International Handbook of Giftedness and Talent 2000
DOI: 10.1016/b978-008043796-5/50010-3
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Developmental Psychology and Giftedness

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Cited by 22 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…They also successfully participated in national and international competitions in their respective disciplines, obtaining, for example, top results in European championships, awards in national and international music competitions, or awards in national and international high school academic competitions. They all met the criteria of giftedness as suggested by various models of giftedness (i.e., Gagné, 2004;Mönks & Mason, 1993;Renzulli, 2005) and, based on their results, all could be regarded as highly or exceptionally gifted according to Gagné's metric-based system of levels within the gifted/talented population (Gagné, 2004).…”
Section: Participants In the Studymentioning
confidence: 85%
“…They also successfully participated in national and international competitions in their respective disciplines, obtaining, for example, top results in European championships, awards in national and international music competitions, or awards in national and international high school academic competitions. They all met the criteria of giftedness as suggested by various models of giftedness (i.e., Gagné, 2004;Mönks & Mason, 1993;Renzulli, 2005) and, based on their results, all could be regarded as highly or exceptionally gifted according to Gagné's metric-based system of levels within the gifted/talented population (Gagné, 2004).…”
Section: Participants In the Studymentioning
confidence: 85%
“…However, while there has been plenty of theorizing about innateness, the experimental evidence is elusive, as Ericsson, Roring, and Nandagopal (2007) explore, concluding that there is no evidence for innate differences, and all actual differences in achievement can be accounted for by greater practice. The ''expert performance'' approach to giftedness outlined by Ericsson et al (2007), in which a clear link is established between superior performance and deliberate practice, would be classed by Mö nks and Mason (2000) as ''achievementoriented.'' This may seem to point to the gifted just being advanced for their age, but as Sternberg (2001) observes, this approach (called the ''developing expertise view'' by him) ''in no way rules out the contribution of genetic factors as a source of individual differences in who will be able to develop a given amount of expertise.'…”
Section: Perspectives From the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mö nks and Mason (2000) suggest that considerations of giftedness can be approached in four distinct ways:…”
Section: Perspectives From the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Монкса и Мејсона (Mönks & Mason, 2000) увиђају да је немогуће дефинисати даровитости на концизан начин због условљености образовним контекстом у коме се користи и истражује, те долазе до закључка да су дате дефиниције више везане за практичне разлоге него за теорије. На основу тога одлучили су се за четири критеријума дефинисања даровитости, те дали уз њих и репрезентативне, већ постојеће, теорије: Даровитост као особина (Hovard Gardner, 1983, 1993, 1999, 2006, Даровитост као сазнајна компонента (Robert Sternberg, 1986), Даровитост као постигнуће (Јоseph Renzulli, 1978) и Социокултуралнипсихосоцијални модел (Abraham Tannenbaum, 1983).…”
Section: савремени приступи проучавању даровитостиunclassified