Cognitive and Motivational Characteristics of Adolescents Gifted in Mathematics: Comparisons Among Students With Different Types of Giftedness
Hong & Aqui (2004) conducted a research on cognitive and motivational characteristics of adolescents gifted in mathematics: comparisons among students with different types of giftedness. They said that although numerous studies have compared cognitive and motivational characteristics between gifted versus nongifted students, research comparing those characteristics among different types of gifted students has not kept up with the theoretical development that saw a transition from unidimensional to multidimensional conceptualizations of giftedness. This study compares cognitive and motivational characteristics of high school students who are academically gifted in math, creatively talented in math, and nongifted. Whereas no differences were found among the three groups in their beliefs about ability, most of the other characteristics examined in the study distinguished the three groups. Academically gifted female students reported expending more effort than did academically gifted male students. Creatively talented males put forth more effort than academically gifted males, and the creatively talented in general used more cognitive strategies than the academically gifted. Overall, students who were either academically gifted or creatively talented in mathematics perceived that they were self-efficacious in general, used cognitive strategies, perceived their math ability and math self-efficacy to be high, and valued learning math more so than their nongifted age peers.
Hong, Eunsook & Aqui, Yvette. (2004). Cognitive and Motivational Characteristics of Adolescents Gifted in Mathematics: Comparisons Among Students With Different Types of Giftedness. Gifted Child Quarterly. Vol 48 (3): 191-201
Hong, Eunsook & Aqui, Yvette. (2004). Cognitive and Motivational Characteristics of Adolescents Gifted in Mathematics: Comparisons Among Students With Different Types of Giftedness. Gifted Child Quarterly. Vol 48 (3): 191-201
3 Comments:
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I am afraid a lot depends on the definition of a "mathematically giftedness". Mathematicians tend to understand it differently from teachers and psychologists.
Well yes teh definition of mathematics giftedness can be understood differently. However, one who is extra good with number and score highly on a maths tool is gifted.
Also mathematicians and teachers may look at it the same way or from teh same angle where as psychologists see it fdifferently.
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