1. Introduction
Underachievement is a frequently researched topic in the field of gifted and talented education [
1]. However, sometimes this research is not well-situated to school pedagogical practices, moreover the field is often clouded by ambiguous definitions and conceptualisations of underachievement [
1]. Because underachievement signifies both psychosocial and educational features of gifted education pedagogical practices, it is important to explore the impact of student engagement in relation to underachievement.
The underachievement and disengagement of gifted students presents an enigma for the students themselves, their parents, and teachers [
2]. The expectation for gifted students is that they, by their very nature of being gifted, should be showing sustained evidence of high academic achievement [
3]. When this is not the case, the inconsistency between anticipated achievement and actual achievement is of concern due to the adverse impacts on school and life outcomes [
3], and hopes for developing lifelong learners. While student engagement is influenced by a diverse range of demographic factors that cannot be changed (e.g., cultural background), student engagement can be seen as “an alterable class of variables” [
3] (p. 224), that is impacted by different contexts (i.e., school, home, relationships); all of which are associated with academic outcomes and social belongingness [
4]. In this article we explore the nexus between three interrelated components: (1). gifted students based on the broad Neihart and Betts’ [
5] six profiles; (2) gifted student engagement based on four engagement dimensions; and (3) appropriate pedagogical approaches for supporting the (re)engagement of gifted students. The multipart exploration of these three important components, to our knowledge, has not been previously explored. We begin by first defining gifted and talented students in the Australian context, then exploring engagement for gifted learners, before turning to conceptualising (dis)engagement and (re)engagement opportunities through personalised learning approaches at the nexus of the three components.
2. Gifted and Talented Students
Gifted students can be defined as those whose potential is in the top 10% of age peers [
6]. In Australia, Gagné’s
Developmental Model of Giftedness (DMGT) [
6] is the most accepted defining model for gifted and talented education [
7]. The DMGT covers six domains of giftedness, under two headings: 1. Mental giftedness: (i) Intellectual (e.g., crystallised reasoning), (ii) Creative (e.g., problem-solving), (iii) Social (e.g., leadership), and (iv) Perceptual (e.g., hearing), and 2. Physical giftedness: (v) Muscular (e.g., strength and endurance) and (vi) Motor Control (e.g., speed and agility).
Within Gagné’s DMGT, the differences between giftedness and talent are unpacked and clearly distinguished. Giftedness is the possession of outstanding natural abilities in at least one of the ability domains (e.g., Intellectual), to a degree that places an individual at least among the top 10% of age peers—this is about a student’s potential. On the other hand, talent is more about actual achievement, the outstanding mastery of abilities that have been systematically developed, in at least one field (e.g., Science and Technology), to a degree that places an individual at least among the top 10% of age peers—this refers to actualisation of gifted potential. For the purpose of this discussion we draw on Gagné’s conception of giftedness as potential, and (re)engaging gifted students in learning so they can achieve mastery (talent), through systematically developing their gifted abilities. In order to do this, it is important that gifted student underachievement through (dis)engagement is addressed.
The two concepts of underachievement and (dis)engagement, are inherent within the centre of Gagné’s DMGT where environmental catalysts (e.g., culture, pedagogy, relationships), and intrapersonal catalysts (e.g., motivation, volition, resilience), impact on the actualisation of talent through the talent development process. Both environmental and intrapersonal catalysts impact on the conceptualisation of underachievement and (dis)engagement in that these influence the development of giftedness into talent. Therefore, it is of paramount importance that gifted students are engaged in their learning, as it is a key aspect to preventing underachievement for gifted learners.
3. (Re) Engaging Gifted Students
It is well-recognised that disengagement is a growing problem in Australian schools, with up to 40% of students identified as being disengaged [
8]. Furthermore, statistics show that nearly 60% of all gifted students are not achieving their potential [
2]; research shows this is leading to “a loss of potential for both the individual and society as a whole” [
9] (p. 163). As Gagné [
6] recognises in his DMGT, talent actualisation is not guaranteed just because a student is gifted. This is where there is heightened concern about the inconsistency between anticipated actualisation of talent (in the form of achievement), and actual (under)achievement through the talent development process proposed in the DMGT, where giftedness may not be developed into talent (mastery).
