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International perspectives and trends in research on giftedness and talent development.

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Chapter 2

International Perspectives
and Trends in Research
on Giftedness and Talent
Development

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Heidrun Stoeger, Daniel Patrick Balestrini, and Albert Ziegler

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Before this chapter can focus on international per- with achievements (e.g., Tannenbaum, 1986;

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spectives and trends in research on giftedness and but cf. also Gagné, 2005). In this chapter we will

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talent development, we need to clarify the meaning use the terms giftedness and talent as conceptu-

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of central key terms. Neither common usage nor ally overlapping terms (e.g., Ericsson, Roring, &

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scientific parlance offer generally accepted defini- Nandagopal, 2007).
tions of giftedness and talent (cf. Carman, 2013). Another fundamental problem of most defini-

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Most definitions fit roughly into one of four catego- tional approaches is their propensity to assume
ries: psychometric definitions, performance defini- that gifts and talents are personality traits. This has
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tions, labeling definitions, and specific giftedness/ received a considerable amount of critical attention
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talent definitions. According to psychometric defi- (e.g., Barab & Plucker, 2002; Dai, 2009; Ziegler,
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nitions, the terms apply to individuals who score 2005; Ziegler & Heller, 2000). A Delphic defini-
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well in psychometric tests (e.g., tests of intelligence tion avoids this problem by basing definitions of
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or creativity). Performance definitions describe giftedness and talent on expert opinions about the
those individuals as gifted or talented who dem- probability of future learning and achievement
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onstrate high achievements, for instance the best development of a person (Ziegler, 2008). Accord-
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pupil in a certain class or a school valedictorian. ing to this probability-based approach, talented
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According to labeling definitions, gifts/talents are persons are individuals who may one day achieve
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socially accorded, usually by an expert. In the case domain-specific excellence. Gifted persons are indi-
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of specific giftedness/talent definitions, strengths viduals who will probably one day achieve domain-
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in a particular domain (e.g., music, mathematics, specific excellence. Experts are those individuals
endurance running) qualify a person as gifted or who already have achieved excellence in a specific
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talented. domain.
The lack of uniform distinctions between the Theoretical models and conceptions of giftedness
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terms giftedness and talent is as problematic as are similarly heterogeneous (Dai, 2009; Davidson,
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the sheer variety of definitions that can be found 2009; Sternberg & Davidson, 2005). The fuzzi-
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in the literature. There is no generally accepted ness of giftedness conceptions also shows up in the
understanding of the difference between the two. research on gifted identification and education
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Although some researchers use both terms syn- (Carman, 2013; Ziegler & Raul, 2000). For this
onymously (e.g., Csikszentmihalyi & Robinson, reason, we will first discuss trends and cultural dif-
1986), others seek clear distinctions. Some ferences in conceptions of giftedness. We will then
researchers view talent as a hyponym of gifted- review recent trends in international research on
ness (e.g., Haensly, Reynolds, & Nash, 1986); gifted identification and on types of gifted education
others equate talent with potential and giftedness and their effectiveness.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0000038-002
APA Handbook of Giftedness and Talent, S. I. Pfeiffer (Editor-in-Chief)
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Stoeger, Balestrini, and Ziegler

Recent Trends in Conceptions achievement, or learning behavior to include addi-


of Giftedness and Talent tional dimensions. In many cases, these additional
Development dimensions involve other personality traits such as
creativity or motivation and in some cases contex-
For a long time now, many giftedness researchers tual factors. The fundamental assumption underly-
have taken monocausal approaches to giftedness, ing such conceptual extensions is that achievement
equating it with high intelligence. Although excellence can be exhibited in various forms and
Terman’s (e.g., Terman & Oden, 1947) longitudinal that it is the result of bundles of causal factors.

