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Teased by peers, persecuted by the press, prodded by pushy parents and dogged by expectations of greatness, prodigies are still seen as wondrous curiosities
[3]
Intelligent people are at less risk of suffering severe mental illness, according to a new study by psychiatrists in the UK. This substantiates the conclusions of previous research on the same topic. Of course, what this suggests also is that some of the same genetic and brain differences that lead to mental illness may also cause lower IQ (again, in some but not all people) - which is a more logical explanation of the correlation of low IQ and mental illness.
A high IQ can lessen the severity of disorders such as depression and schizophrenia, say researchers from Cambridge University.
"It has been known for some time that intelligence can protect you against dementia and the consequences of head injury," said a university spokeswoman.
Creative, talented and gifted children, broadly defined as the top 16% of the bell curve (Silverman, 2002a), often find few programs, elusive funding and few specially-trained professionals. One reason gifted children have special needs is that they develop asynchronously, or unevenly. A child may soar in his or her ability to intellectually comprehend matters far exceeding their chronological age, while the necessary development has yet to occur as to enable them to process the same matter emotionally.2
It is exacerbated by the fact that, in most school systems, identification of the gifted, and for that matter, learning disabilities, does not occur until third grade... many gifted children have learned that, in order to gain social acceptance, it is best to hide their gifts or to “dumb down”.
Of all the prodigies for which there are records, his was probably the most powerful intellect of all. And yet it all came to nothing. He soon gave up his position as a professor, and for the rest of his life wandered from one menial job to another. His experiences as a child prodigy had proven so painful that he decided for the rest of his life to shun public exposure at all costs. Henceforth, he denied his gifts, refused to think about mathematics, and above all refused to perform as he had been made to do as a child. 3
Originally posted by skeptic1
People with higher IQs do not lack mental abilities.
People with higher IQs do not have a mental handicap that keeps them from living a normal life or holding down a job.
People with higher IQs do not mental problems that put them at a disadvantage....quite the opposite.
People with higher IQs do not have recognized disabilities due to IQ alone.
People with higher IQs are not legally incapable or legally disqualified from anything based on IQ alone.
Question 1: Does having poor social skills put you at a disadvantage in life?
Question 2: Would you want to marry someone who could not properly express themselves or reciprocate feelings?
Question 3: Considering Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs*, do you believe that people of high IQs can simply skip the “Friendship, family, sexual intimacy” step and move up the pyramid?
[3]
Research shows that emotional intelligence may actually be significantly more important than cognitive ability and technical expertise combined. In fact, some studies indicate that EQ is more than twice as important as standard IQ abilities.
… generally speaking, a leadership pattern will not form--or it will break up--when a discrepancy of more than about 30 points of IQ comes to exist between leader and led.
Children who rise above 170 IQ are liable to regard school with indifference or with positive dislike, for they find nothing in the work to absorb their interest.
Some of them are lost to usefulness through spreading their available time and energy over such a wide array of projects that nothing can be finished or done perfectly.
At the extremely high levels of 180 or 190 IQ, the problem of friendships is difficult indeed, and the younger the person the more difficult it is.
But those of 170 IQ and beyond are too intelligent to be understood by the general run of persons with whom they make contact. They are too infrequent to find congenial companions. They have to contend with loneliness and personal isolation from their contemporaries throughout the period of their immaturity. To what extent these patterns become fixed, we cannot yet tell.
Originally posted by skeptic1
They need a social circle of friends.
They need a loving and nurturing family.
They need training in social skills.
They need training in emotional displays and responses.
They need the chance to learn and grow and express their gifts.
They need what every other child needs. They are gifted.....not disabled.
1. lack of adequate power, strength, or physical or mental ability; incapacity.
Socratic Question #1: Would you say that the natural inability to think on the same level as most other people is a disability?
[1]
Most individuals' I.Q. scores will change little over time, indicating that the test has managed to pinpoint some aspects of a person's "fixed" intelligence -- mind-brain abilities that are inherently a part of that individual and are unlikely to be significantly improved or degraded over time. These basic skills include apprehending, scanning, retrieving and responding to stimuli. The faster one's brain can perform these tasks, the higher one's I.Q. score will be.