While disengagement and underachievement are complex issues with no one root cause, it is well-recognised that when students are actively engaged in their learning, they learn more effectively [
8], thus addressing (at least in part) underachievement. Furthermore, learner engagement is a driver of student learning outcomes [
10]. Gifted students who are disengaged and underachieve exist in all regions of the globe, and are found within culturally diverse populations, communities with low socio-economic status, and individuals with disabilities [
2,
11].
Student engagement can be conceptualised through four interrelated dimensions: Behavioural engagement (e.g., participation), Affective engagement (e.g., student attitude), Social engagement (e.g., sense of belonging at school), and Cognitive engagement (e.g., self-regulation) [
12]. The dimensions represent an interrelated and multidimensional conceptualisation of engagement, where students often move between and within the dimensions, exemplifying different elements within each dimension depending on the activity, and their interest and engagement [
12]. Engagement has previously been conceptualised as a continuum model. This previous form of modelling appears to define desired exemplification of the elements within each dimension, prior to, and connected with the successive dimension on the continuum in a linear fashion. Continuum modelling is more suitable for viewing processes consisting of different stages or steps, one being achieved prior to or overlapping with the next [
13], with the focal desired outcome of cognitive engagement. Yet, the complex interrelatedness of the four engagement dimensions means that a continuum model is not well-suited for exploring these complexities involved in the processes and elements of engagement. We propose a revisioning of the engagement continuum as a cyclical process (
Figure 1).
Our
Cyclical Model of Student Engagement (
Figure 1) shows a cyclical continuum, which enables the different elements across and within the engagement dimensions to be acknowledged and reconceptualised as non-sequential, complex, recurrent, and interconnected components. The cyclical process also recognises multiple outcomes within each dimension and across the dimensions to enable a more complex exploration of the dimensions and exemplified elements evident (or not) in the classroom. The following section unpacks the four dimensions across our Cyclical Model of Student Engagement.
The behavioural engagement dimension is related to what teachers see in their schools and classrooms; students participating in activities and class discussions, attending to the teacher and peers, on-task behaviour, involvement in school activities, as well as persevering when challenged in their learning [
12]. These are said to be positive-involved behaviours, exemplified by students positively engaging in their learning. Behavioural engagement is often what educators refer to when they talk about student engagement, which is frequently reduced to a single factor, that of student attendance data [
15]. While it is self-evident that students need to be in attendance to become engaged, (behaviourally present), as can be seen, there is much more to engagement than merely being marked present on the class roll.
The dimension of affective engagement is all about the learner and their emotions during learning. This dimension is strongly connected to student interest in and enjoyment of what they are learning and school-related activities (e.g., extra/co-curricular). Affective engagement is demonstrated through happiness, identification with school, a student’s attitude, and both positive and negative connections to peers, teachers, school, and learning [
14]. Students who are affectively engaged know why they are learning the content of any given lesson. Affective engagement is strongly connected to the use of digital technologies and can vary depending on what and how students are using these [
15,
16]. It is well understood that positive affective engagement is strongly connected to behavioural engagement [
17]. Emotions like happiness, pride, and enthusiasm can drive student learning and connect them behaviourally, affectively, socially, and cognitively to both learning and school. Likewise, an absence of these positive emotions can lead to feelings of loneliness, sadness, and lack of identification with school and learning. This has implications for both engagement and student outcomes.
The social engagement dimension represents a student’s sense of belonging and connectedness to school, including peers and teachers. This dimension is intimately connected to affective engagement as together both factors produce feelings of connection to school and a sense of inclusion [
12]. In the classroom, social engagement is demonstrated when students show an understanding of the social conventions of learning: cooperative learning, taking turns, arriving on time to class, and listening to others [
12]. Like affective engagement, a lack of social engagement can lead to students’ experiencing isolation and loneliness [
18].
The cognitive engagement dimension embodies the culmination of student engagement: mastery and autonomy. In the cognitive engagement dimension, students are demonstrating learning by choice, applying processes of deep thinking, self-regulating behaviours, purposefully setting goals and mastering what they are learning [
14]. Through their use of metacognitive strategies students who are cognitively engaged show a strong sense of agency and preference for challenge at school. Their application of higher order thinking processes becomes automatic as they demonstrate mastery of the learning. Mastery is a key word here, in both the cognitive engagement dimension and moving to talent development: actualisation of gifted potential. According to Gagné’s DMGT [
6], the move from giftedness (as potential) to talent, evidenced in achievement, requires catalysts, such as an engaging learning environment and learning activities, where teachers should be making explicit and deliberate efforts to engage gifted learners across the engagement dimensions.