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study is a well-known early example, the practice The multidimensional models fail to specify the

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continues into this century (e.g., Deary, 2006; Rost, interdependencies among considered factors and

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2009). Since the early 20th century, researchers have moderators, however. This is where systemic theo-

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investigated whether individuals with an unusually ries of giftedness come into play (cf. Csikszentmih-

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high IQ (most often defined as at least two standard alyi, 1998; Jeltova & Grigorenko, 2005; Ziegler &

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deviations above the mean score) went on to excep- Phillipson, 2012). These theories consider interac-

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tional achievements. Researchers failed, however, to tions between various individual factors and their

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establish an unambiguous link between IQ and out-

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compatibility, as well as interactions between sets

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comes such as exceptional career success or domain- of individual and contextual factors and their com-

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specific excellence. Instead, studies revealed that patibility. Attempts at clarifying these relationships

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high IQ and various contextual variables are con- increase the complexity of earlier multidimensional

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founded. Holahan, Sears, and Cronbach (1995), for conceptions of giftedness. Indeed, in systemic mod-
instance, showed that the career paths of a randomly
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els, giftedness is no longer situated in the individual.
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selected sample of individuals, who were comparable It exists only in the system of the individual and the
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to Terman’s original study participants only in terms environment.


of socioeconomic status, were just as successful as By considering such interactions, systemic gift-
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Terman’s participants (independent of their IQ). edness theories—as well as some multidimensional
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Such findings compelled researchers to rethink giftedness models—reflect another change, a greater
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their scientific conceptions of giftedness with the awareness of context (cf. Plucker & Barab, 2005;
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aim of more accurately capturing reality. Resulting Stoeger & Gruber, 2014). In multidimensional mod-
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changes included (a) an increase in the complexity els, however, person and context are crucially seen
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of giftedness conceptions, (b) a more thorough con- as independent variables rather than as an integrated
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sideration of contextual factors, (c) a stronger orien- system (Snow, 1992). Theoretical and empirical
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tation toward processes and actions, and (d) a shift publications have begun to appear that try to sys-
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from a deficit to a resource orientation, among others. tematize supportive contexts in particular talent
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A first reaction to the failure of monocausal con- domains and that analyze the role of contexts and
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ceptions to predict achievement excellence exclu- relevant persons within them (e.g., coaches, men-
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sively on the basis of high intelligence, exceptional tors, parents) for giftedness and talent development
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past achievements, or exceptional learning behavior (e.g., Pfeiffer, 2013; Subotnik, Edmiston, Cook, &
(cf. Worrell, 2009; Ziegler, 2008) was to increase the Ross, 2010; Ziegler, 2009).
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complexity level of giftedness conceptions. Another change in giftedness conceptions


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These efforts led to multidimensional models of involves a stronger process or action orientation, in
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giftedness (cf. Heller, Mönks, Sternberg, & which researchers shifted their empirical focus from
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Subotnik, 2000; Sternberg & Davidson, 2005). personality traits to the learning and developmen-
Rather than describe individual models, we will tal processes that lead to achievement excellence
focus on similarities between these models (see (e.g., Ericsson, Charness, Feltovich, & Hoffman,
Chapters 10, 15, and 17, this handbook). All mul- 2006; Jeltova & Grigorenko, 2005; Sternberg,
tidimensional models expand the focus of mono- 2007; Ziegler, 2005). The object of inquiry in the
causal conceptions of giftedness via intelligence, most popular approach that follows this trend,

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International Perspectives and Trends in Research on Giftedness and Talent Development

the expertise approach, is the individual who has individuals displayed frequent behavioral problems
already achieved at exceptional levels in a certain or were even “crazy”—known as the divergence
talent domain. Researchers conduct a systematic, hypothesis (Stoeger, 2011)—was the point of depar-
often retrospective examination of the characteris- ture for Terman’s longitudinal study (cf. Holahan
tics and prototypical learning pathways of such indi- et al., 1995, for details about Terman’s study). After
viduals (experts). Findings have provided important reading about Sir Francis Galton’s research, Terman
insights into the ways in which the learning pro- was intrigued (Mönks, 1981) by the question of
cesses of experts and average achievers differ (Erics- whether high intelligence correlates, in the sense of

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son et al., 2006). Expertise research has also shown the divergence hypothesis, with negative physical

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that considerable quantities of intensive, highly and psychological characteristics. The results of

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structured practice (deliberate practice) are a crucial Terman’s study showed clearly that highly intel-

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factor in determining achievement excellence (cf. ligent children did not have a greater propensity for

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Macnamara, Hambrick, & Oswald, 2014). Although the sorts of inauspicious traits or behaviors foreseen

