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Negative attitudes toward gifted--an instinct to protect social fabric?

Negative attitudes toward intellectually gifted students are common. Yet, this

social hostility does not exist for athletically or artistically gifted

students, says an evolutionary psychology study in Gifted Child

Quarterly..

"It is deeply ironic that students who have the potential to learn most

easily and swiftly in school are often regarded by teachers with qualified

enthusiasm at best while, if the rhetoric of some teacher unions is

representative of the views of their members, gifted students can even be

regarded with open hostility. It seems reasonable to ask, why?," the researchers

say.

Deep roots
The root of these negative attitudes toward

academically gifted students may go deep, even to the beginnings of language,

the researchers write. The practice of athletic or musical gifts is seen as a

form of social compliance in that the talent results in the enjoyment of the

community, the authors write. High intellectual ability, however, may be seen as

a form of social noncompliance in that it mostly benefits the individual student

and may be seen as disruptive of the social fabric.

The researchers designed a study to test their hypothesis that negative

attitudes toward the intellectually gifted are rooted in fears that they have

the potential to affect, manipulate, exploit and disrupt social relationships.

From the perspective of evolutionary psychology, these negative attitudes toward

the intellectually gifted probably could be traced all the way back to the very

beginnings of language when those who had a language facility had the unfair

advantage of being very persuasive, they write.

"An individual who even seemed to show the potential to develop such powers

could be viewed as a threat to the group," they write. "If so, then it could be

in the group's self-interest to cut such a precocious tall poppy down to size."

To test their hypothesis about the reasons for the negative attitudes,

researchers asked 377 teachers in England, Scotland and Australia, who were

taking professional development courses in gifted education between Sept. 2003

and May 2005, to respond to an instrument that measured teachers' subconscious

feelings about gifted children.

The 20-item instrument had target statements that were derived mostly from

Clark's (1997) lists of characteristics of gifted children. (B. Clark, Growing

up Gifted, Prentice Hall). Some of the statements included:

  • Gifted students dominate discussions.

  • Gifted students have unusual interests.

  • Gifted students are disrespectful to authority.

  • Gifted students make friends easily.

  • Gifted students are perceived by others as elitist, or superior, or too

    critical.

Instead of the typical Likert-type scale (agree-disagree) responses,

researchers used a 5-dimensional semantic differential instrument. Participants'

judgments about the 20 statements were made on the following five dimensions:

good-bad, like-dislike, fair-unfair, strong-weak, and valuable-worthless. The

choices were presented in a random order.

The purpose of semantic differential scales is to measure the meanings people

attribute to concepts when they make judgments, the researchers write.

With an agree-disagree scale, many people tend to go to the center, the

researchers write, or to the extremes. Likert-type scales are usually so obvious

there also can be an acquiescence response bias.

Social aspects
Responses to the instrument revealed that

teachers harbored subconscious negative feelings toward academically gifted

students and were suspicious of their precocity, and that the negative feelings

focused on students' superior articulation and nonconformist socializing.

"The deep-rooted nature of such suspicion is reflected in the absence of the

effect of teaching experience on factor scores," the researchers write. "This in

turn suggests that the suspicion is not the exclusive province of teachers per

se, but might be a general population attribute."

The good news, say the authors, is that the mean scores on this instrument

shifted significantly with completion of a professional development program in

gifted education. Teachers who had completed a professional development program

in gifted education were significantly less wary of their gifted students than

teachers who were still at the beginning or only partway through such a program.

"This outcome is particularly pleasing as it seems to support an educational

solution to an educational problem--teachers' disaffection with the potential

antisocial applications of the intelligence of gifted students," they write.

One limitation to this study, as in any attitude judgment research, is that

participants are asked to make responses that do not take into account

individual differences of students. Another potential criticism of the study is

that the target statements about the gifted were stereotypical. The authors

write that they wanted stereotypical statements because many of the teachers

were as yet unfamiliar with the nuances of gifted behavior.

"Teachers' Negative Affect Toward Academically Gifted Students, An

Evolutionary Psychological Study, by John Geake and Miraca Gross, Gifted Child

Quarterly, Volume 52, Number 3, Summer 2008, pp. 217-231.

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