Publication | Closed Access
A Comparison of Gifted Underachievers and Gifted High Achievers
107
Citations
9
References
1993
Year
GiftednessEducational AttainmentEducational PsychologyEducationPsychologyUnderachieving ChildExceptional ChildPsychology Of GiftednessTalent DevelopmentComposite ScoreSocial SkillsStudent SuccessGiftedness DevelopmentEducational TestingEducational LeadershipEducational StatisticsGifted UnderachieversAdult GiftednessPerformance StudiesSpecial EducationEducational AssessmentNational Sample
The purpose of this study was to compare a national sample of gifted underachievers and gifted high achievers on a number of characteristics. Giftedness was measured as a composite score at or above the 95th percentile on the American College Testing Program (ACT). Underachievement was defined as reporting a high school grade-point average of ≤2.25 (on a 4.00 scale), and high achievement was defined as reporting a grade-point average of ≥3.75 (on a 4.00 scale). Participants for this study were 30,604 high school juniors and seniors: gifted underachievers n=257; gifted high achievers n=30,347. The underachievers generally had lower scores on the ACT and less extensive out-of-class accomplishments. Over 90% of the underachievers were Caucasian males. Comparisons are provided on a number of nonacademic variables between underachievers and high achievers.
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