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there are some studies that focus on environmen- by the divergence hypothesis. These findings have

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tal agents involved in expertise development (e.g., been replicated numerous times over the past

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Stoeger & Gruber, 2014), the expertise approach, as 90 years (e.g., Rost, 2009). Not only did studies refute

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it is usually carried out in research, can be viewed as the divergence hypothesis (e.g., Freeman, 2001),

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a new sort of monocoausal conception of giftedness they actually found evidence for above-average

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(Ziegler, 2008). It is unlike early monocausal views, psychosocial functioning among highly intelligent

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however, in that it avoids essentialist giftedness individuals (cf. Stoeger, 2009). With these results in
notions. It nevertheless represents a strong focus on
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mind, newer conceptions of giftedness have rejected
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one factor. At the same time, numerous giftedness the deficit approach, focusing instead on resources
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researchers have come to the conclusion that the and talent development (cf. Heller et al., 2000;
deliberate-practice framework can be fruitfully inte- Shavinina, 2009; Sternberg & Davidson, 2005).
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grated into newer conceptions of giftedness (cf.


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Dai, 2009; Ericsson et al., 2007).


Cultural Differences in
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The trend toward process or action orientation is


Conceptions of Giftedness
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also evident in conceptions that more clearly reflect


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giftedness research (e.g., Jeltova & Grigorenko, It is generally recognized that giftedness and intel-
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2005; Sternberg, 2007; Ziegler, 2005). An example ligence conceptions are culturally embedded (e.g.,
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is the actiotope model of giftedness (Ziegler, 2005). Neisser et al., 1996; Sternberg, 2007). Accordingly,
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Here, too, learning actions, not personality traits, numerous publications offer insights into non-
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are at the conceptual forefront. The development Western conceptions of giftedness (cf. Phillipson &
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toward domain-specific excellence is understood McCann, 2007) and intelligence (cf. Niu & Brass,
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as a gradual expansion of the individual action 2011). Providing an overview of the variety of
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repertoire. The action repertoire is situated in a existing conceptions throughout the world is not
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complex system of various individual and con- possible within this chapter. Therefore, we will
textual components. A successful development of illustrate the richness of cultural conceptions
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the action repertoire enables domain-specific high of giftedness in an exemplary manner by briefly
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achievement—but action-repertoire development is describing large-scale East–West differences in


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only possible when all system components interact giftedness conceptions and providing exemplary
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in an appropriate way with one another. insight into the cultural variety within sub-Saharan
The shift from a deficit to a resource orientation conceptions of giftedness. East Asian conceptions
in conceptions of giftedness is also worth noting. offer a good starting point for this discussion as the
Myths, such as that of the crazed genius (Stoeger, region has received a good amount of attention by
2011), are indicative of a deficit orientation in gift- researchers contrasting Western with non-Western
edness conceptions. The assumption that gifted notions. A consideration of examples of sub-Saharan

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Stoeger, Balestrini, and Ziegler

conceptions offers a reminder that large-scale gener- because of the restricted focus of East Asian academic
alizations can overshadow important differences. high achievement (McInerney, 2013).

East Asian Versus Western Conceptions The Emic Complexity of Culturally


of Giftedness Specific Giftedness Conceptions: The
Perhaps the most established vein of research on Example of Sub-Saharan Conceptions
non-Western conceptions of giftedness has focused of Giftedness
on East Asia (e.g., Phillipson, Stoeger, & Ziegler, More general statements about Western, Asian,

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2013; VanTassel-Baska, 2013b). One reason may Islamic, or African conceptions of giftedness should

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be the interest of educational psychologists, educa- be made with caution (Phillipson, 2007b). They

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tion researchers, and economists in understanding may offer a useful way of structuring international

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the nature of East Asian strengths in education and discourse on giftedness and avoiding a bias toward

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learning (cf. Wang & Lin, 2005). historically rooted Western preoccupations. Yet,

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East Asian conceptions of giftedness typically are even within shared geographical, cultural, and

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less concerned with the sorts of entity theories of linguistic contexts, a great deal of variety exists that

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giftedness on which traditions of gifted identifica- might be easily overlooked when viewing cultures

