Category: Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Tiombe Bisa Kendrick-Dunn

Talking Circles: Social/Emotional Impacts on G/T From Culturally Diverse Backgrounds

Gifted children from culturally diverse backgrounds often face under-identification and lower-quality programming, which can harm their social and emotional development. These disparities can cause sadness, anxiety, and reduced motivation. Parents and educators should monitor changes, provide support, and connect children with counselors or trusted adults to address these challenges.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Joy Lawson Davis, EdD.

Director’s Corner: Social Justice and the Gifted Child

An educator reflects on youth-led social justice actions—from a personal high school walkout to historic protests like Barbara Johns, Hector Pieterson, Malala, and the Children’s Crusade—arguing gifted young people often show intense moral conviction and can drive lasting community and societal change when supported.

Read More »
Education & Homeschooling
seng_derek

Talking Circles: You Aren’t Going to Get There Paddling That Old Boat

The post argues gifted education systems use biased identification and inadequate programs, disadvantaging diverse and low-income students. It calls to change assessments, expand teacher training, fund and redesign programs to focus on social-emotional support, culturally fair measures, universal screening, and community-inclusive approaches to equity.

Read More »
Adult Giftedness
Joy Navan

Gifted Comes of Age

SENG launches the Gifted Elders Initiative to study and support aging gifted individuals. The initiative seeks research on elder needs, promote awareness across cultures and settings, disseminate findings, advocate for differentiated services, and invite collaboration to preserve and nurture gifted seniors.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Tiombe Bisa Kendrick-Dunn

Parenting the Culturally/Racially Diverse Gifted Child

Many parents of racially and culturally diverse gifted children worry about racism, discrimination, cultural preservation, bullying, and self-advocacy. They must prepare children early, seek supportive resources and culturally responsive mental health services, and promote resilience while protecting cultural identity amid mainstream societal challenges.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Tiombe Bisa Kendrick-Dunn

The Often Unspoken Pain of the Racially Diverse Gifted Child

This post argues that racially diverse gifted students face increased social and emotional challenges despite high intellectual ability, including lack of opportunities, underrepresentation in leadership roles, and unpreparedness for racism. It calls for sustained support, preparation, and resources to ensure their wellbeing and academic and career success.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Rose Blackett

Whakatauki – Proverbs… Learning social expectations by looking into the past…

Explains how Māori whakatauki (proverbs) reflect cultural values and social expectations, illustrating meanings with several sayings. The post argues that understanding past perspectives and collective values—such as humility, shared success, and leadership—can inform contemporary views on giftedness and community roles across societies.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Tiombe Bisa Kendrick-Dunn

The Gift of Globalization

This post argues that globalization affects American gifted children, urging exposure to other languages, cultures, and global competition. It warns that ignorance can cause misunderstanding or prejudice, and recommends teaching children about diverse customs, values, and languages so they can adapt and succeed in an interconnected world.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Danae Deligeorge

Androgyny and Gifted Youth

Discusses psychological androgyny, distinguishing gender, gender-role, sexual orientation and identity, and links androgyny to giftedness and creativity. Reviews research (BSRI, Silverman, Tolan, Sheely, Piirto, Kerr) suggesting many highly gifted children reject strict gender roles and advises parents to avoid stereotyping.

Read More »
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Danae Deligeorge

Androgyny and Gifted Youth*

The post explains psychological androgyny—gender-role traits combining masculine and feminine characteristics—distinguishes gender, gender-role, sexual orientation, and identity, and reviews research linking androgyny with giftedness and creativity. It warns against stereotypical bias in gifted program referrals and urges caregivers to support children’s authentic gender expression.

Read More »