Gifted and LD: Misdiagnosed and Misunderstood
By Susan Baum, Ph.D.
Education professor Susan Baum, Ph.D. is a leading authority on children who are both gifted and learning disabled. Here she discusses the unique challenges facing this often misunderstood, misdiagnosed group of students.
Many people assume that learning disabilities and giftedness are at opposite ends of a continuum. In some states, a student may be identified with either LD or giftedness, but not both. In fact, we know that learning disabilities and giftedness can—and often do—exist simultaneously. You’ve probably come across people who exhibit remarkable talents or strengths in some areas and disabling weaknesses in others. This is the 8-year-old bug expert who can name and classify a hundred species of insects, yet he can’t read; or the obviously bright student who is struggling to stay on grade level.
Missed Diagnosis
Often bright children who are having difficulty maintaining their grades are neither identified nor offered services because they are not failing or performing below grade level. But a profile from the WISC IV IQ test can provide the evidence for diagnosis of such a subtle learning disability.
Likewise, children who have been diagnosed with LD are passed over for gifted programs. Their overall IQ test scores, depressed by their learning disability, prevent them from being identified and receiving services they deserve as gifted or talented. Again, examining areas of strengths on the WISC IV can provide the needed evidence for proper identification, setting the stage for appropriate services.
Different Shapes and Sizes
Students that are gifted and LD can be grouped into three categories, each resulting in unique challenges:
- Identified gifted students who have subtle learning disabilities. While increased effort may be expected of them due to their obvious intellect, they often do not know how to do what’s being asked of them due to their LD.
- Unidentified students whose gifts and disabilities are masked by average achievement. These students are struggling to stay at grade level. Their superior intellectual ability is working overtime to compensate for undiagnosed learning difficulties.
- Identified LD who also are gifted. These students are most at risk because of the implicit message that often accompanies an LD diagnosis: something is wrong that must be fixed before anything else can happen. As a result their talents are put on hold, when in fact, nurturing their gifts is the key to helping them deal with their learning challenges.
In the final analysis, students must learn to be their own advocates. But parents and teachers can help by following these general guidelines:
- Focus attention on developing your child’s gifts
- Provide a nurturing environment that values individual differences
- Encourage compensation strategies
- Encourage awareness of individual strengths

August 31st, 2010 at 1:15 pm
Hi Susan:
I love the idea of empowering gifted students with learning challenges and special needs to advocate for their unique learning styles. If students are encouraged to ask for the tools and strategies they need to succeed, we should celebrate that ability. With that said, I’d like to share a link to Don Johnston’s website, where he is collects videos and letters from students who talk about asking for and using assistive technology tools in schools. http://www.donjohnston.com/building_wings/fairfax/student_selfadvocacy.html
September 2nd, 2010 at 9:52 pm
Hi Susan, I really was impressed by your blog on LD and dyslexia. I know how hard it was for me in grade school fifty years ago when dyslexia was not recognized. You were just placed in a slow class. It is wonderful that we are now addressing dyslexia—reading disabilities in children at an early age. I was a teacher assistant for five years and saw at first hand how children were misdiagnosed and misunderstood. The sad thing about is the system suppresses the children gifts as they are often pushed into a corner with reading and writing. I agree with the nurturing of these gifts because as the children develop their gifts they will automatically want to further their knowledge in that specific gift. This will cause them to have to research (read) and write a plan.
September 27th, 2010 at 5:42 pm
Susan,
I’m not at all surprised to find your insightful blog on the Smart Kids website. My son Michael was SKD’s 2009 honoree. “Misdiagnosed and Misunderstood” doesn’t tell the half of what that poor kid went through – from peers, teachers, administrators, teachers, even doctors who certainly should have known better. He’s on scholarship at Binghamton now. Btw, the special needs program at that school is pretty strong, far more supportive than anything Mike ever felt in H.S.. Perseverance is key.
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