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tion and education were originally founded in the or regions in a culturally universal (etic) manner

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West (Dai, 2009; Stoeger, 2009). This difference (King & McInerney, 2014). In fact, values, which

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may be motived by heightened East Asian concerns make up a crucial aspect of culturally specific gifted-

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with educability (Cheng, 1998), more collectivist ness constructions (e.g., Ngara & Porath, 2004), are
social perceptions in rice-cultivating parts of East
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known to vary more within than between cultures
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Asia (e.g., Talhelm et al., 2014), and Confucian (Schwarz, 2014).
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holistic outlooks (Phillipson, 2013) as opposed to Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, presents a tap-
the mind–body dualism of Western Enlightenment estry of unprecedented cultural and linguistic rich-
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thought (Barab & Plucker, 2002). ness and diversity. Among the backdrop of Africa’s
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The greater cultural affinity in East Asia for inter- cultural variety, the application of a single concept
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dependence (Chinese Culture Connection, 1987), of giftedness would be unthinkable (Ngara &
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malleable views of learning (Cheng, 1998), and Porath, 2014; Taylor & Kokot, 2000). Although
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special emphasis on effort (Li & Fischer, 2004) general assertions suggest that African giftedness
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create a remarkable intersection between widespread conceptions may typically include a strong family
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views of high ability in East Asia and recent scientific and community orientation (Eriksson, 2006;
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giftedness conceptions in the West. For example, Maree & van der Westhuizen, 2009), studies of spe-
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systemic models of learning and rigorous deliber- cific cultural groups remind researchers of the depth
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ate practice routines have been noted for gifted of cultural differences throughout the continent.
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education (Phillipson et al., 2013) and education in Empirical research tells us, for example, that Shona
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general (Rao & Chan, 2010). Although East Asian culture in Zimbabwe associates gifted behaviors
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approaches to studying and providing gifted educa- more strongly with men (Ngara & Porath, 2004),
tion reflect developments of recent decades and, whereas Kenyan respondents envisioned men and
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to a certain extent, adaptations of Western trends women almost equally often when asked to draw an
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(Phillipson et al., 2009; Vialle & Ziegler, 2015), the intelligent person (Aljughaiman et al., 2012).
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recent Western scientific reconceptualizations of


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giftedness and talent development may align newer


Research Review
Western giftedness conceptions more closely with
long-standing East Asian outlooks (Nisbett, 2003; Before we present recent trends in gifted iden-
Phillipson & Yick, 2013; Stoeger, 2013). At the same tification and in research on the provision and
time, however, equating East Asian high achievement effectiveness of gifted education, we will briefly
with Western giftedness conceptions is problematic discuss findings on Western and, in particular,

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International Perspectives and Trends in Research on Giftedness and Talent Development

Anglo-American bias in giftedness research as well researchers are starting to use (cf. Campbell, Tirri,
as the shortage of cross-cultural studies. This should Ruohotie, & Walberg, 2004), only few cross-
remind readers of the necessity of considerably more cultural studies exist that make comparisons of
development toward truly international, cross- giftedness conceptions, gifted identification strate-
cultural, and culturally sensitive perspectives in gies, and gifted education provision. For the period
research in the field, which would, among other between January 1980 and August 2015, 10 peer-
things, enable the practice of gifted education to reviewed journal articles are recorded in PsycINFO
become more culturally inclusive (Phillipson, 2007a). that contain gifted as a title word and cross-cultural

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among listed key concepts; all of these articles were

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Western Bias and Shortage of Cross- published after 2001.2 Even when one considers

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Cultural Research that our search was cursory and did not include

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A bibliometric examination of giftedness research all possible relevant terms, the numbers strongly

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publications of the last 5 years confirms the continu- suggest that there is still an enormous potential for

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ing existence of a Western bias in the field. A search growth in this area before the practice of giftedness

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in PsycINFO for research articles published in peer- research fully reflects established theoretical insights

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reviewed journals between January 2009 and August about the cultural embeddedness of giftedness

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2015 containing the terms gifted and identification conceptions.

