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Free ISGAA Memberships!
Get one year of membership FREE when just two of your friends join ISGAA. Have them email treasurer@isgaa.org with your name before they sign up and we'll credit your paypal account!
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International Society for Gifted Adults and Advocates
Our Mission and Values
Welcome to the ISGAA!
ISGAA is a nonprofit society established for the purposes of:
forming a community of gifted people around the globe
advancing knowledge and understanding of giftedness
supporting the constructive development of high potential
Our mission is to provide an online association and resource center for gifted adults, teens, and their advocates to learn from experts and peers, collaborate, and share information and viewpoints beyond national, political, religious, and ethnic boundaries. In doing so, we ultimately strive to contribute to the betterment of humankind and the world at large.
We are here for YOU!
As we continue to grow, members will have increasing access to:
A growing knowledgebase of information about giftedness
Discussions and intellectual exchanges
Online expert seminars
Opportunities for Gifted leadership development
Networking with others of similar interests
Schedules for gatherings, conferences, seminars, and activities
Links to other useful sites
We will grow with your participation so get involved!
Plans for future ISGAA development include the founding of certified local chapters, publications and book reviews, as well as scholarships for Gifted pursuits, research, and international collaborations.
We need your active participation to meet your needs and those of other gifted adults worldwide!
If you can help in any of the areas below send an email to help-out@isgaa.org.
Become a forum Moderator and/or enlist a gifted teen you know to become one.
Provide Content in one or more topic areas - any member can submit articles for posting on the website.
Know many gifted people in your area? Form a Local Chapter and/or be a Membership Coordinator.
Are you bi- or multi-lingual? Help us bring ISGAA to others in their native language. Translators needed for all languages except Spanish.
Are you a Planner? Creative? Help us organize conferences and events.
Nothing happens without money. If you have Fundraising Skills and a desire to change the world let us know!
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Gifted Teenagers Welcome!
Gifted teens do grow up. Will they be ready?
To prepare them for adulthood, ISGAA brings gifted teenagers, their parents, and adults together to form an international community for their support, advancement, and the betterment of society by providing education, scientific research, and literature related to giftedness. In addition, we will provide support to friends, families, educators, and advocates because they are such a vital part of the gifted teenager's life. This website is the first of many steps ISGAA will take to facilitate these kinds of interactions.
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Social and Emotional: Is Intellect an Albatross?
Posted by cbell4 on Monday, February 12 @ 18:10:52 PST (207 reads)
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Arianna Huffington is described by her friend and author Sugar Rautbord [in a Vanity Fair article] as "probably one of the most intellectually seductive human beings on the face of the planet.
"She has such a powerful brain, and she exudes an intellectuality that is almost sexual."
Does that sort of exceptional mind have potential negative consequences, particularly for women?
In her controversial book Are Men Necessary? Maureen Dowd claims, "If there's one thing men fear it's a woman who uses her critical faculties."
Pretending to be less capable, less intelligent is a ploy that has probably been used by many gifted women. When she began directing in the forties, Ida Lupino sometimes claimed not to know the best way to line up a shot or specify a line reading, explaining "Men hate bossy women. Sometimes I pretend to know less than I do."
Other women in the arts, such as Barbra Streisand, have endured widespread negative reactions to expressing their intellectual and creative abilities.
A specialist in psychological issues facing gifted people, Dr. Linda Silverman notes in one of her books: "Because of their enhanced ability to perceive social cues and their early conditioning about the critical importance of social acceptance, gifted girls are much more adept than gifted boys at imitation. They fit in by pretending to be less capable than they really are, disappearing into the crowd."
Jane Austen (1775-1817) cautioned in her novel Northanger Abbey, "To come with a well-informed mind is to come with an inability of administering to the vanity of others... A woman, especially, if she
have the misfortune of knowing anything, should conceal it as well as she can."
Huffington, like many precocious girls earlier in their lives, spent most of her time alone, reading, nurturing her intelligence.
And that was a choice, encouraged by her mother, to follow a joyful passion. It was not, apparently, a deprivation of relationships. Now, as an adult, she continues to pursue a wide variety of interests,
especially her blog The Huffington Post, and is a prominent leader, media personality and friend of a wide range of other accomplished men and women in politics, the arts and media.
Dowd wrote the supposed "threat" to men by intelligent women is confirmed by research studies showing lowered expectations for marriage with an increasing intelligence of women.
But those studies lead to faulty conclusions, according to a Women's eNews article ["Why Dowd Doesn't Know..."], by Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett. They note that men "do not reject achieving women. Quite the opposite. Sociologist Valerie Oppenheimer of University of California, Berkeley reports that today men are choosing as mates women who have completed their education. The more education a woman has, the more likely she is to marry."
But there are other issues than relationships for highly intelligent women.
Sally M. Reis, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Connecticut and Principal Investigator of The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented, notes in her article "Internal barriers..." that high potential and multiple interests, multipotentiality can benefit many women, but others "often cannot find their niche, make it on their own, or choose a vocational path... they commit to a career too quickly in order to reduce tensions caused by a vast array of competing options... or may have career choices externally imposed on them by their parents or teachers."
Continued on original article
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Educators of the Gifted: The 2e (twice exceptional) Person
Posted by cbell4 on Tuesday, November 28 @ 09:42:16 PST (271 reads)
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The twice-exceptional (2e) demonstrate a definite discrepancy between their potential and their actual performance. This discrepancy is due to some kind of learning disability including, but not limited to, ADD, ADHD, Asperger’s Syndrome, Autism, Dyslexia, Dysgraphia (difficulty writing), Dyscalculia (difficulty with math), Sensory Integration Dysfunction (sensory processing abnormalities), and other issues that interfere with the 'normal' learning process.
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General Information: Consult Directly With Dr. Jacobsen!!
Posted by cbell4 on Tuesday, October 17 @ 13:42:31 PDT (335 reads)
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Dr. Jacobsen has been conducting consultations with gifted adults and parents of gifted youngsters with great success worldwide since 2000. If you are interested in consulting services "straight from the expert", please contact her at:
mjacobsen@isgaa.org
She or her assistant will promptly contact you with more information.
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A quote to consider about authenticity...
Posted by CBell4 on Tuesday, November 01 @ 17:30:45 PST (481 reads)
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"...knowing of self is moved not only by a history of being socially rewarded in particular ways for its activities, but also by its own inner logic, by its own sense of integrity and continuity, its own demand for meaning and sense...
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Gifted Online Marketplace
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