Prix bas
CHF281.60
Habituellement expédié sous 4 à 9 semaines.
This is the first ever handbook on giftedness and talent development for the Asia-Pacific region. It discusses important issues for an important group of students, addresses a gap in the current understanding of gifted students in the region, traverses substantial intellectual terrain, and draws on past and present research literature.
The handbook brings together contributions from 18 countries, providing a diverse, unique and comprehensive contemporary research and practice on giftedness and talent development in the Asia-Pacific region. It highlights contemporary issues and incorporates important topics such as conceptions, identification, curriculum, and programs. Chapters in the book will include a stronger focus on pedagogy that could assist researchers, academics and educators, post-graduate students, families, advocates, teachers and practitioners, and other stakeholders to support gifted students. It also informs pre-service education programs in gifted education, in-service professional learning programs, and future research and practice in this region of the world.
Addresses gap in current understanding of gifted students Highlights contemporary issues Provides a strong focus on pedagogy Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Auteur
Susen R. SmithGERRIC, School of EducationUniversity of New South WalesSydney, NSW, AustraliaDr. Susen Smith is a GERRIC Senior Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Gifted and Special Education at the School of Education, University of NSW, Australia, where she teaches in the Master in Gifted Education program and supervises PhD students. She has four decades of leadership, teaching, and research experience from pre-K to adult education. Her research and practice interests include: differentiating curriculum and pedagogy for diverse student needs in multi-disciplinary contexts, gifted underachievement and indigeneity, twice-exceptionalities, social-emotional learning, academic engagement, enrichment, education for sustainability, and community outreach programs. Susen is published internationally and is on the editorial boards of the Gifted Child Quarterly,Roeper Review, International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, and the Australasian Journal of Gifted Education. She has been a visiting scholar to Columbia University, Imperial College London, CUNY, National Taipei University of Education, and the Hong Kong Institute of Education; has acquired many competitive research grants; is widely published; and keynoted at national and international conferences. She has been an academic adviser for educational departmental policies and programs for decades in addition to having on-going advisory board and association memberships. Susen chaired the inaugural national GERRIC Gifted Futures Forum **for Talent Enhancement in Australia and has organised regional, national, and world conferences and many gifted education outreach enrichment programs across several universities in Australia and internationally, such as the TalentEd program and the 2eMPower project. She created the Model of Dynamic Differentiation (MoDD) for supporting student diversity across the learning continuum, provides professional learning across Australia and internationally, and is Editor of the first ever Handbook of Giftedness and Talent Development in the Asia-Pacific, in the series Springer International Handbooks of Education. E-mail: susen.smith@unsw.edu.au
Contenu
Section I Socio-cultural conceptions.- 1 Theoretical and practical advantages of using differentiated labels representing potentialities and achievements: The DMGT and IMTD.- 2 Being of like-mind: Giftedness in the New Zealand context.- 3 Understanding the views of the gifted and talented education of Columbian schools: A secondary data analysis.- 4 Gifted children at the south of the world: Chilean students' experiences within regular classroom.- 5 Gifted education, talent development and high ability in Mexico.- 6 Innovative practices to support high achieving deprived young scholars in an ethnic-linguistic diverse Latin-American country.- 7 Creativity development: Trends and challenges among selected Asian countries.- 8 Spirituality and giftedness: Independent or interdependent?.- Section II Social and emotional learning and needs.- 9 Dabrowski's theory of positive disintegration: More than overexcitability.- 10 Put them together and see how they learn! Ability grouping and/orAcceleration effects on the self-esteem of academically gifted high school students.- 11 Supporting the social emotional learning of gifted Australian children.- 12 Fostering resilience in 'At-risk' gifted and talented young people.- 13 Of grit and gumption, Sass and verve: What gifted students can learn from multicultural picture book biographies.- Section III Diversity in giftedness and talent.- 14 Identification of gifted students: A developmental process for underrepresented students.- 15 Perceptions of academically gifted English langauge learners.- 16 Multi-processes in identification for the gifted and talented.- 17 Identification and curricular place-based adaptations for gifted students in rural communities.- 18 Understandings of twice exceptionality across Australia.- 19 Creativity talent development: Learning from the experiences of creatively gifted students.- 20 Underachiever or selective consumer? A new look at an old topic.- 21 No... Maybe... Yes, but just for myself: Building identity in highly-able/gifted women.- 22 Exploring diverse conceptions of wisdom: Focusing on gender differences in Korea.- 23 The achievements and lives of extraordinary Australians: A master, a maker, an introspector and an influencer.- 24 Identifying gifted learning in the regular classroom: Seeking intuitive theories.- Section IV Interdisciplinary assessment, pedagogic, and curriculum innovations.- 25 Listening to students with gifts and talents: What makes for an effective teacher of the gifted and talented learner?.- 26 Inquiry learning: Challenging the gifted to be knowledge producers.- 27 Cultivation of giftedness: The art of dynamic differentiation in expert teachers' praxis.- 28 Super high schools in Japan: Hybrid-style gifted education designed both to raise overall standards and to respect the individual.- 29 Differentiation: 'How' versus 'What'.- 30 Developing a differentiated model for the teaching of narrative composition to high performing and high potential students.- 31 Nurturing Mathematical talents and English proficiency of Mathematically promising English language learners using M3 program.- 32 Online learning for mathematically talented students: The importance of self-regulation, self-efficacy, social support, and course design.- 33 How do teachers meet the academic needs of high-ability students' in Science.- 34 Creativity and talent development: A four-day camp for utilizing social games, mindfulness meditation, and STEM for primary school students.- 35 Differentiated instruction strategies in English language teaching for gifted students.- 36 Using the model of dynamic differentiation to guide scaffolding intellectually gifted students' learning.- 37 Research on teacher use of differentiation: What conditions support success.- Section V Talent development, creativity, and other dimensions of gifted education.- 38 An ecological approach to understanding highly able students' experiences of their academic talent development in a Singapore school.- 39 How does gifted education foster students' creativity in Korea?.- 40 Giftedness: The fourth dimension - The ethical nature of the gifted individual.- 41 Rural gifted adolescent girls and popular culture: Supporting talent development in a world of image and media.- 41 Growi…