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in their abstracts yielded 100 citations. We selected

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this combination of terms on the assumption that Trends in Gifted Identification

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identification, as a central concern of giftedness Ideally, identification approaches should reflect cur-
research overall (Carman, 2013), should offer a
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rent scientific conceptions of giftedness. For exam-
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reasonable proxy of giftedness research in gen- ple, should identification be based on a monocausal
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eral. Although these 100 journal articles reflected conception in which giftedness is equated with high
research conducted in 32 countries, a strong West- IQ, then the identification of gifted persons should
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ern bias was evident: 84% of the locations where the result from IQ testing. If, however, a multifacto-
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studies were conducted were in Western nations rial or systemic conception provides the theoretical
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(America, Europe, and Australia), 10% were in East basis, then individual and contextual factors must
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Asia, 4% were in Islamic countries, and 2% were in be integrated into the identification process and,
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South East Asia and India.1 With few exceptions, depending on the conception, also into the devel-
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most research is being conducted at Western institu- opmental processes (cf. Pfeiffer, 2015; Sternberg &
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tions with Western subjects. Subotnik, 2000; Ziegler, 2008). Despite these expec-
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The necessity and potential of cross-cultural tations, neither increased complexity of giftedness
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giftedness research has been apparent for decades conceptions nor trends toward greater consideration
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(Hernández de Hahn, 2000; Maker, 1993; Van- of contexts, processes, and actions are reflected by
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Tassel-Baska, 2013a). Although the fields of cross- current approaches to gifted identification. Rather,
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cultural psychology and education studies have a conceptual chasm divides the theoretical asser-
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laid theoretical and methodological groundwork tions of conceptions of giftedness from identifica-
(cf. King & McInerney, 2014) that giftedness tion approaches—in practice and in research. Most
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1
To ensure that our findings were not reflecting an avoidance of the term gifted by researchers in some cultures, we repeated the search using a title
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search and with synonyms for gifted as provided by the PSYNDEX Thesaurus. For inclusion, the peer-reviewed article needed to include gifted, excep-
tional, talented, high ability, or intelligent, and identification in its title. The results of this search were even more strongly biased toward North America
and other Western cultures.
2
We conducted a similar search in the second key database of giftedness research (Carman, 2013), the Education Resources Information Center
(ERIC), and achieved similar results—although differences in database structure prevented us from making an exact comparison with PsycINFO. For
the same period (January 1980 to August 2015), ERIC reports 12 peer-reviewed journal articles that contain gifted as a title word and cross-cultural
in the abstract. These findings reflect a miniscule portion of all journal articles focusing on giftedness. Together, PsycINFO and ERIC report 7,879
journal articles between January 1980 and August 2015 containing gifted in their title. Finally, we repeated the searches as described but used talent
development instead of gifted. This final search resulted in only six peer-reviewed journal articles (two in PsycINFO and four in ERIC).

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Stoeger, Balestrini, and Ziegler

identification regimens rely on one diagnostic cri- Nevertheless, status-oriented diagnostics remains
terion, most often IQ or achievement as measured strongly focused on high intelligence, and this is
by grades or standardized tests (e.g., Carman, 2013; the point of departure for intervention-oriented diag-
Worrell, 2009; Ziegler, 2008). nostics. As described previously, early longitudinal
This simplification creates various problems. research clearly showed that not all individuals who
First, we can assume that more complex concep- were diagnosed as gifted on the basis of an IQ cri-
tions of giftedness and identification strategies terion went on to make exceptional achievements
will better reflect reality. Limiting predictors of later in life (e.g., Deary, 2006; Terman & Oden,

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future achievement excellence to intelligence or 1947). However, rather than rejecting the giftedness

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achievements must, therefore, be viewed with conception as a result, researchers integrated the

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skepticism (Worrell, 2009; Ziegler, 2008). Stud- concept of underachievement as an explanation for

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ies comparing the predictive power of individual potential that was not transformed into exceptional

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predictors versus a combination of predictors of achievements (Stoeger, 2009). The introduction

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future achievements and learning success confirm of this construct of lower-than-expected achieve-

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this (cf., Lohman, 2009). Second, identification ment was often operationalized as the discrepancy

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processes that also consider contextual factors are between IQ and achievements and led to a different

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less biased against children from families with a diagnostic focus. Instead of contemplating predic-

