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Educational Research and Evaluation: An International Journal on Theory and Practice

Volume 13, Issue 6, 2007

Special Issue: Current Research on Giftedness: International perspectives

On Being Gifted, but Sad and Misunderstood: Social, emotional, and academic outcomes of gifted students in the Wollongong Youth Study

On Being Gifted, but Sad and Misunderstood: Social, emotional, and academic outcomes of gifted students in the Wollongong Youth Study

DOI:
10.1080/13803610701786046
Wilma Viallea*, Patrick C. L. Heavena & Joseph Ciarrochia

pages 569-586

Available online: 30 May 2008

Abstract

This research examined the relationships among personality factors, social support, emotional well-being, and academic achievement in 65 gifted secondary students, a sample drawn from a longitudinal study of over 950 students. The research demonstrated that, compared to their nongifted peers, gifted students had significantly higher academic outcomes for all subject areas except Geography and Physical Education. Teachers rated the gifted students as being well-adjusted and less likely to have behavioural or emotional problems than nongifted students. The gifted students, however, reported feeling more sad and less satisfied with their social support than their nongifted counterparts. There were no significant differences in terms of self-esteem, trait hope, problem orientation, or attitudes towards education. Within the gifted sample, the research found that the students who were most likely to get poor grades were those who scored high in psychoticism and low in conscientiousness, trait hope, joviality, and in attitudes towards schools. Interestingly, self-esteem was entirely unrelated to gifted performance.

 

Details

  • Available online: 30 May 2008

Author affiliations

  • a University of Wollongong, Australia

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group