Abstract
The student who qualifies as both gifted and dyslexic often has low self-esteem and poor motivation. Although creative thinking, essential for complex problem solving, improves feelings of self-esteem, research has been sparse on creative thinking characteristics in these gifted/dyslexic students. The major part of this paper describes a study from Ontario regarding how gifted/dyslexic students compare to age-matched youngsters who are either dyslexic or gifted, but not both. Through both quantitative and qualitative analyses, cognitive and creative thinking differences are analyzed in children aged 9 to 14 years. Results of this study contribute information to the literature in four areas: intellectual, academic, socioemotional and creative thinking. The WISC-R profiles differ in these three groups of students. Although academic difficulties are similar in students who are dyslexic and gifted/dyslexic, the latter exhibit strength in expressing humor, problem solving, capturing the essence of an idea, and in synthesizing dissimilar concepts. This group too, in their writing, express feelings of being in control, and in their drawings, other positive and negative feelings. Like dyslexics, gifted/dyslexics express intuitive aspects of creative thinking but are somewhat stronger in gaining information through their physical senses. In all cognitive and physical sensing aspects of creative thinking, the gifted group is strongest.
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