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Abstract

This article introduces the tripartite model of giftedness, a new paradigm for viewing gifted students from three perspectives: giftedness viewed as high intelligence, giftedness viewed as outstanding accomplishments, and giftedness viewed as high potential to excel. The article also links gifted assessment practices to each of the three different perspectives, offering psychologists and educators alternative and defensible approaches to identifying gifted students in the schools. One purpose of the article is to narrow the gap between gifted assessment practices and new findings in the cognitive sciences and talent development field.
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... They are among the most capable and top-performing children in the class. Identification methods may include teacher ratings, classroom performance, and performance on academic tasks (Pfeiffer 2015). ...
... These students may not excel on standardized tests or meet typical IQ thresholds for giftedness, often scoring between 110 and 115. Their academic performance may also lag behind that of traditionally gifted learners, yet they exhibit a latent, underdeveloped high potential (Pfeiffer 2015). However, the three groups of high-ability/gifted children are not necessarily mutually exclusive. ...
... Adopting a developmental view and an inclusionary approach, the term "high ability" with an emphasis on high academic potential is embraced in this study, aligned with Pfeiffer's tripartite model, to describe the top 10% of the preschool children's population with a potential to perform or achieve beyond age-peers (Pfeiffer 2015;Wellisch 2015Wellisch , 2019Worrell and Dixson 2018). ...
... Likewise, an important reference for the assessment of students with high abilities is the Tripartite Model of High Ability proposed by Pfeiffer (2013Pfeiffer ( , 2015. This model integrates developmental, psychometric, and transformational approaches, offering three perspectives for understanding high ability: (1) as high intelligence, (2) as exceptional performance, and (3) as high potential to excel. ...
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Despite the growing body of research examining the personality traits of individuals with high abilities, little clarity exists about how they differ from the general population, especially within the university context. This study aimed to identify distinct personality traits by examining 268 high-ability university students alongside a matched average-ability group through a retrospective ex post facto design. Results revealed significant differences only in the trait of responsibility (p = 0.037), with lower scores observed among high-ability students. This outcome may be related to specific academic environmental factors, such as insufficient challenges. It can be concluded that, although stereotypes often associate high-ability students with certain personality traits, such as openness to experience, the present results do not reflect such differences. Therefore, it is important to conduct well-designed studies to determine the characteristics of high-ability individuals and how they differ from average-ability students.
... The content of the instrument is more comprehensive and based on a more common theory of giftedness in different countries such as the USA, Turkiye, and Russia. Previous parent rating scales are based on different specific theories of giftedness such as Munich Model of Giftedness and Talent, Tripartite Model of Giftedness, and Three Ring Conception of Giftedness, or they are only based on the aspects of official definition of giftedness in the USA (such as creativity, leadership, intellectual, etc.) (Lee & Pfeiffer, 2006;Pfeiffer, 2015Pfeiffer, , 2015bRenzulli et al., 2002). Both these three definitions and the aspects of the USA definitions are not in line with definitions of giftedness adopted by different countries such as Turkiye, Japan, Russia, and Germany. ...
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This study aimed to develop a parent rating scale (PRSG) for screening children for further identification process in terms of giftedness. The participants of the study were 255 parents of gifted and non-gifted students. The PRSG, consisting of 30 items, was created by consulting parents and reviewing instruments existent in the literature. As part of the validity testing, the content, construct, and criterion-related validities were examined. Expert opinion was sought for content validity. Construct validity was achieved as the findings of the confirmatory factor analysis confirmed the three-factor model in the 27-item instrument. The parents rated their own children after the researchers showed them how to rate their children. One hundred and sixty parents had a gifted child. Finally, the scores given by the parents of gifted children and those of the non-gifted were compared, which yielded a statistically significant difference between the mean scores in favor of the scores given by the parents of the gifted. The Cronbach alpha value was found to be .95 for the whole instrument.
... Intelligence quotient (IQ) tests are widely used around the world for many purposes (Coaley, 2010;Gottfredson and Saklofske, 2009), one of which is to identify gifted children (McIntosh et al., 2012). Educators can identify students with exceptional intellectual potential using these tests, which provide objective and standardized measurements of cognitive abilities (Pfeiffer, 2015). Moreover, IQ tests can tailor educational programs to meet students' specific needs, ensuring that academic challenges and growth are appropriate to their needs (Borgonovi and Ferrara, 2020;Gibbons and Warne, 2019). ...
