|


Don't forget to do your
Back-to-School shopping through Hoagies' Page affiliates!
Visit
Shop Hoagies'
Page to click on our affiliate links before you shop.
Thanks for your support!
Simple solution: Click and drag
Shop Hoagies'
Page link to your browser toolbar... (IE users should "turn on"
your Links toolbar before you drag the link)
Then click on
Shop Hoagies'
Page before you do your internet shopping. Voila! You're
supporting Hoagies' Page.
Donations
Your donations keep Hoagies' Gifted Education Page on-line. 13 people have
donated in 2008 so far....
| |
Technologically Gifted
"When he was tested at the age of 5, instead of drawing a person, M
drew a diode circuit and a transformer with a built-in plug. In his Sentence
Completion test, M said he thinks most about "electronic circuits,"
dreams of "electronic circuits," hates when his brother gets into
his electronics and destroys them, is unhappy sometimes when his circuits
dont work, that his mother and father help him with electronics, and when
he gets older hes going to be "somebody who does a lot of
electronics." Imagine being Ms teacher and trying to teach him
spelling!" Linda Kreger Silverman,
Technical
Wizards (requires Adobe Reader)
- Asperger's
and IT: Dark secret or open secret? by Tracy Mayor, in Computerworld
- Asperger's Syndrome has been a part of IT for as long as there's been IT.
So why aren't we doing better by the Aspies among us?
- Identifying
students with gifts and talents in technology by Del Siegle, in
Gifted Child Today
- Young minds are full of promise and creativity. Many educators have chosen
to capitalize on these characteristics by devising curricula based on the
process of inventing
-
Inventive
Differentiation by Julie Rossbach
- Young minds are full of promise and creativity. Many educators have chosen
to capitalize on these characteristics by devising curricula based on the
process of inventing
- Meet
the Whiz Kids: 10 Overachievers Under 21 by Dan Tyman, PC World
- They're the next generation of entrepreneurs, inventors and innovators —
and not one of them is old enough to buy beer. The moral?
There's more than one way to be successful!
- A
Quiet Crisis is Clouding the Future of R&D by Joseph Renzulli, Education Week
- What about support for the highly gifted, creative, and innovative young
people whose ideas will create the products and jobs that start the wheels
of productivity turning?
- Student
Interest in Computer Science Plummets by Andrea L. Foster, The Chronicle
of Higher Education
- The six-step invention process described is one that inventors typically
utilize when creating and producing inventions
- Technical
Wizards by Linda Kreger Silverman
- Some of the children we are least likely to understand, or deal with
effectively in the schools, are those who are best suited to our
technological future (requires Adobe Reader)
- Teen
Helps Build Firefox Web Browser by John Pain, myway
- Ross, now 19, a sophomore computer science major at Stanford University,
has an even more impressive resume than most of his peers. Before graduating
high school, he helped develop Firefox. Colleagues who worked with Ross
only online were surprised when they met him to find "a scrawny 15-year-old
kid,"...
Last updated
August 04, 2008
|