The strengths and talents of diverse gifted learners must be supported in culturally responsive middle and high school classrooms. Secondary social studies teachers can use teaching strategies to provide an enriched experience in U.S. history classrooms that will engage and intellectually challenge diverse gifted learners. The model proposed by Ford and Harris (1999) for delivering multicultural gifted education offers educators a framework for delivering culturally responsive curriculum.
BainbridgeJ.PantaleoS.EllisM. (1999). Multicultural picture books: Perspectives from Canada. Social Studies, 90, 183-188.
2.
BanksJ. A. (1991). Teaching strategies for ethnic studies (5th ed.). Dubuque, IA: McGraw Hill.
3.
BanksJ. A.McGeeC. A. (2001). Multicultural education: Issues and perspectives (4th ed.). New York, NY: Wiley.
4.
BloomB. (1956). Taxonomy of educational objectives: Handbook I: Cognitive domain. New York, NY: Wiley.
5.
BogdanR.BiklenS. K. (2006). Qualitative research for education: An introduction to theories and methods (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
6.
Boyle-BaiseM. (1996). Multicultural social studies: Ideology and practice. Social Studies, 87, 81-87.
7.
BrownE. L.HowardB. H. (2005). Becoming culturally responsive teachers through service-learning. Multicultural Education, 12, 2-8.
8.
CamangianP. (2008). Untempered tongues: Teaching performance poetry for social justice. English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 7, 35-55.
9.
CamiciaS. P. (2009). Identifying soft democratic education: Uncovering the range of civic and cultural choices in instructional materials. Social Studies, 100, 136-142.
10.
CarrK. S.BuchananD. L.WentzJ. B.WeissM. L.BrantK. J. (2001). Not just for the primary grades: A bibliography of picture books for secondary content teachers. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 45, 146-153.
11.
ClarkB. (2007). Growing up gifted: Developing the potential of children at home and at school (7th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
12.
DankerA. C. (2003). Multicultural social studies: The local history connection. Social Studies, 94, 111.
13.
DavisG. A.RimmS. B.SiegleD. (2011). Education of the gifted and talented (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.
14.
DejeanW. (2008). Picture this: Using photography to conceptualize social justice. Multicultural Perspectives, 10, 105-109.
15.
FergusonS. K. (2009). Affective education: Addressing the social and emotional needs of gifted students in the classroom. In KarnesF. A.BeanS. M. (Eds.), Methods and materials for teaching the gifted (3rd ed., pp. 447-482). Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
16.
FordD. Y.HarrisJ. J.III. (1999). Multicultural gifted education. New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
17.
FordD. Y.HarrisJ. J.III. (2000). A framework for infusing multicultural curriculum in gifted education. Roeper Review, 23, 4-7.
18.
FryS. W. (2009). Exploring social studies curriculum through multicultural literature: Legend of the St. Ann’s Flood. Social Studies, 60, 85-91.
19.
GorskiP. C. (2001). Changing preservice teacher perceptions of minority schools. Urban Education, 36, 60-92.
20.
GraffJ. M. (2010). Countering narratives: Teachers’ discourses about immigrants and their experiences within the realm of children’s and young adult literature. English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 9, 106-131.
21.
GreenS. L. (2007). Preparing special educators to work with diverse student populations: Culturally responsive teaching and its alignment with the teaching of social studies. Black History Bulletin, 70, 12-18.
22.
HébertT. P. (2011). Understanding the social and emotional lives of gifted students. Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
23.
HessD. (2004). Discussion in social studies: Is it worth the trouble?Social Education, 68, 152-155.
24.
HestA. (1997). When Jessie came across the sea. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Books.
25.
JonesT. (2005). Incorporate diversity in your classroom. Intervention in School and Clinic, 41, 9-12.
26.
LarkeP. J.ElbertC.Webb-JohnsonG.LarkeA. W.BriscoM. (2006). Culturally meaningful classrooms: The five Cs of best practice. In PangV. O. (Ed.), Race, ethnicity, and education (Vol. 1): Principles and practices of multicultural education (pp. 161-178). Westport. CT: Praeger.
27.
McCallA. L. (2004). Using poetry in social studies classes to teach about cultural diversity and social justice. Social Studies, 95, 172-176.
28.
MerryfieldM. M. (2004). Elementary students in substantive culture learning. Social Education, 68, 270-273.
29.
MeyerC. F.RhoadesE. K. (2006). Multiculturalism: Beyond food, festival, folklore, and fashion. Kappa Delta Pi Record, 42, 82-87.
30.
NelsonJ. L.PangV. O. (2006). Racism, prejudice, and the social studies curriculum. In RossE. W. (Ed.), The social studies curriculum: Purposes, problems, and possibilities (3rd ed., pp. 115-136). Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
31.
OhnJ. D.WadeR. (2009). Community service-learning as a group inquiry project: Elementary and middle school civiConnections teachers’ practices of integrating historical inquiry in community-service learning. Social Studies, 100, 200-211.
32.
ParkerW. C. (2001). Classroom discussion: Models for learning seminars and deliberations. Social Education, 65, 111-115.
33.
ParksS. (2009). Teaching analytical and critical thinking skills in gifted education. In KarnesF. A.BeanS. M. (Eds.), Methods and materials for teaching the gifted (3rd ed., pp. 261-300). Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
34.
PiechowskiM. M. (2006). “Mellow out,” they say. If only I could: Intensities and sensitivities of the young and the bright. Madison, WI: Yunasa Books.
35.
RenzulliJ. S. (1977). The enrichment triad model: A guide for developing defensible programs for the gifted. Mansfield Center, CT: Creative Learning Press.
36.
RoslerB. (2008). Process drama in one fifth-grade social studies class. Social Studies, 99, 265-272.
37.
SerriereS. C. (2010). Carpet-time democracy: Digital photography and social consciousness in the early childhood classroom. Social Studies, 101, 200-211.
38.
SilvermanL. K. (1993). The gifted individual. In SilvermanL. K. (Ed.), Counseling the gifted and talented (pp. 3-28). Denver, CO: Love Publishing.
39.
StephensK. R.KarnesF. A. (2009). Product development for gifted students. In KarnesF. A.BeanS. M. (Eds.), Methods and materials for teaching the gifted (pp. 157-186). Waco, TX: Prufrock Press.
40.
TanS. (2007). The arrival. New York, NY: Arthur A. Levine Books.
41.
TerryA. W. (2003). Effects of service learning on young, gifted adolescents and their community. Gifted Child Quarterly, 47, 295-308.
42.
TerryA. W. (2008). Student voices, global echoes: Service-learning and the gifted. Roeper Review, 30, 45-51.
43.
TerryA. W.BohnenbergerJ. E.RenzulliJ. S.CramondB.SiskD. (2008). Vision with action: Developing sensitivity to societal concerns in gifted youth. Roeper Review, 30, 61-67.
44.
ThorntonS.GarrettK. J. (1995). Ethnography as a bridge to multicultural practice. Journal of Social Work Education, 31, 67-74.
45.
TomlinsonC. A.KaplanS. N.RenzulliJ. S.PurcellJ. H.LeppienJ. H.BurnsD. E.. . . ImbeauM. B. (2009). The parallel curriculum: A design to develop learner potential and challenge advanced learners. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
46.
VillegasA. M.LucasT. (2002). Preparing culturally responsive teachers: Rethinking the curriculum. Journal of Teacher Education, 53, 20-32.
47.
WhiteJ. (2008). Teachers prepare to integrate social justice into social studies curriculum. Social Studies, 62, 83-84.
48.
WoodruffE. (1999). The memory coat. New York, NY: Scholastic Press.