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Hamdan Intelligence Scale (HIS) is the first intelligence scale that has been developed and normed in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). This study aimed to examine the refinement, validity, and reliability of HIS in upper elementary grades using the Rasch model. A total of 4,301 students (34.3% Male; 65.7% Female) from grade 4 to 6 (32.1% grade 4; 33.7% grade 5; 34.2% grade 6) were administered to the HIS. The confirmatory factor analysis was first conducted to verify the fitness of the one-factor model of the HIS. The results of validity showed strong correlation coefficients between the HIS and the Aurora-g battery (0.83) and the Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices (RSPM; 0.86). Moreover, the results of the developmental trends demonstrated that raw scores of the HIS increase with age and grade relatively constantly across composite scores. Unidimensionality was confirmed through the Confirmatory Factor Analysis and Principal Component Analysis of Residuals (PCAR). The low eigenvalues of the first contrast were below 2, and additionally, the infit and outfit mean squares ranged from 0.88 to 1.14 and 0.84 to 1.14. Rasch’s person reliability result of 0.62 was acceptable reliability. The results provided strong support for the validity and reliability of using the Hamdan Intelligence Scale in the UAE environment.
... La concepción de la inteligencia entendida como capacidad o aptitud y el talento como aplicación de la misma a diversos dominios, han experimentado una evolución de forma continua, desde autores como Galton (1869) o Terman (1925) que describían la inteligencia como un rasgo único, innato e inmutable, y ponían el énfasis en su cuantificación y medida a través de pruebas de cociente intelectual, a la explicación de la capacidad como desarrollable, surgiendo nuevos modelos como los de Gagné (2015Gagné ( , 2018Gagné ( , 2021, Renzulli y Delcourt (2017), Renzulli y Gaesser (2015), Renzulli (2016), Renzulli y Reis (2018, Pfeiffer (2015a, 2017a) u Olszewski-Kubilius et al. (2019, Worrell et al. (2019) entre otros, que destacan también la importancia tanto del contexto como de factores y variables co-cognitivas (Renzulli, 2021) necesarias para el desarrollo del talento. ...
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The development of measurement instruments in the field of high abilities in Spain is scarce. The deficit in the identification of these students is due, in part, to this lack. Current identification procedures focus on a global approach that recommends using various information sources and instruments, such as detection scales, that go beyond intelligence or aptitude test scores, among others. The importance of co-cognitive variables, usually malleable, has been high-lighted by many authors, so that the triangulation of complementary information sources is considered essential. Here, for the first time, the study of the construct validity of the GRS 2 Parents Scale in Spain is addressed, with a sample of 1334 fathers and mothers. An exploratory and confirmatory factorial study, AFE and AFC, was carried out, and the metrics of the variables and their multivariate normality have been taken into account, adapting the analysis accordingly. Weighted least squares estimation methods were used. Eight models have been studied and, finally, a structure of four first-order factors and two second-order factors is proposed, which explains 58% of the variance of the scores. The fit indices of the model are satisfactory (CFI, .98; TLI, .97; GFI, .98), the convergent validity (AVE, above .54 and Composite Reliability, between .78 and .92) show an acceptable result. The proposed structure improves the original three-factor one. This scale is validated in Spain for the first time and provides a measure for the identification of students with high ability. This study will be completed with the validation of the other two scales for teachers that make up the GRS 2, which is being carried out by the authors.
... These models all clearly indicate that "giftedness" as a concept encompasses more than having a high degree of intellectual ability (IQ > 130). Two more recent models are the tripartite model of giftedness of Pfeiffer (2015) and the megamodel of Subotnik et al. (2018). Pfeiffer's model assumes three perspectives and provides practical tools for supervisors of gifted individuals in education. ...
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... O conceito de inteligência, e juntamente com ele o de AH/SD, vem sofrendo mudanças nos últimos anos, de uma concepção psicométrica baseada fundamentalmente nas pontuações obtidas 2 Altas Capacidades = Terminologia oficial utilizada na Espanha, para se referir as pessoas com AH/SD. Brazilian Journal of Development, Curitiba, v.9, n.2, p. 7210-7231, feb., 2023 em testes de inteligência, para a integração de modelos que levam em conta não apenas a inteligência, mas outros fatores ligados à personalidade, como a criatividade, a perseverança em tarefas ou a automotivação (PFEIFFER 2015, RENZULLI, 2015, BLUMEN, 2015. ...
