@axnxcamr @actuallyautistic

There's a real problem faced by "highly-capable" or "gifted" kids:

Things are easy for them, until they're not.

And when things get difficult, it's often because the kid coasted by on their IQ without developing the skills they'd need when things got more complex than they were able to brute-force with their brains.

I know this happened to me, and it's only as an adult that I learned more about why.

Autism is often co-morbid with executive function impairment and atypical sensory-processing.

Learning skills to help counter executive functioning issues and techniques to deal with over-stimulus when it comes to task completion can dramatically improve quality of life and burnout issues with tasks that suddenly seem to be too great to surmount.

Take this with some salt, I transitioned from psychology to computer science half-way through my college career.

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#Autism #ExecutiveFunctioning #ActuallyAutistic #Burnout

@alice
One of the best things our gifted ADHD daughter learned at the private non-profit school she attended through sixth grade was *how to get along with non-gifted kids*. I was a gifted, verbally-precocious kid. Such kids can be very impatient and cruel to kids that don't learn as fast they do!
@axnxcamr @actuallyautistic @PeteLittle

@dancingtreefrog @actuallyautistic The thing that shocked me was leaving the little rural high school and going to university where I met people noticeably smarter than me. I was not at all used to people being able to understand what I meant without a lot of back and forth.

That's a valuable experience to have young, if you can arrange it. Those "STEM camps" etc can be good that way (and might be necessary depending on just how smart your kid is).

@moz
Yup! Same thing for me.
@actuallyautistic