Comparing Prospective Twice-Exceptional Students With High-Performing Peers on High-Stakes Tests of Achievement

From a sample of 1,242 third graders, prospective twice-exceptional students were selected using reading and math curriculum-based measures (CBMs), routinely used in Response to Intervention (RtI). These prospective twice-exceptional students were compared with non-twice-exceptional peers with simil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal for the education of the gifted 2015-09, Vol.38 (3), p.294-317
Hauptverfasser: Bell, Sherry Mee, Taylor, Emily P., McCallum, R. Steve, Coles, Jeremy T., Hays, Elizabeth
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:From a sample of 1,242 third graders, prospective twice-exceptional students were selected using reading and math curriculum-based measures (CBMs), routinely used in Response to Intervention (RtI). These prospective twice-exceptional students were compared with non-twice-exceptional peers with similar strengths in either math or reading on CBMs and an end-of-year high-stakes achievement test. Students (both potentially twice-exceptional and not) who are potentially gifted in reading based on CBM performance did not differ significantly on the end-of-year outcomes in reading (p < .05); rather, students in both groups performed equally high. However, twice-exceptional students who are potentially gifted in math performed significantly lower on both end-of-year math and reading outcomes than non-twice-exceptional peers. Most of the end-of-year math subtest scores were negatively affected by the prospective twice-exceptional students’ deficits in reading, even though their math CBM scores placed them into a category representing giftedness in math. Implications for screening for twice-exceptionality are discussed.
ISSN:0162-3532
2162-9501
DOI:10.1177/0162353215592500