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... Varios autores como Blumen (2015); Pfeiffer (2015); López-Aymes y Roger, (2017), entre otros, reconocen que dentro de los conceptos que se relacionan con las altas capacidades intelectuales, está el de talento, el cual hace referencia a personas que muestran rendimientos elevados en áreas muy concretas (académica, matemática, verbal, motora, social, artística, musical, creativa). Es decir, los talentos se caracterizan por altos rendimientos en alguna o algunas áreas específicas, dentro de las que se incluye el deporte. ...
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I am quite confident that the conception of giftedness set forth in this chapter differs significantly from those found in the other chapters of this book in that the conception I advance is no conception at all. By that, I do not mean that I have chosen not to advance a conception of giftedness. Rather, I am actively advancing the idea of no conception of giftedness as a positive development for the field of gifted education. To be clear about what I am advocating, let me state my position unequivocally. I believe that the concept of the gifted child is logically, pragmatically, and-with respect to the consequences of its application in American education-morally untenable and that the aims of the field of gifted education would have a greater likelihood of being realized if we were to dispense with it altogether. Because I realize that this is a radical position for a contributor to this book to take, I want to clarify my motivation and my positionality before advancing my argument. I write as one who considers himself to be a scholar in and of the field of gifted education. I have taught in programs for gifted students, and my doctorate is in this field. I believe that there are individual differences in elementary and secondary students’ school performance that probably derive from a complex of ability and motivational, social, cultural, sociopolitical, and other factors and that these have important educational implications.
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The purpose of this study was to determine the constructs measured by the WISC-IV and the consistency of measurement across large normative and clinical samples. Competing higher order four-and five-factor models were analyzed using the WISC-IV normative sample and clinical subjects. The four-factor solution is the model published with the test manual. In the five-factor model, the POI differentiated into a visual-spatial factor (consisting of Block Design and Picture Completion) and a fluid reasoning factor (consisting of Matrix Reasoning and Picture Concepts, with and Arithmetic). The five-factor solution included Inductive Reasoning (IR), consisting of Matrix Reasoning and Picture Concepts, as a narrow ability subsumed under the FRI (Gf). When all 15 WISC-IV subtests were considered, both four-and five-factor models were suitable and showed close model-data fit. Further, both models generally demonstrated full factorial invariance between clinical and nonclinical samples. Interpretation of the fifth factor is discussed.
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For nearly a century, scholars have sought to understand, measure, and explain giftedness. Succeeding theories and empirical investigations have often built on earlier work, complementing or sometimes clashing over conceptions of talent or contesting the mechanisms of talent development. Some have even suggested that giftedness itself is a misnomer, mistaken for the results of endless practice or social advantage. In surveying the landscape of current knowledge about giftedness and gifted education, this monograph will advance a set of interrelated arguments: The abilities of individuals do matter, particularly their abilities in specific talent domains; different talent domains have different developmental trajectories that vary as to when they start, peak, and end; and opportunities provided by society are crucial at every point in the talent-development process. We argue that society must strive to promote these opportunities but that individuals with talent also have some responsibility for their own growth and development. Furthermore, the research knowledge base indicates that psychosocial variables are determining influences in the successful development of talent. Finally, outstanding achievement or eminence ought to be the chief goal of gifted education. We assert that aspiring to fulfill one’s talents and abilities in the form of transcendent creative contributions will lead to high levels of personal satisfaction and self-actualization as well as produce yet unimaginable scientific, aesthetic, and practical benefits to society. To frame our discussion, we propose a definition of giftedness that we intend to be comprehensive. Giftedness is the manifestation of performance that is clearly at the upper end of the distribution in a talent domain even relative to other high-functioning individuals in that domain. Further, giftedness can be viewed as developmental in that in the beginning stages, potential is the key variable; in later stages, achievement is the measure of giftedness; and in fully developed talents, eminence is the basis on which this label is granted. Psychosocial variables play an essential role in the manifestation of giftedness at every developmental stage. Both cognitive and psychosocial variables are malleable and need to be deliberately cultivated. Our goal here is to provide a definition that is useful across all domains of endeavor and acknowledges several perspectives about giftedness on which there is a fairly broad scientific consensus. Giftedness (a) reflects the values of society; (b) is typically manifested in actual outcomes, especially in adulthood; (c) is specific to domains of endeavor; (d) is the result of the coalescing of biological, pedagogical, psychological, and psychosocial factors; and (e) is relative not just to the ordinary (e.g., a child with exceptional art ability compared to peers) but to the extraordinary (e.g., an artist who revolutionizes a field of art). In this monograph, our goal is to review and summarize what we have learned about giftedness from the literature in psychological science and suggest some directions for the field of gifted education. We begin with a discussion of how giftedness is defined (see above). In the second section, we review the reasons why giftedness is often excluded from major conversations on educational policy, and then offer rebuttals to these arguments. In spite of concerns for the future of