Gifted, Creative & Talented Learners
Inclusive education includes children at the high end too, and CTET reminds teachers that gifted and talented learners are children with special needs whose needs are easily missed. A gifted child shows exceptionally high ability, often a high IQ, in one or more areas; a talented child shows outstanding skill in a specific field such as music, art, sport or mathematics; a creative child generates many original, unusual ideas (divergent thinking). Common characteristics: they learn quickly and remember a lot, have a large vocabulary and curiosity, ask deep questions, show intense focus on interests, and often prefer the company of older children or adults. The classic trap is that, given ordinary grade-level work, a gifted child becomes bored, restless or disruptive, and may even underachieve or hide their ability to fit in. Identification uses a mix of teacher observation, achievement and performance, and tests, not a single number. The two main strategies are enrichment (giving broader, deeper, more challenging work at the same grade, projects, open-ended problems, research) and acceleration (letting the child move faster, skip a grade, or take advanced material early). The inclusive teacher differentiates, adjusting the content, process or product so the gifted child is genuinely challenged, while still belonging to the regular class. The aim is to prevent boredom and underachievement and to nurture potential.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Four ways of placing children with special needs
| Segregation | Children with disabilities taught SEPARATELY in special schools |
|---|---|
| Integration / Mainstreaming | Child placed in regular school but must ADJUST to fit it |
| Inclusion | Regular school ADAPTS itself to fit every child; all learn together |
| RPwD Act 2016 | 21 disabilities; right to free education ages 6-18; reasonable accommodation |
Specific Learning Disabilities (NOT low intelligence)
| Dyslexia | Difficulty with READING (decoding words, spelling) |
|---|---|
| Dyscalculia | Difficulty with MATHS (numbers, calculation) |
| Dysgraphia | Difficulty with WRITING (handwriting, letter formation) |
| Key fact | SLDs occur in children of average or above-average intelligence |