive in special,
disabled-only classes. In such classes, what socialization they learn is how
to interact socially with other disabled children, not with everybody else.
This leaves them with a deficit that can cripple them for life, not just
physically or mentally, but socially. It leads to feelings of exclusion and
isolation because they never have the opportunity to meet and make friends
with non-disabled children.
Hiding the disabled away is also harmful to non-disabled children. It only
exacerbates the "green monkey" syndrome and makes it much harder for
non-disabled children to accept those who are different. It is to everyone's
benefit that children be required to associate with and create relationships
with disabled children as early as possible. The earlier the better, before
prejudices, bigotry and bias rear their ugly heads.
--
Regards,
Scott Weiser
"I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on
for all children friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people
WORLDWIDE!" TM
© 2005 Scott Weiser
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