Pure Intention Services
24/04/2026
Twice-exceptional students sit in a complicated place in school systems. They are identified as both gifted and disabled, which means they are constantly being pulled between two different sets of expectations that do not really fit together in practice.
Giftedness is treated as something to be developed through achievement and output. Disability is treated as something to be managed so it does not interfere too much with performance. When both exist in the same student, the system tends to separate them instead of integrating them.
What often ends up happening is that “exceptional” becomes conditional. Students are encouraged to perform at a high level, while their support needs are only addressed when they start to get in the way of that performance. Over time, the message becomes pretty consistent that value is tied to what you can produce, and your needs only matter in relation to how they affect that output.
That starts to shape how students see themselves. Self-worth becomes linked to productivity. Rest starts to feel like something that has to be justified. Struggle is only acknowledged if it is visible enough to warrant intervention, but not disruptive enough to affect outcomes. A lot of students learn to keep going by disconnecting from what it costs them.
This is not just an educational pattern as it becomes part of how students are socialized to understand their own worth in general. So the question becomes less about identification and more about design.
Is this pipeline unintentionally shaping students into a very specific outcome, where the goal is to produce adults who are functional, productive, and able to meet middle-class expectations, even if it requires ongoing self-suppression to maintain it? Because if that is what is being reinforced, then we are not just talking about support needs in school. We are talking about what the system is actually training people to believe about themselves.
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