ABSTRACT

This volume presents fascinating new theoretical perspectives and empirical findings on the life-span development of talent. It shows how talents are the result of the acquisition of a sequence of skills and how the acquisition of these skills is facilitated by changes in the individual's environment. It explores to what degree the development of high intelligence or achievement is similar to the development of specific domains such as personality, morality, painting, musical performance, or professional skills. It questions whether the development of talent observed for specific groups is similar to individual cases and how the different numbers of highly talented women and men in several domains are to be explained.

part 1|40 pages

Conceptual Perspectives on the Development of Talent

chapter 2|24 pages

Slumbering Talents

Where do they Reside?

part 2|59 pages

Intellectual Giftedness

part 3|99 pages

Specific Talents

chapter 5|21 pages

The Gifted Personality

Resilient Children and Adolescents, their Adjustment and their Relationships

chapter 6|25 pages

The Morality Paradox

Choosing not to be Moral as a Component of Moral Excellence

chapter 7|16 pages

Talent for Development

Responding to Contextual Promises

chapter 8|17 pages

Successful Achievement in Mathematics

China and the United States

part 4|121 pages

Supporting the Development of Talent

chapter 10|27 pages

Gifted Infants

What Kinds of Support do they Need?

chapter 11|18 pages

Teaching for Talent

Lessons from the Research

chapter 12|28 pages

The Juilliard Model for Developing Young Adolescent Performers

An Educational Prototype

chapter 13|22 pages

Talent and Self-Narrative

The Survival of an Underachieving Adolescent

chapter 14|23 pages

Support for University Students

Individual and Social Factors