innovation in the United States, the education research and policy communities have been generally resistant to addressing academic giftedness in research, policy, and practice. The resistance is derived from the assumption that academically gifted children will be successful no matter what educational environment they are placed in, and because their families are believed to be more highly educated and hold above-average access to human capital wealth. These arguments run counter to psychological science indicating the need for all students to be challenged in their schoolwork and that effort and appropriate educational programing, training and support are required to develop a student’s talents and abilities. In fact, high-ability students in the United States are not faring well on international comparisons. The scores of advanced students in the United States with at least one college-educated parent were lower than the scores of students in 16 other developed countries regardless of parental education level. In the third section, we summarize areas of consensus and controversy in gifted education, using the extant psychological literature to evaluate these positions. Psychological science points to several variables associated with outstanding achievement. The most important of these include general and domain-specific ability, creativity, motivation and mindset, task commitment, passion, interest, opportunity, and chance. Consensus has not been achieved in the field however in four main areas: What are the most important factors that contribute to the acuities or propensities that can serve as signs of potential talent? What are potential barriers to acquiring the “gifted” label? What are the expected outcomes of gifted education? And how should gifted students be educated? In the fourth section, we provide an overview of the major models of giftedness from the giftedness literature. Four models have served as the foundation for programs used in schools in the United States and in other countries. Most of the research associated with these models focuses on the precollegiate and early university years. Other talent-development models described are designed to explain the evolution of talent over time, going beyond the school years into adult eminence (but these have been applied only by out-of-school programs as the basis for educating gifted students). In the fifth section we present methodological challenges to conducting research on gifted populations, including definitions of giftedness and talent that are not standardized, test ceilings that are too low to measure progress or growth, comparison groups that are hard to find for extraordinary individuals, and insufficient training in the use of statistical methods that can address some of these challenges. In the sixth section, we propose a comprehensive model of trajectories of gifted performance from novice to eminence using examples from several domains. This model takes into account when a domain can first be expressed meaningfully—whether in childhood, adolescence, or adulthood. It also takes into account what we currently know about the acuities or propensities that can serve as signs of potential talent. Budding talents are usually recognized, developed, and supported by parents, teachers, and mentors. Those individuals may or may not offer guidance for the talented individual in the psychological strengths and social skills needed to move from one stage of development to the next. We developed the model with the following principles in mind: Abilities matter, domains of talent have varying developmental trajectories, opportunities need to be provided to young people and taken by them as well, psychosocial variables are determining factors in the successful development of talent, and eminence is the aspired outcome of gifted education. In the seventh section, we outline a research agenda for the field. This agenda, presented in the form of research questions, focuses on two central variables associated with the development of talent—opportunity and motivation—and is organized according to the degree to which access to talent development is high or low and whether an individual is highly motivated or not. Finally, in the eighth section, we summarize implications for the field in undertaking our proposed perspectives. These include a shift toward identification of talent within domains, the creation of identification processes based on the developmental trajectories of talent domains, the provision of opportunities along with monitoring for response and commitment on the part of participants, provision of coaching in psychosocial skills, and organization of programs around the tools needed to reach the highest possible levels of creative performance or productivity.
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Although most African Americans are aware of the importance of education, many still continue to suffer from poor school achievement. School failure, high rates of educational dropout, low college enrollment, over-representation in special education classes, and low standardized test scores reflect a pervasive problem of educational underachievement among African Americans. Our work with African American males reveals a positive relationship between cultural mistrust and oppositional cultural attitudes and an inverse relationship with outcome expectations, outcome value, and academic achievement. Cultural mistrust is a significant predictor of academic achievement. As African American males' mistrust increases, their academic outcome expectations decrease. As mistrust increases, oppositional cultural attitudes also increase. Students with high cultural mistrust, oppositional cultural attitudes, and low valuation for educational outcomes have lower expectations for the benefits of their educational outcome. A presence of cultural mistrust and oppositional cultural attitudes clearly undermines educational outcome expectations. These findings have implications for educational research and practice, particularly concerning the education of African American males living in urban environments. Resistant cultural identity or cultural mistrust may be early markers of risk status for educational underachievement. School policies and practices that support identity development may help more African American youth cultivate a strong positive cultural identity that is consistent with academic achievement. African American students who value outcomes associated with education and who exhibit oppositional identities may not anticipate being able to achieve those outcomes through educational means.