4. Conceptualising Disengagement and Underachievement for Gifted Students
The four interconnected engagement dimensions exemplified in our Cyclical Model of Student Engagement have key implications for both supporting gifted students at risk for underachievement, as well as designing and implementing suitable pedagogical approaches for sustaining (re)engagement [
3]. Gifted students, who often experience cognitive engagement earlier in their learning than other students, can demonstrate ‘early’ mastery of the content (or already know the content) [
19]. As Gross [
20] pointed out, gifted students “come to school expecting to learn something new each day rather than to review and practise previous learning and skills” (p. 43). This can lead to early disengagement and subsequent underachievement. Gifted students need to be sufficiently challenged with learning opportunities that facilitate behavioural, affective, social, and cognitive engagement.
Identifying gifted students who are at-risk or who have disengaged can be problematic. These students frequently appear to be behaviourally engaged (e.g., on task), affectively engaged (e.g., positive reactions to teachers), and socially engaged (e.g., involved in their learning) and there may even be some signs of cognitive engagement (e.g., goal setting). Yet, their classwork or assessment results may not provide positive outcomes of this apparent engagement. This could be evidence of disengagement and underachievement. One approach to identify levels of disengagement is through student underachievement. This can be measured by looking at the difference between a gifted student’s ability and their performance and achievement [
21]. However, this is unreliable at best given that disengaged gifted students can fly under the radar [
21], achieving satisfactorily (e.g., achieving Bs and Cs), but not demonstrating what their parents and some teachers know they can do. Since disengagement and underachievement often begins in primary (elementary) school it is important to be able to recognise and intervene early with appropriate pedagogical practices and support strategies. This is where an understanding of the engagement dimensions and broad gifted learner profiles is important. We now turn to exploring the interrelated engagement dimensions in relation to gifted learners conceptualised through our Cyclical Model of Student Engagement.
5. The Engagement Dimensions and Gifted Student Profiles
A useful framework for understanding how our Cyclical Model of Student Engagement further connects to gifted students is to explore these concepts in connection with Neihart and Betts’ [
5]
Revised Profiles of the Gifted and Talented. It is important to note that gifted students are not (and should not) be defined by these six profiles as their characteristics, personalities, and needs vary across the course of their education [
11]. Furthermore, each gifted student should have their own individual profile developed in conjunction with the student themselves and stakeholders, which is based on the specific learning characteristics and needs of each student. However, Neihart and Betts’ six profiles provide one useful way of considering some of the unique characteristics and opportunities for (re)engaging gifted students.
The Neihart and Betts [
5] gifted profiles are valuable in understanding disengagement and underachievement for gifted students: Profile I Successful Learner (
Table 1), Profile II Creative (
Table 2), Profile III Underground (
Table 3), Profile IV At-Risk (
Table 4), Profile V Twice-Exceptional (
Table 5), and Profile VI Autonomous Learners (
Table 6). While we recognise that these profiles are generalised and broad, they do provide some initial starting points for teachers to ascertain individual student needs and develop opportunities to (re)engage gifted students through personalised pedagogical approaches.
Applying Neihart and Betts’ six profiles enables us to demonstrate that some of these learners share common characteristics, which connect directly with the four engagement dimensions. For example: low self-esteem connects directly to affective engagement and social engagement); lack of intrinsic motivation connects to affective engagement; erratic attendance connects with behavioural engagement; limited self-regulation connects to cognitive engagement; and lack of a sense of belonging at school connects with social engagement. These connections are considered further in the following section.
The
Successful gifted learner profile (
Table 1), suggests a key characteristic of high motivation for these students. However, this motivation is extrinsic, related to pleasing the teacher, rather than intrinsic motivation. It is essential to develop intrinsic motivation, so students are aware of why they are learning the topic, what it means and the relevance of this new learning to their own lives. This is intrinsically connected to the behavioural, affective, social, and cognitive engagement dimensions [
12] in our Cyclical Model of Student Engagement.
Students who demonstrate aspects of the
Creative profile (
Table 2), can often have negative reactions to teachers, peers, academic activity, and school. This connects specifically to the affective engagement dimension. Due to the strong connection of affective engagement to the behavioural dimension, this has implications for these students; meaning they could be less likely to be happy at school, which then potentially fatigues student learning and disconnects them further from education and school. A consequence of this can be limited mastery of the content due to restricted and reduced cognitive engagement (impacting on talent actualisation in Gagné’s DMGT).
