Despite educators' growing concern about meeting the unique needs of gifted students from culturally diverse backgrounds, the research literature sheds little light on best practices for these populations. A multicultural education perspective can help bring clarity to issues of practice by examining these issues within two divergent philosophical frameworks: assitnilationist and pluralist. These perspectives offer different views on sources of ethnic student underachievement, the purpose of schooling, procedures for identification, instructional processes, and curriculum content.Publications on culturally diverse gifted learners spanning several decades provide evidence of the continued interest of educators in improving services to these children. A recent achievement in this regard is Maker and Schiever's (19891 edited book, Defensible Programs for Cultural and Ethnic Minorities, which provides critical information on characteristics, identification practices, and instructional needs of the gifted among four distinct cultural groups. In his essay review of this volume, Tannenbaum (1990) challenged the field to go a step beyond: Future publications will do well to use this book as a point of departure for devising less stereotyped, more daring, and reasonably hopeful ideas about how to approach some of the most frustrating issues in education. After so many years of nibbling futilely at the edges of these issues, it is time to bite boldly into their bitter core. (p. 84) This article seeks to clarify major issues confronting educators of gifted students from a multicultural education perspective. The article presents a discussion of research implications and philosophical Margie Kitano is the Associate Dean