It is very important to identify gifted children. These are children who are above the average, in the case of academically gifted children above the average academically. These children must be given a suitable education to cater for their slightly different needs, just as a disadvantaged child should be given a suitable education to cater for their particular needs.
I agree. My problem is with the notion that IQ
is the scale to determine who is gifted, who deserves the different educational opportunities.
You mention Richard Feynman, which is a good case in point. It shows the difference between giftedness and talent. He would be considered mildly gifted, and here in Australia perhaps skipped a grade, or at the least taught a little more unconventionally. Whether he would have been picked up or not, the fact is he worked on his gift for physics and made a contribution to science, he became a prominent scientist, ie. he turned his gift into a talent. Today he would be considered a genius am I right? That is because he transformed his gift into a talent through hard work, and through his life experiences.
This is more than wrong. You assume that IQ is an accurate scale to predict intelligence - it isn't.
Sometimes it is a useful tool but
not always. Richard Feynman was clearly a genius to those who knew him as a child - he was voted "Mad Genius" in high school. However, he
did not have a high IQ! In other words, one can
clearly be a genius and have a slightly above average IQ.
So in a way you are right, life is in a way a measure of intelligence, in that whether a gifted child transforms that gift into a talent depends immensely on their life experiences.
This is about right, but you assume that IQ is a good measure of a child's talent - by all accounts this is ignorant. Sometimes IQ can reveal a gifted child, often times it can't.
And for the record, aren't you in a gifted program (or at least some kind of accelerated learning program?)
For the record, yes I am. I was put in GATE after I scored 154 on a professionally administered Stanford Benet test. Right now I am in the IB (International Baccalaureate) program, an international program for college credit during high school (from my classes and tests I could get credit at any major University in over 100 countries).
It's really easy to see things and say "this should not be done this way" but I don't see anyone offering any alternatives, which I would probably accept if they were a better choice.
The problem is that we are not offering alternatives, we are designating resources to a select few based upon a scale that has proven to be inadequate. The problem is not with using IQ, it is with using mainly IQ. Teacher recommendations, past work performance, and peer and parental reorganization of talent all are other valid indicators of intelligence.