Students who may have characteristics of the third profile,
Underground (
Table 3), are frequently socially engaged, but can also be influenced by what is called the forced choice dilemma; a belief that some gifted students hold that they must choose between fitting in and being accepted by their peers, and achieving academically [
22]. This can lead to underachievement and affective and cognitive disengagement.
The
At-Risk gifted profile (
Table 4), suggests that students who primarily exhibit these characteristics can be physically present in the classroom (behaviourally engaged), but affectively, socially and cognitively they have become disengaged and consequently disconnected from learning [
11]. When gifted students become detached from their peers, learning, and school, this compounds the effect on the other engagement dimensions across the cyclical model. Students who display characteristics of the At-Risk profile can subsequently refuse to participate in class tasks and negatively express their emotions resulting in increased behavioural issues in the classroom [
11] and increasingly becoming behaviourally (and consequently affectively, socially, and cognitively) disengaged.
Students who may display characteristics of the
Twice-Exceptional profile (
Table 5), are students who have two exceptionalities—giftedness and one or more disabilities [
23]. Twice-exceptional students can have multiple comorbid disabilities, such as autism spectrum disorders, dyslexia, anxiety, and dysgraphia. Students with this profile can have reduced resilience (impacting on behavioural engagement), limited coping strategies and learning strategies (inhibiting cognitive engagement), and impeded persistence (hindering both behavioural and cognitive engagement).
Gifted students who predominantly exhibit characteristics of the
Autonomous profile (
Table 6), includes learners who are mostly engaged across the cyclical model. These students have worked out what is needed to perform well in school. They are generally self-directed, confident learners, often well-respected by peers and teachers. However, these students need additional support to develop their gifted potential. They can often be underachieving because they have reached the learning ceiling, where educators believe that these students have met the year level learning outcomes, and therefore, their learning and achievement is sufficient. Extending student motivation to excel is a challenge for both the learner and teacher. However, if they were appropriately challenged with above-level content and relevant learning opportunities they may demonstrate accelerated achievement.
The intrinsic connections to Neihart and Betts’ [
5] six gifted profiles and the cyclical model of the four interrelated engagement dimensions has been made evident here. It is important to now turn our attention to some appropriate pedagogical opportunities and approaches that can foster gifted student (re)engagement in school and learning.
6. Pedagogical Opportunities For (Re) Engaging Gifted Students
The (re)engagement needs for each of Neihart and Betts’ [
5] six gifted profiles presents important opportunities for educators to individually (re)engage these students, and at the same time attempt to address disengagement and underachievement. As illustrated in
Table 7, examples of pedagogical approaches specific to each learner profile have been provided along with specific connections to relevant dimensions of learner engagement (behavioural, affective, social, and cognitive). This conceptualisation highlights for educators the critical connection between these three components (engagement dimensions, learner profile characteristics, and pedagogical approaches). Through a range of purposeful pedagogical approaches, gifted students can be provided with individualised support and personalised learning experiences to become (re)engaged learners.
The common theme across the pedagogical approaches outlined in
Table 7, is that many of these approaches foster the opportunities for the development of student self-regulation. As a key core skill required for academic performance, self-regulation is an important influencing factor on student engagement across the four engagement dimensions [
24]. Drawn from social cognitive theory, self-regulated learning involves students being cognitively, motivationally, and behaviourally engaged, actively participating in academic tasks, and involved in school-related activities [
25].
Prior to approaching any learning opportunity, students need to be orientated to engage with the task, set goals to direct their efforts, focus their attention, and be supported to self-assess their own learning (elements of self-regulated learning). These can be achieved in many ways, for example, through providing freedom and autonomy in learning focused on areas of interest (see examples in
Table 7). Pedagogical approaches which foster interest in the task (or content), and show the value or importance of the task, support student engagement across the four engagement dimensions. Through these types of approaches it is important that educators monitor and support gifted students in developing requisite skills and strategies for engaging with learning opportunities. For example, students need to develop and know which strategies to draw on for specific kinds of learning, for instance studying for an exam requires knowledge and application of study skills (e.g., revision and use of flash cards) [
26]. Opportunities for learner self-reflection need to be embedded in the approaches outlined in
Table 7, so that gifted students can reflect on whether they have met their goals or not and are able to explain (through self-reflection) the how and why. Self-reflection influences and supports goal setting, motivation, and persistence for future learning [
26]. In this way, past learning and prior levels of student engagement have a strong and significant influence on future learner engagement (as illustrated in
Figure 1).
