On Being Twice Exceptional in Sweden—An Interview-Based Case Study about the Educational Situation for a Gifted Student Diagnosed with ADHD
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. A Brief History of Twice Exceptionality
1.2. Definitions, Characteristics, and Identification
1.3. Prevalence
1.4. Consequences, Academic Achievement, and Psychosocial Well-Being
1.5. Parents
1.6. Peers
1.7. Educational Provision
1.8. Aim and Research Questions
- How do the 2e student and her guardians experience her educational environment in school?
- What wishes do the 2e student and her guardians have relating to her educational environment in school?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Overview and Participants
2.2. Data Collection
- Can you tell me about your ADHD diagnosis?
- Do you think that you are gifted? Why? Why not?
- What do you think of your lessons in the classroom?
- Are there moments when it gets boring for you in school? Give examples. What do you usually do then?
- Are there moments when it gets difficult for you in school? Give examples. What do you usually do then?
- How could school become better for you?
- Can you tell me about your child’s disability?
- Can you tell me what you think about your child’s giftedness?
- What do you think of your child’s lessons in the classroom?
- Is there any area/subject in which it works particularly well for your child? What is it that makes it work well?
- Is there any area/subject in which it does not work well for your child? What is it that makes it problematic?
- How could school become better for your child?
2.3. Data Processing
- Familiarizing yourself with your data.
- Producing a record of idea units/propositions for each transcribed interview.
- Generating initial codes.
- Searching for themes.
- Reviewing themes.
- Defining and naming themes.
3. Results
3.1. Multiplex Perspectives on Academic Outcomes and Expectations (1)
3.1.1. The Child’s Academic Outcomes and Her Expectations of Herself (1a)
C: … I think it was in the first week [in the new] school that I said “I’ll have an A in math when I finish sixth grade”. She just “No … I’ve given out two A’s and I’ve been a teacher for 15 years”. And then I said “No, I’m going to have A’s, I’m going to be your third” … And the day I finish school … when she gave me my grades … she said “You will be happy with your grades”. And then I knew that then I had got an A in math. … And then I was really happy. Then I was happy all over the world.
C: … if I will get a D then I will really cry … I am not exaggerating. I kind of cried yesterday when we got our math tests back because I had 2 errors … I’m just frustrated that I did badly, so annoyed that I made mistakes. … then I can seem really grumpy … when I get angry with myself. … I care quite a lot, because I want to [be able to] get into any high school [that I] want.
It hasn’t gone well, because … it’s been too easy for me because I have thought that it should be harder, but it’s become too easy and then I’ve kind of forgotten, like, how to do it. So, I’ve lowered myself a lot and the teachers notice that, and kind of everyone tells me that when [there are verbal exercises then I can achieve high results] … but as soon as it comes to writing, then it becomes very difficult. Then I miss a lot of things that I, because … I don’t have the energy to finish …
3.1.2. The Guardians’ Expectations of the Child’s Academic Outcomes (1b)
C: … My mom is quite a lot like, that I should perform well, because she knows that I can. She knows that if I come home and say “I got a C”, then she knows I’m disappointed … then she just says, well, but you have to study more and then … I get kind of angry and start crying and then she knows that I am disappointed in myself for not get higher marks …
3.1.3. The Classmates’ Perceptions of the Child’s Academic Outcomes (1c)
C: … If you think of the social [aspects], then I am horse lengths behind my friends. But when it comes to … things that you should know … then I have no problem. Then I am plenty of horse lengths ahead. And then they can often take me as if I am bragging. That I am a ‘besserwisser’ [know-it-all], I am able to do anything, know everything and so on. Because I’ve always been told that. … Not that I’ve thought about it. Because I don’t care (about it). … It’s like your classmates, when you have a special talent, then … they just think you’re boastful, because you have the abilities/potential.
C: Once we got our grades at the end of school, we went home. So then I talked to my friends and … they thought I was bragging because I said … that I was proud that I had got my A’s and my B’s and that I was disappointed that I had gotten that C. I couldn’t do anything about it because everyone had gotten C or lower.
3.2. In the Intersection between Twice Exceptionality and Academic Work (2)
3.2.1. Experiencing and Coping with Academic Work (2a)
I: But is there any time when you feel that it is difficult in school then?C: That’s when it gets too easy. Then I think it is very difficult. …I: Interesting, because I think if it gets too easy …C: It’s almost harder than if it were to be too hard. … if it becomes too easy, then I will just think that it is far too complicated and then it will just go wrong. It happens a lot of times that … I think it’s too difficult … it’s too easy and then it just gets harder so that I kind of won’t come up with anything. …I: What you’re saying is that it’s almost harder when it’s too easy?C: Yes, I find it harder when it’s too easy than if it’s hard. Thus it’s easier when it’s too hard.
