“…We try to avoid the word "gifted"-or the G-word-especially when it is used as an entity (noun or object e.g., "he or she is gifted"), preferring to talk and write about students with higher learning potential and using the G-word as an adjective (e.g., he or she is a gifted [superior, advanced, innovative, exceptional, persuasive, compelling] writer for his or her age or compared with others her age; see also Renzulli, 2012). Although students with higher learning potential might include "gifted" students, underachieving able students, or students with dual or multiple exceptionalities (Wallace et al, 2009), they are not the focus in this study. The term students with higher learning potential constitutes a complex group of individuals with different needs comprising students who achieve at high levels and those who have potential to do so, a group estimated to constitute 10% to 15% of the school population (Gagné, 2005;Idsøe, 2014;Renzulli, 2005;Theilgaard & Raaschou, 2013).…”