By embedding such pedagogical approaches as those outlined in
Table 7, educators can be empowered to foster gifted students’ abilities to set goals and also support them in recognising when to use the different strategies they have developed through these approaches, thus enabling a transformation of their abilities into academic skills [
27] or talents. Developing self-regulation strategies enables gifted students to be actively participating in their own learning, which in turn facilitates the development and practice of elements across the four engagement dimensions, such as effort, persistence, interest, enjoyment, and volition learning.
It is important to recognise that each gifted learner is an individual, therefore it is critical to leverage pedagogical approaches, such as those outlined in
Table 7, in a personalised way, so that each student receives targeted support for (re)engagement. Teachers already apply differentiated instruction through a variety of pedagogical approaches that are aimed at modifying the regular curriculum to suit gifted learners [
28]. However, the ultimate aim of (re)engaging gifted students is to personalise their learning. Similar to differentiation, personalised learning focuses on the needs of individual gifted students, however unlike differentiation, which starts with broad curriculum and adjusts this to suit individual gifted learners, personalised learning begins with the individual gifted student (based on the Neihart and Betts broad profiles), rather than the curriculum [
28]. In this way, each gifted student becomes the driver of their own learning, supported by a skilled teacher implementing some of the types of approaches outlined in
Table 7. This is the crux of gifted students’ (re)engagement—by personalising learning for gifted students, expert teachers can support engagement across all of the broad gifted profiles (i.e., Neihart and Betts), and target specific (re)engagement opportunities based on individual needs for each gifted learner. For example, personalised learning can target self-regulation—a characteristic of the Twice-Exceptional broad gifted profile, and an element of the cognitive engagement dimension, which needs addressing for learners with this profile. Furthermore, personalised learning can also focus on developing learner autonomy. This is highlighted in the Successful, Creative, and Autonomous gifted profiles [
5], and is an element that needs addressing using the Cognitive engagement dimension for each of these broad profiles. Likewise, personalised learning approaches can also address the need for engagement through self-directed learning where all six Neihart and Betts’ [
5] broad gifted learner profiles can be addressed. Thus, at the same time targeting the cognitive engagement dimension, often required for these learners to be successful in reaching their potential: demonstrating talent through mastery (exemplified in Gagné’s DMGT) [
6].
It is important to note that what we propose here, with targeted personalised learning approaches for each gifted student, is vastly different to individualised learning, which can mean individual students learning separately from their peers [
28], often isolated and at-risk of becoming behaviourally, affectively, socially, and cognitively disengaged. Personalised learning is therefore, focused on and tailored to the individual abilities, interests, aspirations, and needs of each gifted student. Hence, each student is engaged in becoming self-directed and monitors his or her own progress towards mastery (cognitive engagement) and transforming giftedness into talent as demonstrated in Gagné’s DMGT [
6] through mastery. Understanding that each of the four engagement dimensions, the individual gifted learner profile, and appropriate, targeted, and personalised pedagogical approaches are interrelated, is essential to supporting the (re)engagement of gifted learners.
Figure 2 conceptualises this connectedness, showing the nuanced dependency of each component of the (re)engagement nexus at the centre of the three components (consisting of the engagement dimensions, individual gifted learner profile, and personalised pedagogical approaches), which enable individual learners to be consistently engaged at school to address underachievement and disengagement.
Our (Re) Engagement Nexus Model (
Figure 2), suggests a conceptualisation of the interrelationship between the three components: the engagement dimensions; gifted learner profiles; and personalised pedagogical approaches. This provides the framework from which to view the nexus of personalised (re)engagement opportunities for gifted learners. The three components provide a promising lens from which to view re (engagement) of gifted students in the classroom. The exploration of the interrelationships between these three components highlights the important need for teachers and researchers to consider how these guide teaching and learning decisions for re (engaging) gifted students. This approach in turn has the potential to enable personalised learning experiences. We propose the (Re)Engagement Nexus Model as a starting point for future research approaches that drill down at classroom and individual gifted student level, to explore what this may mean in terms of actual classroom practices for addressing gifted learner underachievement and disengagement. It is hoped that this conceptual model will support further research endeavours aimed at (re)engaging gifted learners and preventing underachievement and disengagement before it becomes entrenched.