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Social Emotional Learning | Parenting | December 3, 2023

SMART Goals for Gifted Students

Move gifted students to a mastery goal-setting approach based on their personal best. Use an adaptation of the classic SMART Goal framework to add strategies to success. This article will guide you in supporting students to set SMARTS/S goals so they grow in confidence and self-efficacy. Download a free Setting SMART Goals Worksheet to support gifted students in goal-setting for success.

Setting Quality and Relevant Goals

Many factors influence goal attainment, from the difficulty of the tasks to social support to—in the case of student goals—orientation toward learning.

When working with students, what’s most important in the goal-setting process is the level of commitment the student has toward the goal. As I stated in Self-Regulation in the Classroom, “Achievement is most positively affected by students and teachers setting challenging goals that are relevant to the students’ level of abilities and achievement.” Psychologists Robert Wood and Edwin Locke found that students who set the most challenging (yet achievable) goals out-performed their peers who set easier goals by over 250 percent!

Some gifted students may not have been challenged in the past to the degree where they had to put forth effort, or they may feel their giftedness hinges on their ability to be fast and right. Students with this kind of learning orientation (called performance approach) set goals based on being better than others. These learners use the learning process for positive reinforcement of their abilities and may only put forth effort on tasks where they are assured a positive outcome. This orientation may be harmful when it comes time to work on unfamiliar or challenging tasks.

Ideal Self Goal

ideal-self-goal

To move gifted students from a performance-approach orientation (goal-setting based on being better than others) to a mastery-approach one (goal-setting based on personal best), consider having your students first set what is called an “ideal self goal.” This is a goal that reflects the type of person they would like to be in their lives. Typically, this includes a set of characteristics or qualities they are committed to achieving, such as

  • compassionate

  • creative

  • dedicated

  • dependable

  • giving

  • kind

  • loyal

  • sensitive

  • trustworthy

Once students decide on their ideal self goals, they can begin to set learning goals to achieve their ideal selves. The quality of the goals students set prior to the learning activities will have a profound effect on their motivation to learn. Quality goals motivate learners to

  • focus attention toward relevant tasks to achieve the goal

  • exert effort in the right places

  • persist when things get difficult

  • achieve a higher degree of self-satisfaction in learning

SMARTS/S Goal Framework

One of the most effective tools for setting quality learning goals is the SMARTS/S goals framework. We’ve all heard of SMART goals:

  • S= Specific. The more specific the goal is, the more likely the student will be able to achieve it.

  • M= Measurable. Knowing how to measure the goal (the criteria for achievement) provides the learner with ways to track progress.

  • A= Achievable. The self-efficacy of the student’s skill level and ability can support him or her when things get tough.

  • R= Realistic. The goal should be neither too high nor too low; it needs to hit the “Goldilocks principle”—just right.

  • T= Timely. The same Goldilocks principle applies here as well—neither too long nor too short of a timeline to measure accomplishment.

I’ve made an adjustment to the framework to include “strategies to success” (S/S):

  • S/S= Strategies to Success. Knowing which strategies to use and when is crucial to the achievement of a learning goal.

Strategies to Success

Having a clear understanding of the strategies (discrete conscious actions) that develop into skills (automaticity) helps in dealing with complex problems. Typically, young gifted students learn strategies quickly, without a great deal of repetition or practice. Many teachers may see students’ rapid efficiency with individual strategies as evidence of skill development. However, without knowing how the strategy can be refined through multiple practices, or having multiple strategies to rely on, students may stumble when issues become more complex or sophisticated in later grades. Skilled learners are those who can quickly refine strategies or pull from multiple strategies to achieve a successful outcome.

Teachers can support gifted students in setting quality goals by

  • helping them identify the kind of person they want to be (the ideal self)

  • keeping them aware of the strategies and skills they’re developing to achieve the ideal self

  • providing effective feedback on goal attainment

In summary, the importance of goal-setting is to develop greater intrinsic motivation toward mastery and learning. Students who set goals tend to be more self-energized, motivated, and directed toward being successful. With each goal attainment, students develop greater self-efficacy and confidence. Our own goal should be to assist our students in setting, monitoring, and reviewing goals toward their individual successes.


Citations

  • Cash, R.M. Self-Regulation in the Classroom: Helping Students Learn How to Learn. Minneapolis, MN: Free Spirit Publishing, 2016.
  • Hattie, J.Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement. New York: Routledge, 2009.
  • Schunk, D.H., and B.J. Zimmerman (eds.). Motivation and Self-Regulated Learning: Theory, Research, and Applications. New York: Routledge, 2008.
  • Wood, R.E., and E.A. Locke. “The Relation of Self-Efficacy and Grade Goals to Academic Performance.” Educational and Psychological Measurement, 47, no.4 (1987): 1013–1024.

 

Author Bio:

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Richard M. Cash, Ed.D., Author

Dr. Richard M. Cash is an award-winning author and educator who has worked in the field of education for over thirty years. His range of experience includes teaching, curriculum coordination, and program administration. Currently, he is an internationally recognized education consultant. His consulting work has taken him throughout the United States, as well as into Canada, the Czech Republic, China, England, Indonesia, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Oman, Poland, Qatar, Spain, South...

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