Category: Counselors & Counseling

Communication
Emily Villamar-Robbins

Legal Tools for Supporting the Emotional Needs of Gifted Students

SENG Community Groups (SCGs)1 help parents to understand and meet the emotional needs of their children, supporting stronger communication and connections at home. In some cases, however, a school environment may also need adjustment. When school contributes to a child’s emotional challenges, parents may wonder whether their school is doing

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Communication
Jerald Grobman, M.D.

You Missed the Opening Chapters—But the Story Isn’t Over

If you were unable to attend the first two seminars in the SENG Signature Mental Health Seminar Series, there is no need to despair. These sessions are designed as an ongoing conversation, and there are many opportunities to join us with a monthly focus on specific topics.   I have

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Counselors & Counseling
Yekaterina (Katrina) O’Neil

Building Resilience: Helping Kids Overcome Bullying

The author shares her firsthand experiences witnessing bullying against her twice- and thrice-exceptional children in public school—and how shifting to a supportive homeschooling community fostered resilience, empathy, and belonging. Through nature programs, volunteering, art, and shared reading, her family learned to transform difference into strength and authentic self-acceptance.

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Counselors & Counseling
Ilse Gevaert

Bridging Two Worlds: A Guide to Supporting Twice-Exceptional Children

Twice-exceptional children combine high intelligence with learning differences and are often misunderstood. This guide outlines misconceptions, brain differences, and distinctive strengths, then offers practical strategies—strength-based learning, assistive technology, emotional support, breaks, and community—to help 2e students bridge challenges and reach their potential.

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Communication
Takako Oishi

ギフテッド児と2E児のレジリエンスの源

This article discusses sources of resilience for gifted and twice-exceptional (2E) children, highlighting three key elements: at least one supportive adult, opportunities to build autonomy, and strength-based education that fosters hope and optimism. It offers practical advice for parents and caregivers to support development.

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Communication
Sarah Strouthopoulos

5 Parenting Pitfalls to Avoid When Raising Gifted and Twice-Exceptional Children

Parents of gifted or twice-exceptional children often face emotional intensity and unique challenges. This post outlines five common parenting pitfalls—emotion dysregulation, lack of curiosity, power struggles, teaching during meltdowns, and default discipline—and offers compassionate strategies to connect, regulate emotions, and find collaborative solutions to support exceptional children.

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Adult Giftedness
Jennifer Harvey Sallin

Gifted Adults & Second Childhoods: Revisiting Essential Stages of Development – Part 2

This article examines how Eriksonian psychosocial stages show up across the gifted lifespan—childhood through elder years—highlighting challenges like mistrust, shame, identity confusion, intimacy issues, and the need for generativity, and it recommends gifted-specific therapeutic, educational and community supports to facilitate healing and growth.

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Counselors & Counseling
Julia Rutkovsky, LCSW; Melissa Sornik, LCSW; Jacob Greebel, LMSW.

Why Are Assessments and Screening Tools Missing Co-occurring Diagnoses of Gifted Kids?

Gifted children’s co-occurring diagnoses are often missed because they mask symptoms, commonly used screeners are outdated or rely on limited reports, and score discrepancies are overlooked. Evaluations should consider narrative context, observations across settings, and score discrepancies to identify needs and provide appropriate supports.

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Counselors & Counseling
seng_derek

So Now What? Affirming Your Twice-Exceptional Queer Child

Adults can better support Twice-Exceptional LGBTQ+ children by offering unconditional acceptance, listening to and using children’s self-described identities, balancing personal research with centering the child’s voice, correcting mistakes briefly without over-apologizing, and seeking queer-led resources or clinicians for additional guidance.

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