Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Psychology, Belgrade
Abstract
The study examines the personality profile of gifted vs. average-ability
students from the perspective of the FFM. The issue was approached by (1)
reviewing the literature for well-established personality characteristics of
the gifted, (2) establishing correspondences between these traits and FFM
domains/facets, and (3) formulating a domain and a facet-level model which
were hypothesized to discriminate significantly between gifted and nongifted
students. The domain-level model consisted of Openness and Agreeableness. The
facet-level model included 14 traits: Anxiety, Impulsiveness, Gregariousness,
Assertiveness, Fantasy, Feelings, Aesthetics, Ideas, Compliance, Modesty,
Tendermindedness, Order, Achievement, and Deliberation. The models were
tested on three samples (N1=515 high-school students, 155 gifted; N2=132
psychology students, 28 gifted; N3=443 psychology students, 91 gifted).
Results indicate that the domain-level model does not discriminate
significantly between gifted and nongifted students in each sample, whereas
the proposed 14-facet model yields a significant discrimination across all
samples. The latter model may be further adjusted by removing facets which
proved inconsistent or unsubstantial in distinguishing between the two
groups. This yields a 7-facet discriminant function, which is also
significant across samples, indicating that gifted students are consistently
distinguished by a combination of high Ideas, Fantasy, Aesthetics, and
Assertiveness, but low Gregariuosness, Modesty, and Tendermindeness.
Educational implications and limitations are discussed.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
13 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献