Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools

The gifted child is considered as a special child with 'disability'. He/she is emotional because most of the times the special needs that he/she deserves are often not met. The gifted child sits in class with normal children with very little or no attention given him/her. When found to...

Description complète

Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel
Format: Article
Langue:anglais
Publié: 2014
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3661
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1810764574309220352
author Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel
author_facet Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel
author_sort Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel
collection DSpace
description The gifted child is considered as a special child with 'disability'. He/she is emotional because most of the times the special needs that he/she deserves are often not met. The gifted child sits in class with normal children with very little or no attention given him/her. When found to be fast at learning, progress often gets slow as a result of neglect. Most of the time, such children are considered troublesome whereas they are not, it is the special attention that they need. The paper through survey examined 50 parents/teachers perception on special children and those 'label' gifted that they have identified and taught. The study assessed the characteristics behaviour, methods adopted to meet his/her educational needs and type of support provided him or her in the school system. The modified standardized Intelligence Quotient Test was used by teachers to screen the learners classified as gifted while stratified random sampling procedure was used to select participating teachers. A 20-item questionnaire was used to collect relevant data while descriptive statistics of mean score and standard deviation were use to analyse the data. A mean x SD = 13.20 was found for the disposition of the gifted. Result of data show that 42 (84%) of respondents agreed that the 'gifted' is a special child with no 'disability' 27 (54%) of respondent agreed that they 'gifted' was not normally excluded from organized school programme; 31 (62%) accepted that schools make provision to allow him/her progress at his/her learning pace. Only 2 (4%) of respondents claimed that parents of the 'gifted' come from low socio-economic class of the society. It was suggested that problems of the gifted be reduced by involving parents in continuous education about their gifted wards. Gifted children require more flexible educational experience; professionals should therefore be involved in their training. Parents' discussion groups will be expedient so that 'gifted' rearing experience could be made more enjoyable. Schools should employ specialist teachers and teachers should use discovery and learning techniques. Teachers should focus on higher order skills. The media has a role to play, especially by promoting the cause of the people with special needs.
format Article
id oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-3661
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2014
record_format dspace
spelling oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-36612023-05-13T11:07:07Z Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel giftedness Educational needs of the gifted child The gifted child is considered as a special child with 'disability'. He/she is emotional because most of the times the special needs that he/she deserves are often not met. The gifted child sits in class with normal children with very little or no attention given him/her. When found to be fast at learning, progress often gets slow as a result of neglect. Most of the time, such children are considered troublesome whereas they are not, it is the special attention that they need. The paper through survey examined 50 parents/teachers perception on special children and those 'label' gifted that they have identified and taught. The study assessed the characteristics behaviour, methods adopted to meet his/her educational needs and type of support provided him or her in the school system. The modified standardized Intelligence Quotient Test was used by teachers to screen the learners classified as gifted while stratified random sampling procedure was used to select participating teachers. A 20-item questionnaire was used to collect relevant data while descriptive statistics of mean score and standard deviation were use to analyse the data. A mean x SD = 13.20 was found for the disposition of the gifted. Result of data show that 42 (84%) of respondents agreed that the 'gifted' is a special child with no 'disability' 27 (54%) of respondent agreed that they 'gifted' was not normally excluded from organized school programme; 31 (62%) accepted that schools make provision to allow him/her progress at his/her learning pace. Only 2 (4%) of respondents claimed that parents of the 'gifted' come from low socio-economic class of the society. It was suggested that problems of the gifted be reduced by involving parents in continuous education about their gifted wards. Gifted children require more flexible educational experience; professionals should therefore be involved in their training. Parents' discussion groups will be expedient so that 'gifted' rearing experience could be made more enjoyable. Schools should employ specialist teachers and teachers should use discovery and learning techniques. Teachers should focus on higher order skills. The media has a role to play, especially by promoting the cause of the people with special needs. 2014-11-17T12:15:38Z 2018-10-29T12:19:20Z 2014-11-17T12:15:38Z 2018-10-29T12:19:20Z 2005 Article Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel (2005). Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools. African Journal of Special Education Needs, 4(1) http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3661 en PDF application/pdf Nigeria
spellingShingle giftedness
Educational needs of the gifted child
Adeyanju, 'Lade Joel
Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title_full Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title_fullStr Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title_full_unstemmed Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title_short Supporting Educational and Emotional Needs of the Gifted in Nigerian Secondary Schools
title_sort supporting educational and emotional needs of the gifted in nigerian secondary schools
topic giftedness
Educational needs of the gifted child
url http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3661
work_keys_str_mv AT adeyanjuladejoel supportingeducationalandemotionalneedsofthegiftedinnigeriansecondaryschools