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lower socioeconomic status and can be more eas- tors of achievement excellence, researchers became

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ily adapted to other cultural contexts (Lohman, more concerned with the question of why achieve-

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2005, 2009; Sternberg, 2007; Stoeger, 2013). Con- ment potential was not being fulfilled. The most fre-
sideration of contextual factors during identifica-
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quently discussed causes are insufficient motivation,
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tion also helps to ensure that children identified incommensurate learning and working behavior,
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as gifted are truly outstanding within the norms motor-skills deficits, specific personality factors,
of their respective sociocultural milieu (Sternberg, sociocultural factors, and inadequate educational
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2007). Third, the more developmental and learn- support or resources (Reis & McCoach, 2000).
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ing processes are included within identification, These variables constitute the focus of intervention-
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the easier it becomes to apply identification results oriented diagnostics.


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to improve the effectiveness of learning and tal- The development-oriented diagnostic approach
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ent development efforts (Grigorenko & Sternberg, arose, in turn, as a reaction to dissatisfaction
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1998; Kanevsky, 2000). with the focus on deficits in the intervention-


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From a theoretical standpoint, four approaches oriented approach. In addition, the development-
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to giftedness diagnostics can be distinguished oriented approach also transcended the


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(Ziegler, 2008): status oriented, intervention ori- status-oriented approach by focusing more on
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ented, development oriented, and support oriented. achievement development. The goal of the approach
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Status-oriented diagnostics is the most traditional is to make the best possible prognoses for individuals’
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approach. It aims to identify gifted individuals continued achievement development. A hallmark is


EC

by specifying the relative position of each person that changes in achievement development feed back
within a population. The assumption behind this into the diagnosis. In other words, an individual’s
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approach is that higher values for desirable individ- future achievement development is being predicted
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ual characteristics (e.g., IQ, achievements, effective on the basis of all cumulative achievement on an
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information processing)—in some conceptions ongoing basis. What constitutes a gift is dependent on
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combined with indicators of an auspicious environ- the current developmental stage and learning behav-
ment (e.g., parenting style, parents’ educational ior, not on an IQ (Subotnik & Jarvin, 2005).
achievement)—predict exceptional achievements. Passow (1981), an early advocate of the
Here, too, the assumption is that predictive strength development-oriented diagnostic approach, viewed
can be improved through the combination of giftedness not as a fixed state but rather as dynamic.
predictors. He rejected the standard two-step approach

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International Perspectives and Trends in Research on Giftedness and Talent Development

involving an IQ test followed by an assignment deci- giftedness—as well as for various identification
sion (e.g., to a gifted class). Instead, he suggested purposes and in different cultures (Stoeger, 2013;
that persons who were identified during initial Ziegler & Stoeger, 2003, 2004). The model’s acro-
testing as potentially gifted should be placed in a nymically derived name denotes its phases (explore,
stimulating environment (an enrichment environ- narrow, transform, evaluate, and review). The
ment) to see how well they fare (also cf. Renzulli, model does not describe one “right” approach for
1986; Stanley, 1996). This approach effects changes identifying gifted individuals, instead it outlines a
in the diagnostic sources and the identification general heuristic procedure. During the first three

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approaches. Instead of personality traits, learning phases, various types of data on various types of

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behavior as well as concomitant cognitive, emo- information are collected. Each phase has a particu-

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tional, and motivational processes are diagnosed. lar focus: for the explore phase, it is the individual

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Another crucial development here is the setting: and, depending on the giftedness conception, her or

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Rather than the often artificial clinical environ- his (systemic) embeddedness in an environment; for

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ment of status-oriented diagnostics (e.g., a clini- the narrow phase, it is the identification of a suitable

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cian’s office), development-oriented diagnostics talent domain; and for the transform phase, it is the

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often occur in authentic learning settings such as identification of a learning path to domain-specific

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classrooms. excellence for the individual.

