| Literature DB >> 21977044 |
Abstract
This study covers the interesting field of the development in gifted children which is often neglected in pediatrics because psychomotor development data are still rare, since "gifted" children are generally noticed towards the end of their primary schooling by IQ measurement. Developmental studies have shown the evidence from several fields that children identified as "high-level potentialities" or "intellectually gifted" develop sensory, locomotor, neuropsychological, and language skills earlier than typically expected. The hypothesis is offered that the earlier development originates from biological processes affecting the physical development of the brain and in turn even intellectual abilities are developed earlier, potentially allowing for advanced development. Further it is discussed how these developmental advances interact with the social environment and in certain circumstances may entail increased risk for developing socioemotional difficulties and learning disabilities that often go unaddressed due to the masking by the advance intellectual abilities.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21977044 PMCID: PMC3184407 DOI: 10.1155/2011/420297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Comparison between observed motor development items in a sample of “high-potential” children followed longitudinally (n = 60) (Vaivre-Douret) [5] and French developmental standardised norms in the first two years of life [8, 9].
| Items observed (Vaivre-Douret) [ | Sample ( | DEF-MOT norms (Vaivre-Douret) [ | Brunet-Lézine norms revised [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Holds head in axis | 1 m | 2 m 4 d | 3 m |
| Voluntary grasp | 3 m | 4 m 10 d | 4 m |
| Turning overresponse | 4 m | 6 m 10 d | 8 m |
| Sitting without support | 6 m | 8 m 6 d | 10 m |
| Sits up alone | 7 m | 8 m 24 d | 10 m |
| Stands up with support | 8 m | 10 m 18 d | 10 m |
| Crawls | 8 m | 10 m 12 d | 9 m |
| Takes bead between thumbs and forefinger | 8 m | 9 m 10 d | 9 m |
| Independent walking | 12 m | 14 m 20 d | 14 m |
| Start eating with a spoonon his own | 12 m | 18 m 14 d | 17 m |
| Climbs stairs | 15 m | 17 m 4 d | — |
| Comes down stairs withhelp without alternating feet | 16 m | 19 m 1 d | — |
| Tower of at least 8 bricks | 23 m | 29 m 1 d | 30 m |
| Climbs stairs alone without support alternating feet | 24 m | 34 m 1 d | — |
| Puts slippers on without help | 24 m | 30 m 8 d | 30 m |
| Rides tricycle or bikewith stabilisers | 24 m | 36 m 3 d | — |
*(Significant items (Student's t-test, liberty degree = 118), P < 0.001, compared to motor development standardised norms).
Mean ages obtained for oral and written language development in a sample of “high-potential” French children in the course of the first three years of life compared to Brunet-Lézine norms.
| Mean age obtained on items observed (Vaivre-Douret) [ | Reference Brunet-Lézine EAP 1951 revised [ | |
|---|---|---|
| Babbling (consonants): mean 4 months | 7 months | 8 months |
| First words (at least three): mean 9 months | 12 months | 10–17 months |
| Repetition of words in exponential manner from 12 months ± 4 weeks | 18 months | 17 months |
| First phrase (association of two words): mean 18 months ± 2 weeks | 21 months | 20 months |
| Imitation animal noises: mean 22 months ± 2 weeks | — | — |
| Accurate vocabulary, no baby talk language mature, easy, correct use of verb tenses: mean 22 months ± 2 weeks | — | — |
| Early spontaneous identifications letters and figures in the environment: mean 24 months ± 4 weeks | — | — |
| Enjoys giving synonyms or opposites: mean 28 months ± 4 weeks | — | — |
| Uses “I” (first person pronoun): mean 30 months ± 2 weeks | 30 months | 30 months |
| “Pretend” writing: mean 34 months ± 2 week | — | — |
(—) No data from authors.
Most frequent associated learning disorders among “high-potential” children.
| Oral language disorders |
| Functional disorders: |
| Difficulty articulating |
| Stammer |
| Simple delay in using words |
| Simple delay in using language |
| Structural disorders |
| Dysphasia of the expressive type |
|
|
| Written language disorders |
| Dyslexia |
| Spelling difficulties |
| Dyscalculia |
|
|
| Developmental coordination disorders |
| Delay in posturomotor development and/or hand to eye |
| coordination |
| Developmental dyspraxia (VIQ > |
| Ideomotor |
| Dressing |
| Visuospatial/visuoconstructional |
| Dysgraphia |
|
|
| Attention deficit disorder/hyperactivity and impulsiveness |
| (ADD, ADDH, ADHD) |
| Attentional dominant and/or hyperactive and/or impulsive |
| dominant |
|
|
| Specific psychomotor function disorders |
| Body image |
| Spatial organisation |
| Temporal organisation |
| Lateralisation |
| Neuromotricity (tone) |
| Tonico-emotional relationships |
Academic problems and behavioural and/or personality disorders among “high-potential” children.
| Underperforming, poor student |
| Lazy, lacking motivation |
| Identified disorders including dysgraphia, dyslexia, spelling |
| problems, dyspraxia, attentional disorders, hyperactivity, |
| and impulsiveness |
| Intellectual/psychomotor/affective dyssynchrony |
| Clowning to gain attention |
| Destructuring tonus-emotion hyper-reactivity |
| Psycho-affective immaturity |
| Apathy |
| Frequent psychosomatic disorders |
| Behavioural fluctuation |
| Oversensitiveness |
| Withdrawing attitude |
| Anxiety |
| Willfulness and tantrums |
| Reactional aggressiveness |
| Violent behaviours |
| Delinquency, drug, and alcohol abuse |
| Megalomaniac trends |
| Difficulties of eye contact and difficult relationships |
| (borderline psychotic) |
| Depressive and suicidal tendencies |
| Identity disorders |
| Self-harm (mental or physical) |