Context Matters in Gifted Education
Bruce M. Shore’s research contributions in gifted education have focused on three contexts that impact how giftedness is understood and the instructional environments that serve gifted learners’ educational needs. This article describes these contributions and provides selected examples plus a more...
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doaj-deedd2b359644f5c8300213d58a2f1d82021-08-26T13:41:14ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022021-08-011142442410.3390/educsci11080424Context Matters in Gifted EducationBruce M. Shore0Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology, McGill University, 3700 McTavish, Montreal, QC H3A 1Y2, CanadaBruce M. Shore’s research contributions in gifted education have focused on three contexts that impact how giftedness is understood and the instructional environments that serve gifted learners’ educational needs. This article describes these contributions and provides selected examples plus a more complete Supplemental Online bibliography. First, giftedness benefits from being conceptualized in terms of theories that address the development of expertise. Featured expert–gifted parallels include interconnectedness of knowledge, metacognitive processes, perspective taking, active learner roles, affinity for novelty and complexity, and task representation and planning. Illustrative research is described from preschool age through higher education, including connections to creativity research. Second, gifted education benefits when guided by social-constructivist theory of education and its expression in inquiry-based instruction. Examples include building upon learner interests, question asking, collaborative inquiry, and active learner roles. Desirable specific instructional practices are framed by the above theories and by being considered in the contexts of widely recommended and best practices with their research support. Third, gifted education, at all levels including higher education and teacher education, needs to be an integral part of the context of general education. Most specific gifted education practices also work in general education, including learning high-level skills within subject matter. Nineteen examples are cited about how gifted education contributes to the quality of general education.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/8/424giftednesscontexttheoryexpertisesocial constructivisminquiry |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Bruce M. Shore |
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Bruce M. Shore Context Matters in Gifted Education Education Sciences giftedness context theory expertise social constructivism inquiry |
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Bruce M. Shore |
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Bruce M. Shore |
title |
Context Matters in Gifted Education |
title_short |
Context Matters in Gifted Education |
title_full |
Context Matters in Gifted Education |
title_fullStr |
Context Matters in Gifted Education |
title_full_unstemmed |
Context Matters in Gifted Education |
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context matters in gifted education |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Education Sciences |
issn |
2227-7102 |
publishDate |
2021-08-01 |
description |
Bruce M. Shore’s research contributions in gifted education have focused on three contexts that impact how giftedness is understood and the instructional environments that serve gifted learners’ educational needs. This article describes these contributions and provides selected examples plus a more complete Supplemental Online bibliography. First, giftedness benefits from being conceptualized in terms of theories that address the development of expertise. Featured expert–gifted parallels include interconnectedness of knowledge, metacognitive processes, perspective taking, active learner roles, affinity for novelty and complexity, and task representation and planning. Illustrative research is described from preschool age through higher education, including connections to creativity research. Second, gifted education benefits when guided by social-constructivist theory of education and its expression in inquiry-based instruction. Examples include building upon learner interests, question asking, collaborative inquiry, and active learner roles. Desirable specific instructional practices are framed by the above theories and by being considered in the contexts of widely recommended and best practices with their research support. Third, gifted education, at all levels including higher education and teacher education, needs to be an integral part of the context of general education. Most specific gifted education practices also work in general education, including learning high-level skills within subject matter. Nineteen examples are cited about how gifted education contributes to the quality of general education. |
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giftedness context theory expertise social constructivism inquiry |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/8/424 |
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