P. Susan Jackson over een 145+ IQ - Talentissimo

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ส.ค. 2024
  • Een interview met P. Susan Jackson van het Daimon Institute. Zij werkt met exceptionally en profoundly gifted mensen van 0-99. In het interview vertelt ze meer over wat de hyperhoogbegaafde (IQ 145+) doelgroep bijzonder maakt en waarom het moeilijk is hun capaciteiten in te schatten: "We can't measure a three foot long organism with a one foot long ruler - we know we don't get full results".

ความคิดเห็น • 19

  • @traezaX1
    @traezaX1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Myself... video is excellent...

  • @michatheresiaprimus9972
    @michatheresiaprimus9972 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    As the mother of four such children, I can absolutely agree with that!

  • @CatherineGuimard-Payen
    @CatherineGuimard-Payen ปีที่แล้ว

    THANK YUOU

  • @victorshackapopulus6078
    @victorshackapopulus6078 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can I do Elephant Polo at the school?

  • @thorzyan
    @thorzyan 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    It's really been a joy losing people/teachers mid-sentence because they couldn't follow the leaps in logic.

    • @thorzyan
      @thorzyan 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @mrAmbitionEver 😐
      Read my comment again; perhaps the sarcasm was lost on you.

    • @thorzyan
      @thorzyan 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      mrAmbitionEver Nice grammar.
      Apologies to you for not being born gifted; are you here to pump up that middle of the bell curve intellect or just a sad troll?
      Please go outside and get some sunshine.

    • @hankmann2508
      @hankmann2508 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @mrAmbitionEver r/woosh

    • @sittingstill3578
      @sittingstill3578 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I bet you are a ton of fun to teach. (Along the lines of what Susan describes in the clip.)
      A teacher I know has shared how frustrated she gets with gifted students. It seems that that teacher is more concerned about her ability to teach rather than getting the opportunity to facilitate her gifted students’ growth. She often complains about not being able to control the rate at which the gifted student is learning and then about how that student then uses her free time to assist her classmates rather than the teacher.

  • @jasonkrick1614
    @jasonkrick1614 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I have a 145+ iq. And never thought for a second I was special or gifted. Neither did my parents or friends. I grew up with, what I consider, a ‘normal’ childhood.
    I would have hated growing up constantly told I was ‘gifted’.
    My ‘genius’ (I laugh at that) came out naturally. I took up violin myself and play at an exceptional level. I participated in sports and got to near national levels. Education. Yes, I have sets of letters before and after my name. And profession. Yes, I am extremely accomplished for what society would consider to be successful.
    For me. I was and am glad I was never treated as gifted. That would have made me question myself on why I failed at something.
    145+. It’s just a number to me. I wouldn’t care if I was 45 or 245.

    • @alteriusnonsit6124
      @alteriusnonsit6124 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Right. Relatives are the most relevant source for high IQ people. Usually at least one of the parents is high IQ, too, and has enough experience to help the child till it's an adult (and longer).

    • @jasonkrick1614
      @jasonkrick1614 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@alteriusnonsit6124 Thank you for replying and your experience with high iq individuals.
      Both my parents were immigrants. My mom had a 6th grade education. And my dad was illiterate and an orphan from a war torn country. Their only concern was working to survive and put food on the table.
      They basically left me alone to do what I wanted to do. Translation: working to put food on the table. They had night jobs which meant I had zero help with homework.
      In my opinion and personal experience, for me again, if I were labeled and treated as ‘gifted’. I think my life would have been much different. In a less accomplished way.

    • @alteriusnonsit6124
      @alteriusnonsit6124 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jasonkrick1614 Thank you for your story.
      I do see parallels in our personal history.
      My parents also had very little formal education, because they both were deaf.
      My father was very intelligent, and his father was, too, but my grandfather died in war when my father had been two years old, his brother had been a few months old.
      I think his mother was slightly above average intelligent. My father always held a grudge because until he was an adult he had nobody to explain him stuff and had to figure everything out by himself.
      He only had one true friend, another deaf man who had been a successful artisan.
      My father did well in life and lived a fullfilled life.
      He was adamant about raising me to be an independent critical thinker.
      My father's brother is still alive. He's at least above average intelligent, hearing, but sadly he is a reclusive person who shys away from deep persoonal conversation, so I know very little about him through his own elaboration.
      My mother was, I'd say, at least highly intelligent as well. But she had even less intellectual training, maybe like a 3rd grader.
      Her thinking was very intuitive. She could judge people unbelievably well, just by watching them for a few minutes.
      She was very resilient and could deal with life's hardship very wisely.
      Both my parents were very loving and trusted me in handling my life. I, too, had no help with school from my parents. I enjoyed quite free reigns.
      My parents never made a fuzz about my talents, which was very good for my development. Also in the first 10-15 years of my childhood, we were quite poor, which was good also.
      After decades of experience, I must say most parents don't handle the information about the giftedness of their child properly. They concentrate on intellectual development instead of emotional development.
      Very intelligent children don't suffer from too little input (at least in developed countries), but from lack of human connection (love) and lack of proper guidance (value based, with satisfactory explanations and well explained corrections of severely ill-advised behaviour). They have to develop skills on how to deal with their life (friends, school, choice of spouse) as very intelligent people.
      I pondered entering mensa just for dating reasons. I could not find a woman intelligent enough for me (communication, intrinsic values). But my superficial impression of mensa did not corroborate that idea. I found my wife when I was 30.
      I'm a father of two (both intelligent (clear signs) but untested) and enjoy family life very much. I've learned a lot from fathering them.
      How did you deal with the matching-problem considering marriage?
      I don't know how high my IQ is, and I don't want to know. It's not good for me to know how far I'm out there. But it helped me to know why I'm out there.
      And I really love learning, thinking and helping.
      Violin. Beautiful! The father of my mother taught himself to play it, as well (idk how well, he died before I was born). His was was an exceptional singer who declined a carreer in favour of having and raising children.
      Music is such a wonderful field for the gifted. All unregulated fields are. But music is so contemplative.
      Of all the gifted people I'm friends with, almost nobody strived for exceptional wealth or fame. Freedom and bliss is what they strived for. Most of them have no normal jobs.
      I very much enjoy their company. Everything is easy and usually interesting with them.

  • @breadstick6345
    @breadstick6345 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    What are some of the behaviors of these kids? Or do they behave normal

  • @paracletusrevelation4080
    @paracletusrevelation4080 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My daughter

  • @scottjackson163
    @scottjackson163 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have a daughter (now 29) who scored an extrapolated 172 on the Stanford-Binet LM (at age 6). I wanted to give her an education commensurate with her intelligence, but my wife did not support such efforts.

    • @asdfg1346on
      @asdfg1346on ปีที่แล้ว

      Did she accomplished great stuff until now?

    • @scottjackson163
      @scottjackson163 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@asdfg1346onShe had an extremely troubled adolescence: Goth dressing, shaved head, tattoos, anorexia, two near-fatal suicide attempts. She eventually graduated from college, with honors. She is married with two young daughters and works a corporate job as a facilities manager.

  • @ancientgear7192
    @ancientgear7192 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I am so InTEleCtuaL!!!