Analysing Educational Interventions with Gifted Students. Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- The quantity of learning and teaching tasks.
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- The most demanding expectations in terms of quality.
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- The teaching style and its guiding and leadership role.
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- Promotion of cooperation and responsibility.
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- Promotion of social values and behaviour.
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- What kind of educational interventions are being developed with con high abilities/gifted students?
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- What perceptions do high abilities/gifted students have about educational measures adopted by schools?
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- What degree of methodological quality shows the evidence on intervention research for high abilities/gifted students?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Procedures
2.2. Selection Criteria
3. Results
3.1. Identification of the Selected Publications
3.2. Description of the Articles Included
3.3. Quality of the Articles Included
4. Discussion
“a process of collection, analysis and evaluation of relevant information about the different elements involved in the teaching and learning process, in order to identify the educational needs of certain students who present or may present imbalances in their personal and/or academic development, and to base and specify decisions regarding the curricular proposal and the type of help they may need in order to progress in the development of different abilities” (p. 105).
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author | Year | Purpose | Design | Participants | Intervention |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dare et al. | 2021 | examine how gifted students conceptualized beliefs about grade-based acceleration in inclusive schools | Group concept mapping approach. Mixed method. 2 groups | 40 | Grade-level acceleration vs. non grade-level acceleration |
Dare et al. | 2020 | Describe the experiences of students who moved into classes with older classmates and explore their attitudes towards grade-based acceleration. | Phenomenological approach. Qualitative. One group. | 11 | Grade-level acceleration |
Ülger et al. | 2020 | Examine the impact of differentiated inquiry based science lesson modules for gifted students on the students’ scientific process skills (SPS). | Mixed method. Single group pre-test/post-test design | 16 | Based science lesson modules for gifted students on the students’ scientific process skills (SPS). |
De Oliveira et al. | 2020 | Describe and compare the social skills, behavioral problems, and academic competence of students with High Abilities/Giftedness (HA/G): (1) according to their own account, before and after a program on social skills | Quantitative. Pre-test/post-test design. 2 EG. | 9 HA/G, 8 teachers and 8 parents/guardians | THS Social Skills Training Programme |
Yu & Jen | 2020 | Cultivate teachers’ capacity to teach new technology, to enhance K–12 high-ability students’ interests and understanding of basic science, and to produce innovations in future industrial and technological development. | Quantitative. Pre-test/post-test design. One group. | 28 high-ability students | Nanotechnology enrichment program |
Yoon et al. | 2020 | Design and explore the effects of an enrichment program on the leadership, attitude, and motivation of ethnic minority gifted and talented students who want to be scientists and engineers in the future | Mixed: Pre-test/post-test, daily reports and interviews. One group. | 10 gifted and talented students | Youth Science and Technology Leadership Camp (YSTLC) program. |
Dare et al. | 2019 | Explored 26 high-ability students’ beliefs about important considerations in grade-based acceleration | Mixed mehod. One group. | 17 | Group concept mapping activities |
García-Perales et al. | 2019 | Analysing the impact of an enrichment programme on children’s adjustment and performance | Quantitative. Pre-test/post-test design: 1 EG and 2 CG | 45 (12gifted students and 33 non gifted students) | An enrichment program imparted to a group of students with high intellectual abilities during the academic year 2017/18 over three weekly sessions during school hours, where emerging technologies were an important key in how it was delivered. |
Martín-Lobo et al. | 2018 | This research focus on to provide a project for gifted students with enrichment programs that can be performed at the school level. | Quantitative. Pre-test/post-test design: 6 EG | 37 | Expanded Curriculum, Creative Literature, Scientific World, Creative Mathematics, Art and Culture and Cooperation programs. |
Golle et al. | 2016 | It presents the results of an HCAP extracurricular enrichment programme in which a basic strategy was implemented in German primary schools. | Quantitative. Pre-test/post-test design: EG and CG | Third-grade students attending the enrichment program (N = 423) and nonattending third-grade students (N = 2328) | HCAP extracurricular enrichment programme |
Robertson et al. | 2016 | This article reports on a study that developed and field tested a procedural guide for implementation of the RtI model with gifted students. | Mixed method. One group. | 13 gifted and RtI experts | Response to Intervention (RtI) model in which gifted students are provided with additional curricular material adapted to their level. |
Kahveci et al. | 2015 | Explore individual gifted and talented student views on a differentiated social studies curriculum unit, namely, luckily it is present (good to have it) | Qualitative research methods. One group. | 12 | Two-month implementation of differentiated social studies instruction |
Doobay et al. | 2014 | Provide an empirical account of the intellectual, adaptive, and psychosocial functioning of high ability youth with and without ASD | Quantitative. Post design. One CG and EG. | 82 (41 high abilities and ASD students and 41 high abilities students) | Completed a psychoeducational evaluation to assist with academic planning that included measures of cognitive, academic, and psychosocial functioning |
Van Der Meulen et al. | 2013 | To investigate whether DWS decreases children’s social–emotional and behavior problems and parents’ stress, and improves children’s self-concept, enjoyment at school, and academic achievement | Quantitative. Pre-post design. One group. | 89 | A pullout program, the ‘‘Day a Week School’’ (DWS) |
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García-Martínez, I.; Gutiérrez Cáceres, R.; Luque de la Rosa, A.; León, S.P. Analysing Educational Interventions with Gifted Students. Systematic Review. Children 2021, 8, 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050365
García-Martínez I, Gutiérrez Cáceres R, Luque de la Rosa A, León SP. Analysing Educational Interventions with Gifted Students. Systematic Review. Children. 2021; 8(5):365. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050365
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Martínez, Inmaculada, Rafaela Gutiérrez Cáceres, Antonio Luque de la Rosa, and Samuel P. León. 2021. "Analysing Educational Interventions with Gifted Students. Systematic Review" Children 8, no. 5: 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050365
APA StyleGarcía-Martínez, I., Gutiérrez Cáceres, R., Luque de la Rosa, A., & León, S. P. (2021). Analysing Educational Interventions with Gifted Students. Systematic Review. Children, 8(5), 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050365