L'autore:
Shane N. Phillipson was a Mathematics and Science teacher for many years before obtaining his Ph.D. in gifted education from Flinders University in South Australia. His Ph.D. thesis won the International Award (1999-2000) for best thesis by the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC) in the UK. Before taking his current appointment, he was a lecturer in gifted education at The University of New England, Australia. Today, he teaches educational psychology and gifted education in Hong Kong and his research interests include educational psychology in cross-cultural contexts, creativity and mathematical thinking, particularly for high ability students. His current research project is an application of modern measurment theory and seeks to identify patterns of achievement in Mathematics in Hong Kong primary and secondary students.
Maria Therese McCann obtained her Ph.D. in Gifted Education from The University of Adelaide, and she is the Co-ordinator of all graduate programs in Gifted Education at Flinders University of South Australia. She holds very senior positions on national and international bodies and is recognized as an expert in the fields of the design of enrichment programs and identifying giftedness, particularly through creativity, visual thinking ability and its links with IQ. Maria was granted an $80,000 Telstra Foundation Award (2004 – 2006) to survey provisions for gifted students in Australia and to design creativity/visual thinking identification and profiling instruments suitable for students from a range of social and cultural groups. Nationally, Maria has served as the President of the Australian Association for the Education of the Gifted and Talented and has also served as the President of the Asia-Pacific Federation of the World Council for Gifted and Talented Children. In 2005 she was elected to the position of Vice-President of the World Council for Gifted and Talented Children. Since August 2005, Maria has been the Editor of the World Council journal, Gifted and Talented International.
Contenuti:
Contents: Preface. Foreword. S.N. Phillipson, A Framework for the Study of Sociocultural Perspectives of Giftedness. J. Chan, Giftedness and China’s Confucian Heritage. A. Ziegler, H. Stoeger, The Germanic View of Giftedness. U. Anuruthwong, Thai Conceptions of Giftedness. H. Begay, C.J. Maker, When Geniuses Fail—Na-Dene’ (Navajo) Conception of Giftedness in the Eyes of the Holy Deities. B. Wong-Fernandez, Ma. A. Bustos-Orosa, Conceptions of Giftedness Among Tagalog-Speaking Filipinos. K. Gibson, W. Vialle, The Australian Aboriginal View of Giftedness. E. Mpofu, C. Ngara, E. Gudyanga, Constructions of Giftedness Among the Shona of Central-Southern Africa. S. Phillipson, Towards an Understanding of a Malay Conception of Giftedness. U. Sak, Giftedness and the Turkish Culture. J. Šefer, Slavic Conceptions of Giftedness and Creativity. N. Matsumura, Giftedness in the Culture of Japan. S.B. Kaufman, R.J. Sternberg, Giftedness in the Euro-American Culture. M. McCann, Such Is Life …in the Land Down Under: Conceptions of Giftedness in Australia. J. Campbell, D. Eyre, The English Model of Gifted and Talented Education: Policy, Context, and Challenges. S.N. Phillipson, M. McCann, Meta-Theoretical Conceptions of Giftedness.
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