C: … I’m always the one who has worked alone. Because otherwise I get like this, “But my god how unsmart can one be?” and then I just get so impatient in the end and then I just get angry and grumpy. Because I want it my way … and I think most people are like that, too.
C: … It is like this, [the teacher] has not even had time to finish the question and I already have the answer to the question. And it’s kind of like that, either I do it or I don’t do anything at all. Then I don’t even raise my hand either. Because either it’s really fast or I’m slow as syrup … I’m not great at holding up my hand and then waiting to get to talk, because then I know that they will ask someone who is not attentive. And then the answer will not come out correctly and I am quite fast, because when they have pointed at someone and they are not fast enough, then I say it. Because I think it takes too long. I’m pretty bad at waiting and things like that …
C: We have had a trial in the classroom, because it has been in Social Science, and … then I was a prosecutor. And then I would get my counsel. Then if [the teacher] has not said that we have this time … I might have been sitting there for 2 h and I could still have something to say because I wanted it my way. I want my case, my plaintiff would get money from them and they should get that penalty etc.
C: Unfortunately, I start drawing on my bench and it may not be so good. But … I can’t sit and draw on paper. It doesn’t work. It’s not the same, so there’s something about kind of just drawing at the same time … but not on a piece of paper. Paper doesn’t work. I have to draw on the, like, bench. … because otherwise, then a whole lecture might have passed and I have not listened at all. Because I’ve … looked straight ahead and just stared. Then I have not been involved at all.
3.2.2. Teachers’ Classroom Strategies (2b)
G1: [Teachers] should never [put] this person is in this category, the green category and [believe that this] person will always be in the green category and never move away from it—then you don’t think that people develop. … And as a teacher, you have to believe that the students will develop. I guess that’s why the teacher is there.
G2: … It shouldn’t be so darn fuzzy at school. … they should have rules, they should have order and they should understand that they will be punished. If they make a mistake, there should be a consequence. And it should not be a consequence that affects the group, but it should be individualized.
C: … if I had been a teacher and I would have had myself as a student, I would have … made home calls because sometimes, I can be really damn annoying, that is. … I’m not, I wouldn’t say I’m the [most well-behaved student]. So I do this stuff myself and that’s what makes me relatable.
G1: … the range, the outcome, is always from minus [lower academic outcomes] to plus [higher academic outcomes] and then you have to think about what you do with these over here at the edges. And sometimes I’ve experienced that you don’t have a plan for it, but you just work on. The focus is on this group here in the middle. And that’s probably where the problem may lie; that you don’t analyze or try.
G2: She has always received support and help to move forward from the teachers now in recent years. [L1] here in [X] has been fantastic, and also [L2] so … then she has received support and help at the level she is at, and then … [L1] may feel that now she is letting her go too far—“I have to catch up here myself”—[L1] maybe put her here in a teaching role and said: “Why can’t you join [another child] today because she has a little problem with this and this”? Yes, but then C may have gone, sat like that and worked with [the other child] and explained to that child. So that then [L1] has to find another role for her.
3.2.3. Organizational Preconditions for Learning in School (2c)
C: But it will be difficult, it’s seventh grade … It takes extra time for the teacher. After all, we only have one teacher. … It is not possible, because then the teacher has to leave the classroom with the student. Because I can’t sit in there [in the classroom], and then there will be chaos in there [in the classroom].
G2: … here at [the school] it works largely because you have small classes, you have small rooms for group work and you have a small schoolyard. … The school building has different floors; maybe that makes it calmer in the corridors? I don’t know. In some miraculous way they have succeeded, at least.
3.3. Information and Perceptions about Twice Exceptionality (3)
3.3.1. The Child’s Diagnosis and Exceptional Traits (3a)
G1: But that’s what one forgot to tell about in the beginning, it’s not pluses and minuses or 1–100, but there is so much more that comes into play. And that’s exactly what this psychologist was so amazingly good at explaining. To, like, picture how the world for a person with ADHD might be and how many spectrums there are … and it is also good for those who have a diagnosis to understand, just because there are two of us in my class who have ADHD does not mean that we have the same problems. We can have completely different problems.
I: … If you can tell me what you think about intelligence, or your particular talent … How does it affect you?C: … if I would not have had my ADHD but just a higher intelligence than everyone else, then I would be able to avoid situations where someone comes up to me and says something that according to me is not … If you are a little smart, you know that you can do better than others, then I could have avoided it. Then they could have believed whatever they believe and so on, but now if someone says something that is incorrect, then … I cannot stop myself from commenting on it. …
C: … because I am gifted and have ADHD, my brain spins so fast all the time … … I have always had problems, one always raises one’s hand, but … I have never become good at that, so I have always just spoken immediately, because I don’t have the energy to wait for the others since it takes a while …
C: … then I only get impulses, like: now I have to do this … and I don’t even have time to think about it, I’ve already done it … I have to say this, no one asks, no one even agrees with what I’m talking about. And so, I just say it. It’s very often like that, I say things straight out.
