Washington
Post
May
16, 2006
"Gifted and
Tormented Academic Stars Often Bullied -- and More Likely to
Suffer
Emotionally as a Result"
by Sandra G. Boodman.
More than two-thirds of academically talented eighth-graders
say they have been bullied at school and nearly one-third harbored
violent thoughts as a result, according to a study believed to be
the first to examine the prevalence and impact of bullying in a
group some experts regard as particularly vulnerable.
The study -- published in the current issue of Gifted Child
Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal -- involved 432 students in 11
states, including Maryland, who had been identified by their
school systems as gifted. Lead author Jean Sunde Peterson, an
associate professor of educational studies at Purdue University,
said she sought to explore whetherharassing behavior affected such
children differently.
"All children are affected adversely by bullying, but
gifted children differ from other children in significant ways,
and what they experience may be qualitatively different,"
said Peterson, whose study was conducted with doctoral candidate
Karen Ray. "It is important to remember that although
cognitively these children are advanced, physically, socially and
emotionally they may not be."
In the view of Peterson and some other experts, the personality
traits and interests of many gifted children may make them targets
of bullying by their classmates. At the same time, she added,
gifted children may be more susceptible to the emotional damage
that bullying can inflict. Some studies have found that gifted
children, especially those with high verbal aptitude, may be more
sensitive than their less-gifted peers and to worry more about
their social standing.
Because the Purdue study did not contain a control group and
was not designed as a comparative study, it is impossible to
determine whether the bullying that gifted children described
differs in quality or quantity from that experienced by their
peers. Other studies have found that 60 to 90 percent of
schoolchildren say they were bullied and 20 percent say they
bullied someone else. "This study is a great start and the
tip of the iceberg," said developmental psychologist Susan
Limber, an associate professor of psychology at Clemson University
in South Carolina and an expert on bullying prevention.
Sylvia Rimm, a clinical professor of psychiatry and pediatrics
at Case School of Medicine in Cleveland, said Peterson's findings
echo what she hears in her practice. "Regular kids get
bullied, too, but gifted kids are bullied based on their school
performance, which makes the child's strength into a
weakness" and a potential source of shame, said Rimm.
Peterson said that one of her most alarming findings involved
the frequency of violent thoughts. By eighth grade approximately
37 percent of boys and 23 percent of girls reported having
unspecified violent thoughts in response to being bullied; 11
percent said they had resorted to violence to cope with the
problem, often by striking a classmate.
Goad to Violence The link between bullying and school violence
has attracted increasing attention since the 1999 rampage at
Colorado's Columbine High School. That year, two shotgun-wielding
students, both of whom Peterson said had been identified as gifted
and who had been bullied for years, killed 13 people, wounded 24
and then committed suicide. A year later an analysis by officials
at the U.S. Secret Service of 37 premeditated school shootings
found that bullying, which some of the shooters described "in
terms that approached torment," played a major role in more
than two-thirds of the attacks. In the last two months,
Columbine-style plots involving students as young as 12 have been
disrupted in more than half a dozen American communities, from
North Pole, Alaska, to Atco, N.J. Bullying was cited as a motive
in some of these incidents, but it is unclear how many of the
suspected conspirators would be considered academically
precocious.
Jaysen Kettl, who was convicted of conspiracy after his plan to
murder 20 classmates, teachers and administrators at Vidor High
School in Vidor, Tex., was foiled in 2003, told the Houston
Chronicle in an
interview last March that classmates began bullying him when he
left a gifted program in eighth grade. Kettl, who was 17 at the
time of his arrest, was charged as an adult and is serving a
four-year prison term.
Often, psychologists say, gifted children who are bullied turn
their rage and despair inward. Among them was J. Daniel Scruggs of
Meriden, Conn., a slightly built 12-year-old with an IQ of 139.
Scruggs was tormented for more than a year by middle school
classmates who shoved him off the bleachers, affixed "Kick
Me" signs to his back and made him eat his lunch off the
cafeteria floor. Many school officials knew about the abuse and
failed to intervene, state investigators found. On Jan. 2, 2002,
the boy walked into his bedroom closet and hanged himself.
One of Rimm's clients, a middle school student, told Rimm she
worried that if her grades were too good, she would be ostracized.
"Some kids get away with it if they're really good at sports
or very pretty," Rimm said. "If kids are teased in the
one area they have that's strong, there is this feeling of
isolation and anger. Adults need to take it seriously because
otherwise these kids go underground." Peterson conducted
detailed interviews with 57 students as part of her study. Some
told her their intelligence was used against them; school
officials, including teachers, were low on the list of people to
whom they turned for help. "Many students said they assumed
responsibility for fixing the problem" Peterson said.
"Some felt they had essentially been told by school
officials, 'If you're so smart, figure it out yourself.' "
Out of the Loop Many studies of bullying have found that the
problem escalates in the later years of elementary school, is most
severe in middle school and tends to dissipate by high school.
Peterson's subjects reported that sixth grade was the peak year
for bullying. Rimm said she suspected that bullying might be less
a problem for gifted children who are grouped together, as in many
Washington area school systems that have magnet academic programs.
Mary Shaw, a spokeswoman for the Fairfax County Public Schools,
which offer gifted education programs beginning in kindergarten,
said officials there declined to comment other than to say that
bullying of gifted students "is not an issue for us."
That is not true elsewhere. Developmental psychologist Richard
Olenchak, director of the University of Houston's Urban Talent
Research Institute, which works with gifted minority students,
said some cultures label gifted children as "overly
intellectual"; standing out for being "a brain" at
an age when children most want to fit in, he said, may make a
gifted student a target of unwanted attention.
Peterson found that being teased about appearance, reported by
24 percent of study participants, bothered students "a
lot" in sixth and seventh grade, the same age that being
teased about intelligence and grades peaked. One finding that
merits further study, according to Peterson: 16 percent of
students in her study said they had bullied someone else. Although
fewer students reported being bullied by eighth grade, the number
who said they bullied others increased.
To Clemson's Limber, who consults with school systems around
the country about bullying prevention, the key questions have to
do with the tone set by teachers and administrators.
"Do they mark [gifted] kids as being special or
different?" she asked.
"Are they looking out for those who may be socially
isolated?"