NAGC works to support those who enhance the growth and development of gifted and talented children through education, advocacy, community building, and research
Talk to your child and her teacher. It is important to work with your child while simultaneously helping the school find appropriate options to provide supportive and stimulating learning opportunities. Answers to the following questions can point you to possible solutions.
Learn how to work with your child's teacher
Find relevant topics in Connecting for High Potential, a newsletter exploring gifted issues from the parents' and teachers' perspective
Ford, D.Y. (2011). Reversing underachievement among gifted black students. Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
Trail, B.A. (2011). Twice-exceptional gifted children: Understanding, teaching, and counseling gifted students. Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
Siegle, D. (2013). The underachieving gifted child: Recognizing, understanding, and reversing underachievement. Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
Ritchotte, J. A. (2010, June). Reversing gifted underachievement: The intervention that set one student on the path to success. Parenting for High Potential, 21-26.
ERIC Digest article "Underachieving Gifted Students" includes the role of the family in reversing the problem.
Research Article: Rubenstein, L.D., Siegle, D. Introduction to the special issue: Understanding and promoting motivation in gifted students, Psychology in the Schools (49)7. Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company (requires subscription of purchase of article)