I.Q. stability merely means that, among children who are exposed to roughly equal educational resources, overall rankings of academic intelligence (and academic success) are unlikely to change much over time. If we rank 100 people in 3rd grade according to academic performance, and then wait eight years and rank that same group in 11th grade, the rankings won't be exactly the same but will strongly resemble one another.
[2]
Freeman (1979) contrasted a "High IQ" group (IQs of 141-170, mean 155) with a "Moderate IQ" group (IQs of 97-140, mean 120) on both parent- and child-report measures of adjustment. Results were generally favorable in both groups, and there was little indication that the High IQ group was less well adjusted.
Janos (1983) compared 32 "highly gifted" children (IQs above 164) and 49 "moderately gifted" (IQs of 120-140) on several standard adjustment measures. On Achenbach and Edelbrock's Child Behavior Checklist, there were not significant differences between groups. Interestingly, even within the highly gifted group, higher IQs were associated with better adjustment on the Behavior Problems subscale (r = -.518).
You will not find many with low intelligence who find it difficult to concentrate on one task because they are too good at too many things. You will not find many with low intelligence who cannot find companions because no one can relate to the things that they think about. You will not find many with low intelligence who are forced to live in solitude as children and find ways to entertain themselves.
Originally posted by MemoryShock
The topic for this debate is “A Very High IQ Should Be Considered A Disability."
Freeman (1979) contrasted a "High IQ" group (IQs of 141-170, mean 155) with a "Moderate IQ" group (IQs of 97-140, mean 120) on both parent- and child-report measures of adjustment. Results were generally favorable in both groups, and there was little indication that the High IQ group was less well adjusted.
Originally posted by skeptic1
These gifted people do not need to be dumbed down, and they do not need to be treated like they have a disability.
He took his time to ponder and his speech was not fluent. His learning disabilities may have been linked to dyslexia. The Einsteins had even feared that their son was retarded.
Through his schooling, Hawking was a good, but not exceptionally brilliant, student.
Newton's childhood was anything but happy, and throughout his life he verged on emotional collapse, occasionally falling into violent and vindictive attacks against friend and foe alike.
In the late 1930s, Dr. Leta Hollingworth's groundbreaking research, which led to the publication of Children Above 180 IQ (1942), suggested that there is a group of people with extremely high intelligence who also have much in common and who are as different from people at the 98th percentile in IQ as people at that level are from the norm.
Entry test scores are 1 in 30,000 (Mensa test entry is 1 in 50).
Originally posted by skeptic1
People with high IQs aren't disabled because they have more. They can choose to lack social skills. They can choose to lack social ties, family ties, and a group of friends.
My opponent also conveniently dodged the Socratic Question. I did not ask it in the context of the debate question. All I asked, again, was, “would you say that the natural inability to think on the same level as most other people is a disability?”
I simply mean that they should be assimilated into groups of people like them, trained further on EQ than most students, be challenged in the correct areas, and given the ability to focus.
For anyone out there who has social issues, high IQ or not, I want you to remember that my opponent believes that it was your choice to not be liked by people. It was your choice and your failure to learn that caused you to not be accepted.
Is she right? Perhaps, but it was not your fault. Society let you down, just like they are letting down those with high IQs who cannot relate to others.
Look, I have presented plenty of evidence here.
Look, we all went to high school. We all remember the groups. It is my opinion that not only are they grouped by the activities they perform in and their personalities, but that IQ plays an important role in whether or not people fit in.
It is unfortunate that more work is not done with those who have superior IQs. Whether you are a genius, or just a bit above average, it is a shame that you have to struggle to communicate with average people simply because everyone assumes you should be able to.
Instead of putting everyone into a giant mixing bowl and hoping it spits everyone out in the right direction, we should be assessing our children at a young age and treating each one of them for their various disabilities. Whether that disability is trouble reading, communicating, understanding body language, working out math problems, or any other common issue, we should focus on our student's strong points, and bolster their weak points as much as possible.
People are not all the same, and it only makes sense that they would communicate differently. Treating them all the same makes no sense, and it explains many of the problems that we have today in society.