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Support-oriented diagnostics goes further still by The final two phases ensure the quality of all

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actively constructing developmental chances for diagnostic and counseling work. During the evaluate

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individuals. The goal is to identify ways in which phase, diagnosticians assess whether the immediate
an individual’s development toward high achieve-
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goal for an identification procedure (e.g., success-
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ments and excellence can be facilitated. In this fully skipping a grade) was actually reached. In the
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approach, gifted identification and education are no review phase, a primary focus is on considering
longer viewed as separate activities. A learning path the immediate identification goal post hoc within
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toward achievement excellence is constructed on the larger context of the entire process of develop-
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the basis of various types of diagnostic information. ing achievement excellence. What might occur, for
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Then, as this path is being traversed by a learner, instance, is that the goal of successfully skipping a
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the diagnostic process continues and its results are grade was achieved, but that further consideration
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used to continually adapt and improve the learning during the review phase might bring to light that
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path (Ziegler & Stoeger, 2004). The process relies a different educational measure would have been
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on numerous classes of information. The diagnostic more appropriate for the long-term goal of achieve-
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process systematically considers individual aspects ment excellence. Furthermore, the review phase
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(e.g., learning behavior, cognitive abilities, goals, includes an assessment of the giftedness model on
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concentration) and contextual variables, as well which the identification procedure is based.
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as how the individual uses learning opportunities


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within the learning environment and deals with set- Trends in Gifted Education Provision
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backs. Thus, stakeholders in an individual’s devel- Comprehensive data about the exact nature of gifted
opment, such as parents, teachers, and mentors, and talented programs are lacking (e.g., Bhatt,
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become part of the diagnostic process. 2011; Ziegler, Stoeger, Harder, & Balestrini, 2013).
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Just as a unified conception of giftedness does Metadisciplinary reflection (Subotnik, Olszewski-


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not exist, a unified model of identification is also Kubilius, & Worrell, 2011; Dai, Swanson, & Cheng,
U

lacking. However, an identification model does 2011) suggests that the most common measures of
exist, which can encourage a more scientific appli- gifted education provision are curriculum accelera-
cation of existing conceptions during identifica- tion and enrichment (including extra-curricular
tion. The ENTER model provides a theoretically activities), often involving differentiation and
underdetermined identification framework that grouping practices. Although the cited findings may
can be implemented with various conceptions of mostly reflect circumstances in the United States,

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Stoeger, Balestrini, and Ziegler

descriptions of gifted education in other cultures p values as equal to or less than 0, and misapplica-
paint similar pictures (e.g., Phillipson et al., 2009; tions of Cohenian effect-size benchmarks—all docu-
VanTassel-Baska, 2013a; Chandler, 2013). There- mented for giftedness research of the past decade
fore, gifted education provision remains focused (Matthews et al., 2008; Steenbergen-Hu & Moon,
on a narrow selection of traditional Western 2011; Warne et al., 2012)—continue to cast doubt
approaches. on the field’s success at gauging the effectiveness of
A look at research on the effectiveness of these gifted education provision.
measures provides yet more justification for view-

N
ing this continuity critically. At the level of specific

O
Future Considerations and

TI
models and programs of gifted education, findings
Directions

A
on effectiveness are still limited (Callahan, Moon,

CI
Oh, Azano, & Hailey, 2015; Subotnik et al., 2011). We conclude by mentioning two trends that are

O
Studies on the broader categories of acceleration likely to change how education systems and societ-

SS
and enrichment are more numerous, although only ies provide gifted education in upcoming decades.

A
somewhat encouraging. Despite frequent consen- First, computer-mediated communication may soon

L
A
sus about the effectiveness of accelerative measures unlock the potential of mentoring for ever larger

IC
(Colangelo & Assouline, 2009; Steenbergen-Hu & groups of gifted children. Although it has long been

G
Moon, 2011; Subotnik et al., 2011), unclarified known that mentoring can be highly effective, its

LO
moderator effects limit our understanding of effectiveness depends on how it is carried out. Effec-

O
whether and how well acceleration is serving par- tive mentoring is expert mentoring (Eby, Allen,
ticular groups (Steenbergen-Hu & Moon, 2011);
CH
Evans, Ng, & Dubois, 2008). Although the results
Y
and in the case of enrichment, findings regarding of gifted mentoring are promising (Subotnik et al.,
PS

short- and long-term effectiveness are inconclusive 2011), the cost of high-quality, one-on-one men-
(e.g., Aljughaiman & Ayoub, 2012; Hany & Grosch, toring (Belfield, 2003) makes implementation and
N
A