C: Do first, think later. Say first, think later. … If I get angry, I can “conjure up” 1000 sentences about why this person should hate themselves. It can go on indefinitely … when my boss in the brain takes over. It’s kind of one of my best friends, but it’s my worst enemy too. I can say so many things that I know this person takes offense too, and if this person has told me that something is a pain for them, then … Once I get into an arguing state and just raise and raise my voice to be heard—that’s when this boss kind of dies. He takes a little nap and then I just conjure up all the words I know and everything I can about this person that I know can make them sad. And—they haven’t quite grasped that yet—I don’t mean anything when I’m angry, and then [afterwards] I can get really angry with myself, too.
… One doesn’t want to feel this different. … like: “now [C] must be special”… At least I’ve found that really hard. That … everyone else has been able to think that they are like everyone else. That is, that one is different from everyone else. That one is not normal … I think most people find that quite difficult.
3.3.2. Peers’ Views on Twice Exceptionality (3b)
C: … many people just think … that I’m so patient, that I don’t care … but then, even if it’s not meant for me, I can get angry out of nowhere. I don’t even know why I get angry … that’s just because I’ve been so angry, annoyed, for quite some time and then I just get like that.
I: … are there times when … others around you, don’t understand you, and you think that this is because of your ADHD?C: Yes, that’s kind of almost every day. … Not many people in my class now understand that certain things I do happen because of my ADHD. … hardly anyone really knows in there [the classroom] what it [ADHD] is, too. Everyone then thinks: “Ah you have ADHD, then you can’t sit still and … You’re not that smart”. Because they think I’m so smart.
3.3.3. The Teachers’ Knowledge about Twice Exceptionality (3c)
3.3.4. Normality and Exceptionality in a Societal Perspective (3d)
G1: … there has been a discussion in the media about … “Shall the school adapt to the individual or to the broad middle lane?” And it is like that within everything, really, in our society. … In Sweden, it is frowned upon to be good, I would like to argue, at least in comparison with other countries, the US, where it is always about the result and nothing else.
4. Discussion
4.1. Focus on Strengths, Not Only Weaknesses
4.2. The Need for More Knowledge
4.3. Peers
4.4. Limitations and Prospects
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Quote | Propositions |
---|---|
C: … then it can be adapted to how good you are in different subjects and so, i.e., to what extent you are at the same level. Because if I would sit with the guy who disturbs … I would have hit him if he teased, because he teases a lot. … It would have been, it would have been kind of the best ever, to have it that way instead, because then the teacher does not have to do as much, because then you can ask a friend first, then teachers, and … If I ask a friend first—I always do it. The girl sitting next to me, she’s, we’re about the same level, I’m a little bit sharper. But I very often just ask her “Is it like this?” but then she says “But, like, C, it’s just like this” and then I come up with it pretty quickly—it goes much faster. She asks me too. … | I think that placement in the classroom should be adapted to how good you are. |
I can’t handle sitting with someone who disturbs me. | |
If I’m sitting with someone who is on the same level as I am, I can ask her about school assignments. | |
It makes it easier for the teacher if I sit with someone who is on the same level as I am. | |
If I had been sitting with the guy who was disturbing and he had teased, I would have hit him. |
Number | Theme | Theme Description | Sub-Theme Title | Sub-Theme Description | Source | Propositions | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Multiplex perspectives on academic outcomes and expectations | Included are descriptions about the child’s concrete academic outcomes and expectations on them. Included are also descriptions about the classmates’ approach to the child’s academic outcomes and her adaptions to the classmates’ approaches. | 1a | The child’s academic outcomes and her expectations on herself | The child’s concrete academic outcomes (grades, test results, etc.) and her expectations on herself. | Child and guardians | C: When I received a B, I got disappointed with myself. G1: C wants to be good in school. |
1b | The guardians’ expectations on the child’s academic outcomes | The guardians’ expectations on the child’s academic outcomes. | Child and guardians | C: Mom wants me to be good. G1: If C does her best in school, then she can later choose what she wants to do in life. G2: C will be able to do what she wants in her life. | |||
1c | The classmates’ perceptions about the child’s academic outcomes | The child’s view on, and adaptions to, the classmates’ approaches to the child’s academic outcomes. | Child | C: When I made two mistakes on my math test and got disappointed, then everyone think that I am bragging. C: If one is good in school, then one shall not talk about it with ones classmates. | |||
