A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction
The focus of this paper is the quantitative synthesis of findings in selected literature on longitudinal gifted studies using 'meta-analysis.' In the existing literature there is a plethora of conflicting findings regarding occupational and life satisfaction of gifted individuals. Thus,...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-38802018-01-05T17:31:39Z A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction Strelzow, Lee-Ann The focus of this paper is the quantitative synthesis of findings in selected literature on longitudinal gifted studies using 'meta-analysis.' In the existing literature there is a plethora of conflicting findings regarding occupational and life satisfaction of gifted individuals. Thus, a meta-analysis investigated the integration of the statistical results of these divergent findings. Nineteen studies were analyzed. The resulting 41 statistical results were transformed into a common effect size measure (ES), correlation coefficient. Using Validity Generalization Methodology, the corrected mean effect size for the relationship between giftedness and satisfaction was .14. When life and occupational satisfaction were separated into two separate effect size estimates, life satisfaction had a corrected mean ES of .10, and occupational satisfaction had a corrected mean ES of .19. No significant difference existed between men and women participants. The relationship of these two measures with giftedness was dependent on a number of variables. In order of strength they include: location of sample studied, location of sample drawn, and gender and age at time of study. Additionally, special school programs for gifted individuals had a mean effect of .10 and a standard deviation of .1. The implications of these findings are discussed in terms of current theories of intelligence and suggestions for further educational investigations are addressed. Education, Faculty of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of Graduate 2009-01-24 2009-01-24 1995 1995-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3880 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 8083133 bytes application/pdf |
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Others
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The focus of this paper is the quantitative synthesis of findings in selected
literature on longitudinal gifted studies using 'meta-analysis.' In the existing
literature there is a plethora of conflicting findings regarding occupational and life
satisfaction of gifted individuals. Thus, a meta-analysis investigated the integration
of the statistical results of these divergent findings. Nineteen studies were
analyzed. The resulting 41 statistical results were transformed into a common
effect size measure (ES), correlation coefficient. Using Validity Generalization
Methodology, the corrected mean effect size for the relationship between giftedness
and satisfaction was .14. When life and occupational satisfaction were separated
into two separate effect size estimates, life satisfaction had a corrected mean ES of
.10, and occupational satisfaction had a corrected mean ES of .19. No significant
difference existed between men and women participants. The relationship of these
two measures with giftedness was dependent on a number of variables. In order of
strength they include: location of sample studied, location of sample drawn, and
gender and age at time of study. Additionally, special school programs for gifted
individuals had a mean effect of .10 and a standard deviation of .1. The implications
of these findings are discussed in terms of current theories of intelligence and
suggestions for further educational investigations are addressed. === Education, Faculty of === Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of === Graduate |
author |
Strelzow, Lee-Ann |
spellingShingle |
Strelzow, Lee-Ann A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
author_facet |
Strelzow, Lee-Ann |
author_sort |
Strelzow, Lee-Ann |
title |
A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
title_short |
A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
title_full |
A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
title_fullStr |
A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
title_full_unstemmed |
A meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
title_sort |
meta-analysis of the relationship between giftedness and life satisfaction |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3880 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT strelzowleeann ametaanalysisoftherelationshipbetweengiftednessandlifesatisfaction AT strelzowleeann metaanalysisoftherelationshipbetweengiftednessandlifesatisfaction |
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