2007; Reis & Renzulli, 2010; Subotnik et al., 2011). expansion of mentoring programs difficult, which
IC

Finally, for the United States, large-scale surveys of was a problem for gifted education provision three
ER

gifted and talented programming as a whole (i.e., decades ago (Grassinger, Porath, & Ziegler, 2010;
M

without differentiation according to program types Gray, 1982). E-mentoring may change this. As the
A

or offerings) have recently raised doubts about the online mentoring program for gifted girls in science,
©

net efficacy of gifted and talented education overall technology, engineering, and mathematics recently
FS

(Adelson, McCoach, & Gavin, 2012; Bhatt, 2011; described by Stoeger, Duan, Schirner, Greindl, and
O

Bui, Craig, & Imberman, 2014). Ziegler (2013) demonstrates, there is good reason
O

Gifted education research in general has been to expect that virtual mentoring may finally enable a
PR

identified as a hybrid field of scientific inquiry char- more rapid expansion of high-quality mentoring for
D

acterized by peripatetic researchers whose focus may gifted learners (cf. Lamb & Aldous, 2014).
TE

shift in and out of gifted education (Dai et al., 2011) Second, concerns about equity in gifted
EC

and whose methods frequently fail to fulfill wide- education—not to be mistaken with the excellence-
spread standards of scientific inquiry (Ziegler & versus-equity discussion (Dai, 2009)—have been
RR

Raul, 2000). Although methodological improve- raised (e.g., Eriksson, 2006; Harris, 2014). This
CO

ments have been observed for work of the past is an increasingly pressing issue for gifted edu-
N

15 years (Warne, Lazo, Ramos, & Ritter, 2012), cation. As affluent countries around the world
U

gifted education research still compares poorly to become more socially and culturally diverse (Har-
the standards found in the larger field of education ris, 2014), the primary beneficiaries of gifted
research, psychology, and the social sciences. Meth- education—children—will need a gifted education
odological shortcomings including lacking or inap- that is ready for them and their social and cultural
propriate control-group designs, an avoidance of heterogeneity (Grantham, 2012). Achieving this
complex statistical methods, frequent references to is difficult, however. The underrepresentation of

32

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International Perspectives and Trends in Research on Giftedness and Talent Development

minorities and the economically disadvantaged in NY: National Center for the Study of Privatization in
gifted education programs reflects group achieve- Education.
ment differences in general rather than merely Bhatt, R. (2011). A review of gifted and talented
shortcomings of program identification instruments education in the United States. Education Finance
and Policy, 6, 557–582. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/
(Erwin & Worrell, 2012) or teachers’ expectations EDFP_a_00048
(Lee, Olszewski-Kubilius, & Peternel, 2010). Hence
Bui, S. A., Craig, S., & Imberman, S. (2014). Is gifted
achieving a better representation of heterogeneous education a bright idea? Assessing the impact of
citizenries in gifted education means investing more gifted and talented programs on students. American

N
effort in rooting gifted education and the models Economic Journal, 6, 30–62.

O
TI
on which it is based in the outlooks and cultures of Callahan, C. M., Moon, T. R., Oh, S., Azano, A. P., &

A
the groups it should be serving in any given culture Hailey, E. P. (2015). What works in gifted education:

CI
Documenting the effects of an integrated curricular/
(Grantham, 2012). This, of course, is possible, as instructional model for gifted students. American

O
the paradigm shift in gifted education theory toward Educational Research Journal, 52, 137–167. http://

SS
systems views of giftedness and talent development dx.doi.org/10.3102/0002831214549448

A
increases pressure on policy makers and educators Campbell, J. R., Tirri, K., Rouhotie, P., & Walberg, H.

L
A
to constantly adjust their notions of giftedness to fit (2004). Cross-cultural research: Basic issues, dilemmas

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Centre for Vocational Education.

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Stoeger, & Vialle, 2012). In particular, a better theo-

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Fifteen years of definitions of giftedness in research.

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forms of gifted education (e.g., Sternberg & Arroyo, on gifted education and talent development, part II
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