have reported investigation of the personality of gifted children and have generally concluded in positive characteristics reflective of superior development, Ketcham (1957) sees that these same positive characteristics may be misinterpreted and the child viewed in a less than favorable manner: Several important personal characteristics of gifted children are liable to confuse and mislead their parents and teachers. The gifted child's curiosity, persistence, purposefulness and sensitivity frequently irritate adults and take on the appearance of disobedience, inattention, and instability. Parents, teachers and others, on occasion, underestimate the true ability of the gifted child. They accuse him of being too active or interested in the &dquo;wrong&dquo; things.The purpose here is to determine, from a developmental sense, the personality growth of young gifted children and the interactions which may lead to a misinterpretation of the discovered characteristics. METHOD By individual evaluation before the entrance to kindergarten, all the intellectually gifted children of a school district's kindergarten students (a total class of 740 children) were located. The 20 gifted children (as well as a control group of 20 non-gifted children) located obtained a Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI) full scale IQ of 125 to 144 with a mean FS IQ of 131 (for the control students, a WPPSI FS IQ range of 97 to 119, mean of 109). , . The Rorschach Technique was utilized, both during this pre-school testing period and at the end of the kindergarten year.