
The Origins and Development of High Ability
R. Atkinson(Editor)
Wiley (Publisher)
Published on 12. November 1993
Book
Hardback
300 pages
978-0-471-93945-0 (ISBN)
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Description
The Origins and Development of High Ability Chairman: Richard Atkinson 1993 The outstandingly high abilities shown by certain individuals are a valuable human resource. Despite much talk of maximizing human potential, there have been few systematic efforts to increase the number of people capable of exceptional accomplishments, and many questions have yet to be answered fully. How does high ability arise, and how and why does it develop? How can early talents best be identified, and what conditions are most likely to facilitate the development of exceptional children into high-achieving adults? Are a child's commitment to improving his or her abilities and the encouragement of this by parents and teachers the cause or the result of the child's talents? Must one be a highly able child to become a highly able adult? Can any motivated, ordinary' individual who makes sufficient efforts at improvement reach heights of ability normally regarded as indicative of inherent exceptionality, or is a certain genetic constitution a prerequisite? In this book, psychologists and educational specialists address these and other questions from a variety of perspectives.
They discuss the extent to which giftedness' depends on general intelligence, and what factors contribute to an individual being labelled as gifted. The nature versus nurture' debate is a major theme throughout, with a chapter describing the latest research attempting to identify specific genes that contribute to intelligence. The role an individual's environment plays in the expression and achievement of high ability is also considered, with parental influences featuring strongly. An examination of the early lives of child prodigies and a study of some mould-breaking creative adults lead to an exploration of the relationship between early giftedness and later achievement. Specialities investigated in particular include mathematics, science, language, music and invention. Recent Ciba Foundation Symposia: No. 174 Experimental and theoretical studies of consciousness Chairman: T. Nagel 1993 ISBN 0 471 93866 1 No. 173 Chronic fatigue syndrome Chairmen: A. Kleinman and S. E. Straus 1993 ISBN 0 471 93618 9
They discuss the extent to which giftedness' depends on general intelligence, and what factors contribute to an individual being labelled as gifted. The nature versus nurture' debate is a major theme throughout, with a chapter describing the latest research attempting to identify specific genes that contribute to intelligence. The role an individual's environment plays in the expression and achievement of high ability is also considered, with parental influences featuring strongly. An examination of the early lives of child prodigies and a study of some mould-breaking creative adults lead to an exploration of the relationship between early giftedness and later achievement. Specialities investigated in particular include mathematics, science, language, music and invention. Recent Ciba Foundation Symposia: No. 174 Experimental and theoretical studies of consciousness Chairman: T. Nagel 1993 ISBN 0 471 93866 1 No. 173 Chronic fatigue syndrome Chairmen: A. Kleinman and S. E. Straus 1993 ISBN 0 471 93618 9
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Chichester
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
550 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-471-93945-0 (9780471939450)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Gregory R. Bock | Kate Ackrill
The Origins and Development of High Ability
E-Book
04/2008
1st Edition
Wiley
€121.99
Available for download
Content
Partial table of contents: Giftedness and Intelligence: One and the Same? (D. Detterman). Psychological Profiles of the Mathematically Talented: Some Sex Differences and Evidence Supporting Their Biological Basis (C. Benbow & D. Lubinski). Genetics and High Cognitive Ability (R. Plomin & L. Thompson). The Early Lives of Child Prodigies (M. Howe). Musical Ability (J. Sloboda). Boys and Girls Who Reason Well Mathematically (J. Stanley). Scientific Ability (K. Heller). Accelerating Language Acquisition (W. Fowler, et al.). Can We Create Gifted People? (K. Ericsson, et al.). Closing Remarks (R. Atkinson). Indexes.