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Hothouse kids : the dilemma of the gifted child / Alissa Quart.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Penguin Press, 2006.Description: 260 p. ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 1594200955
Subject(s):
Contents:
The Icarus effect -- The baby genius edutainment complex: the new smart baby products -- The educated infant: classes for an improved childhood -- Child's play of child labor? Preprofessional kids -- Gifted and left behind: enrichment in the public schools -- Gurus of giftedness: intelligence testing and talent by other measures -- Extreme parenting: mothers and fathers as the ultimate instructors -- Youth competitors: youth contests for good and for ill -- Children of God: the teen preaching tournaments -- The prodigy hunters: math whiz kids become Wall Street recruits -- Rethinking giftedness: against perfection.
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 305.9089 Q1 Available 33111004657413
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Critically acclaimed author Alissa Quart breaks the news about an issue that will be of urgent concern to parents and educators as well as adult readers with "gifted" pasts: the dilemma of the gifted child. While studies show that children who are superior learners do benefit from enriched early education, the intensely competitive lives of America's gifted and talented kids do have risks. The pressure can have long-term effects in adult life, from debilitating perfectionism to performance anxiety and lifelong feelings of failure. Quart traveled the country to research the many ways in which the current craze to "produce" gifted kids and prodigies has gone too far. Exploring the overhyped world of baby edutainment and "better baby" early education programs, she takes a hard look at the claims about educational toys and baby sign language. Taking readers inside the ever-more elite world of IQ testing, she reveals the proliferation of new categories of giftedness, including "terrifyingly" and "severely" gifted and examines the true value of such testing. Profiling the explosion of kid competitions-from Scrabble(tm) and chess to child preaching-she uncovers the dangers of such heated pressure to excel so early in life and exposes the prodigy hunters who search science and math fairs for teens to hire for Wall Street investment firms. Critiquing the professionalization of play, she visits with kids who've been identified as prodigies-from a four-year-old painter whose works sell for $300,000, to an eight-year-old professional skateboarder who is backed by nine corporate sponsors. Surveying expert assessments of the necessary role of unstructured play in child development, she warns about the disappearance of recess and the pitfalls of children's overstuffed schedules today. She also profiles the growing divide in opportunities for wealthy kids versus those from middle and lower income families who are losing out as gifted programs at public schools are gutted in the wake of the No Child Left Behind Act. How should parents and educators draw the line? How much enrichment is too much, and how much is too little? What are we doing to our gifted kids? Alissa Quart's penetrating in-depth examination provides a much-needed wake-up call that will spark a national debate about this urgent issue.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [235]-248) and index.

The Icarus effect -- The baby genius edutainment complex: the new smart baby products -- The educated infant: classes for an improved childhood -- Child's play of child labor? Preprofessional kids -- Gifted and left behind: enrichment in the public schools -- Gurus of giftedness: intelligence testing and talent by other measures -- Extreme parenting: mothers and fathers as the ultimate instructors -- Youth competitors: youth contests for good and for ill -- Children of God: the teen preaching tournaments -- The prodigy hunters: math whiz kids become Wall Street recruits -- Rethinking giftedness: against perfection.

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