2 | In the intersection between twice exceptionality and academic work | Included is reasoning about how the child experiences and copes with academic work in school and at home. Included are concrete consequences arising in the intersection between academic work in classroom situations and the child’s characteristics and behavior. Excluded are descriptions of personal traits that are not directly related to academic work. Included are descriptions about teacher approaches, actual or preferred teacher strategies and organisation of the learning environment. | 2a | Experiencing and coping with academic work | How the child experiences or copes with concrete academic work in school or at home, as well as concrete consequences arising in the intersection between academic work in classroom situations and the child’s traits and behavior. | Child and guardians | C: When it gets boring in school, I talk to the one sitting behind me. C: When the school-work gets too easy, I think too complicated and then it gets wrong. C: When I do homework at home, then I must repeat it many times, because I can’t focus. G1: C puts up her own goals. G2: C gets bored if she has already learnt everything in all lessons. |
2b | Teachers’ classroom strategies | Actual or preferred teacher strategies and approaches. | Child and guardians | C: Many tasks are just to read, respond, and then send the tasks to the teacher. C: If I were to decide, then I would have been allowed to make a verbal completion together with the teacher after I had made my test. G1: The teacher must often re-evaluate the students’ knowledges. G2: In school, the norm is that everything is to be adapted to the group. | |||
2c | Organisational preconditions for learning in school | Actual or preferred organisation of the learning environment on a structural level, beyond teachers’ classroom organisation and influence. | Guardians | G1: The school shall seek help from parents even if it is the school that owns the problem, steers, and exerts responsibility for the organisation. G2: The school class has 16 children. | |||
3 | Information and perceptions about twice exceptionality | Included is information and direct talk about ADHD diagnoses or giftedness as well as general personal traits or explanations related to characteristics typically associated with ADHD diagnoses (such as hyperactivity, attention difficulties, or impulsivity) or giftedness (such as being high achiever, being smart, thinking a lot, thinking fast, high level of intellectual integrity, or being a besserwisser). Included is also general talk about being different. Excluded are descriptions of teacher classroom strategies and the ways that the child approaches academic work inside and outside the classroom, even if these are apparently linked to behavior typically associated with an ADHD diagnosis or giftedness. | 3a | The child’s diagnosis and exceptional traits | The child being different, her ADHD diagnosis or giftedness, her general personal traits or explanations related to general characteristics typically associated with ADHD or giftedness, and about how the child and the guardians relate to all this. | Child and guardians | C: When one has ADHD, one is either hyperactive in the brain or one is hyperactive in the body. I am both. C: I get frustrated or sad if something does not work out the way I thought it would. C: I am like everyone else, but I may have difficulties in some situations. G1: I have never experienced unease when it comes to talking about the diagnosis. G2: C constantly wants to learn. |
3b | Peers’ views on twice exceptionality | Classmates’ perceptions about being different, being diagnosed with ADHD, or being gifted, including talk related to characteristics typically associated with ADHD or giftedness. | Child and guardians | C: The classmates don’t believe that I am very smart. C: My classmates think that I must change, but it is pretty difficult. G2: When a person who has difficulties in a group leaves, it gets apparent for the group that the person is different. | |||
3c | The teachers’ knowledge about twice exceptionality | The teachers’ information and knowledge about, or perceptions of, the child being different, diagnosed with ADHD, or gifted. | Child and guardians | C: My tutors are good, because they see no difference between me and the others in the class. C: I find it bad that it is only my tutors who know that I am gifted. G1: Teachers need to see and understand the individual’s difficulties. G2: The teacher read literature to reach a higher level of knowledge about C:s problems. | |||
3 | Normality and exceptionality in a societal perspective | The Swedish society’s or general views on ADHD, giftedness, or being different. | Child and guardians | C: I believe that most people find it difficult to feel that one is not normal. G1: In Sweden, it is frowned upon to be good. G2: In Sweden, we sometimes forget that we aren’t allowed to be at the top or to be bad, but that we rather should all be baseline. |
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Holmgren, A.-C.; Backman, Y.; Gardelli, V.; Gyllefjord, Å. On Being Twice Exceptional in Sweden—An Interview-Based Case Study about the Educational Situation for a Gifted Student Diagnosed with ADHD. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13111120
Holmgren A-C, Backman Y, Gardelli V, Gyllefjord Å. On Being Twice Exceptional in Sweden—An Interview-Based Case Study about the Educational Situation for a Gifted Student Diagnosed with ADHD. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(11):1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13111120
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolmgren, Anna-Carin, Ylva Backman, Viktor Gardelli, and Åsa Gyllefjord. 2023. "On Being Twice Exceptional in Sweden—An Interview-Based Case Study about the Educational Situation for a Gifted Student Diagnosed with ADHD" Education Sciences 13, no. 11: 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13111120
APA StyleHolmgren, A. -C., Backman, Y., Gardelli, V., & Gyllefjord, Å. (2023). On Being Twice Exceptional in Sweden—An Interview-Based Case Study about the Educational Situation for a Gifted Student Diagnosed with ADHD. Education Sciences, 13(11), 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13111120