How "gifted" is defined
There is no universally agreed definition of "gifted." In educational contexts, the term refers to students who demonstrate outstanding ability or potential in one or more domains — intellectual, creative, artistic, leadership, or specific academic fields. In psychological and psychometric contexts, "gifted" is used more narrowly to describe individuals with very high IQ scores.
The disconnect between educational and psychometric definitions creates significant confusion. A child classified as gifted in a school district using IQ 120 as the threshold occupies a meaningfully different position from a child in a program using IQ 145.
Typical IQ thresholds
The most common thresholds in gifted identification are IQ 130 (top 2.3%, used by most formal programs) and IQ 120 (top 9%, used by less selective programs). Some organisations distinguish levels: "gifted" (130–145), "highly gifted" (145–160), and "profoundly gifted" (160+).
The SMPY (Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth), one of the longest-running studies of intellectually gifted individuals, used SAT scores taken at age 12–13 as a selection criterion — selecting the top 1% of mathematical ability at that age. Follow-up studies decades later confirmed strong effects on career achievement, patents, publications, and academic success.
Gifted education programs
Most US school districts that have gifted programs use IQ 130 as a primary criterion, often combined with teacher nomination, achievement test performance, and creative or leadership assessment. The combination approach is more accurate than IQ alone, as IQ tests have measurement error and miss some dimensions of giftedness.
The evidence on the effectiveness of gifted programs is mixed. Acceleration (moving students ahead in content) shows consistently positive effects on achievement and long-term outcomes. Enrichment without acceleration shows weaker and less consistent effects.
What research says about gifted children
The SMPY research by Julian Stanley and later David Lubinski followed thousands of intellectually gifted individuals over 40+ years. Key findings: those identified as gifted by age 13 went on to disproportionate levels of academic achievement, research publications, patents, and income. The differences scaled with the level of intellectual ability — those in the top 1% outperformed those in the top 5–10%, even within the gifted range.
Importantly, the SMPY also showed that many gifted individuals' potential went unrealised due to lack of educational challenge, poor matching of ability to opportunity, and the suppressive effects of unstimulating environments.
Limitations of IQ-based gifted classification
IQ-based gifted classification misses children who are gifted in domains not well captured by IQ tests — creative ability, social intelligence, leadership, and performance arts. It also disproportionately identifies children from highly educated, high-resource backgrounds, not because such children are inherently more gifted, but because their environments develop the test-relevant skills more fully.
A child with genuinely high potential from a low-stimulation environment may score below a gifted threshold not because of limited capacity but because the capacity has not been exercised. IQ tests measure developed ability, not potential in isolation.