The room where the conversation
finally moves at the right speed.
Custom intellectual pathways for children who finished the worksheet before the teacher finished explaining it. Tell us who you are — we'll show you what's possible.
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The standard classroom was not designed for the child who already knows the answer.
Asynchronous development, academic ceiling effects, and structural underidentification aren't edge cases — they're the daily reality for hundreds of thousands of gifted children whose potential is quietly capped by systems built for the median.
"The research is unambiguous: gifted children who receive no differentiated services show measurable decline in academic motivation within 18 months."
— Journal of Advanced Academics, 2023
of students qualify as gifted
Yet only 1 in 4 receives any form of differentiated instruction in a typical school year.
Source: NCES, 2024
ahead academically
A twice-exceptional 7-year-old may read at a 5th-grade level while still struggling with executive function.
Source: Silverman, 2023
underidentification in minority populations
Gifted Black and Hispanic students are identified at roughly half the rate of their white peers - a structural failure, not a talent gap.
Source: NAGC Report, 2023
higher dropout risk
Unchallenged gifted students disengage at more than twice the rate of their age-peers - academic ceiling effects are measurable and serious.
Source: Colangelo et al., 2022
Three wounds no worksheet can close
The Worksheet Problem
Differentiation in most classrooms means more pages of the same work - not harder thinking. For a child processing at two grade levels above, this isn't enrichment. It's waiting.
The Identification Gap
IQ scores above 130 appear in assessment reports and then disappear into placement committees. Without a structured response pathway, that number becomes a piece of paper, not a plan.
The Asynchrony Reality
A child who debugs code at recess may still cry when a pencil breaks. Twice-exceptional development is not a straight line - programs built for either end alone leave the whole child behind.
There is a structured response.
Gifted builds the pathway your child's school cannot.
Four pillars that answer the wound each section opens.
Every program component is designed to answer a specific failure of the standard system — not to add enrichment on top of it, but to replace the missing structure entirely.
Psychometric Assessment Methodology
Precision identification, not guesswork
We begin with a multi-measure evaluation: cognitive ability (WISC-V or KABC-II), academic achievement, and socio-emotional profile. No single score defines a child — our assessment synthesizes the full picture.
What's included
- Twice-exceptional identification protocol
- Underrepresented population equity screening
- Asynchronous development mapping
- 48-hour written report with placement recommendations
Differentiated Curriculum Architecture
Content that accelerates, not accumulates
Each child receives a custom curriculum map — not a fixed syllabus. We build upward from their demonstrated ceiling, not their grade level, using problem-based learning structures drawn from university research methodologies.
- Subject-specific acceleration tracks
- Socratic seminar and debate modules
- Original research project pathways
- Quarterly curriculum map updates
Social-Emotional Cohort Matching
Finally, a room full of peers
Intellectual isolation is one of the most underreported consequences of giftedness. We match children into cohorts by cognitive profile and social-emotional maturity — not age — so they experience what it feels like to be in the middle of the distribution.
- Psychometric cohort compatibility scoring
- Facilitated peer collaboration structures
- Social-emotional learning integration
- Parent cohort communication cadence
Parent Consultation Cadence
You stay in the room
Monthly parent consultations with your child's program coordinator. Quarterly progress reports that speak the language of psychometrics and translate it into plain English. You'll never wonder what's happening — you'll be part of it.
Cadence
- Monthly 30-minute coordinator check-ins
- Quarterly written progress reports
- School liaison communication on request
- Annual placement review and re-evaluation
What happens when a child finally finds their speed.
These are not curated success stories. They are the documented outcomes of children placed in programs calibrated to their actual cognitive profile — not their grade level.
of families report reduced academic anxiety within one semester
children served across 14 states since 2019
average measurable academic acceleration after 12 months
of school psychologist referrals result in actionable placement change
"My daughter was reading Tolkien at six and crying every Sunday night about going back to school. After Gifted's assessment, we finally had language for what was happening — and a plan. She hasn't cried on a Sunday in eight months."

Renata Okonkwo
Daughter, age 7 — IQ 142, twice-exceptional
No Sunday anxiety
"I've referred four students to Gifted this year. The assessment reports are the most useful documents I've ever handed to a placement committee — they translate psychometrics into decisions a principal can actually act on."

Dr. Marcus Trevino
Chicago Public Schools, District 299
This academic year
"We were told to 'just let him be a kid.' Meanwhile he was teaching himself topology from YouTube at age eight. The curriculum map Gifted built wasn't a worksheet packet — it was a research agenda."
James Whitfield
Son, age 9 — Mathematics acceleration, cohort year 2
"As a district coordinator, I needed a summer partner who could serve our HiCap students without just handing them AP prep. Gifted's cohort model is the only program I've found that takes social-emotional fit as seriously as academic placement."

Priya Raghunathan
Bellevue School District, HiCap Programs
District partnership
The Gifted Child Identification Guide
A 28-page practitioner-authored guide for parents, school psychologists, and district coordinators — written to answer the questions that come after the assessment report arrives and before anyone knows what to do next.
What's inside
- Gifted identification criteria across 12 psychometric instruments
- Twice-exceptional diagnosis: what it means and what it demands
- Underidentification in minority populations: the data and the fix
- How to read your child's assessment report — a plain-English guide
- Placement options matrix: what each setting provides and what it doesn't
- Questions to ask your school district at the next IEP meeting
Download the Identification Guide
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Or explore without downloading
Summer cohort enrollment opens March 15. Assessment slots for the 2026 summer program are limited to 24 children. The guide includes placement timeline recommendations.