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Weâve all seen it. The student staring vacantly at the wall while the rest of the class is bustling. The brilliant kid whose worksheet is meticulously half-finished. The teenager who responds to a stimulating question with nothing but a shrug.
Itâs easy to react to this. Itâs easy to label it. Word...
As educators, weâve all had that one learner.
The one who can critique a Shakespearean sonnet or solve a multi-step calculus problem in their head, but then completely loses their cool because they canât find their favorite highlighter. Or the learner who can lead a class discussion on philosophy b...
If youâve worked with gifted learners for any length of time, youâve probably experienced this moment.
A learner says something incredibly insightful.
Maybe they connect ideas in a way that surprises everyone in the room.
Maybe they ask a question that stops the entire class.
And then five minutes...
Thereâs something Iâve noticed over and over again in really good classrooms.
The planning is solid.
The learning targets are clear.
The tasks are thoughtfully designed.
And yet, some of the most interesting minds disengage. Not because they donât care. Not because they arenât capable. But because...
One of the things that keeps becoming clearer to me the longer I do this work is how much of giftedness lives outside of what we measure.
We collect scores.
We track benchmarks.
We make decisions based on spreadsheets.
And yet, in real classrooms, we all know learners whose minds donât quite fit w...
Green Flags and Red Flags: How to Read Struggle in Gifted Learners
One of the hardest parts of supporting gifted learners is knowing what to do with their struggle.
And, often, when we see struggle, we assume something is wrong...that they don't understand. But, what if struggle is actually a sign...
When we talk about or think about gifted learners, a lot of us default to the same ideas: neat notebooks, quick work, correct answers, polished products. But hereâs the thing Iâve learned over years of classroom experience and working with educators all over the countryâŚthose behaviors tell us more ...
Every year around this time, we talk about spreading kindness, joy, and holiday cheer.
But in gifted education, thereâs another kind of cheer our learners desperately need, one that lasts long after December.
Gifted cheer isnât about decorations or seasonal activities.
Itâs about showing up loudly...
When we give learners choice, time, and true autonomy to explore what they care about, something powerful begins to happen. Gifted behaviors start to reveal themselves in ways traditional instruction doesnât always allow.
Genius Hour isnât just a creative break or a once-a-week passion project. At ...
One of the things I love most about Genius Hour is the freedom it gives learners to explore their passions. But sometimes, that same freedom can feel overwhelming. It can feel like too many directions and not enough focus. Iâve found that creative constraints can actually make the process more mean...
Most Genius Hour projects start with excitement â sticky notes of ideas, students buzzing about what theyâll build or research. But a few weeks in, the energy fades. Why? Because too often, we stop at what theyâll do, and skip over why it matters.
Genius Hour isnât just about giving learners time t...
âGifted learners donât need more work⌠they need meaningful work.â
If youâve ever heard, âThey finished early, what should they do next?â, youâre not alone. Many educators face the same challenge: keeping gifted learners engaged when theyâve already mastered the material.
But hereâs the trap, givi...
Join a free online community just for gifted educators, hosted by me, Andi McNair.
A Meaningful Mess CommunityÂ
Monthly webinars | Quarterly challenges | Resources for real classrooms | No cost to join