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The Enrichment Triad Model was designed to
encourage the creative productivity of young people by exposing
them to various topics, areas of interest, and fields of study,
and to further train them to apply advanced content, process-training
skills, and methodology training to self-selected areas of interest.
Accordingly, three types of enrichment are included in the Triad
Model (see Figure 1).

Figure 1.
The enrichment triad model. (Click on the figure to see it as a PDF file.)
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- Type I enrichment is designed
to expose students to a wide variety of disciplines, topics, occupations,
hobbies, persons, places, and events that would not ordinarily
be covered in the regular curriculum. In schools that use this
model, an enrichment team consisting of parents, teachers, and
students often organizes and plans Type I experiences by contacting
speakers, arranging mini-courses, demonstrations, or performances,
or by ordering and distributing films, slides, videotapes, or
other print or non-print media.
- Type II enrichment consists
of materials and methods designed to promote the development of
thinking and feeling processes. Some Type II training is general,
and is usually carried out both in classrooms and in enrichment
programs. Training activities include the development of (a) creative
thinking and problem solving, critical thinking, and affective
processes; (b) a wide variety of specific learning how-to-learn
skills; (c) skills in the appropriate use of advanced-level reference
materials; and (d) written, oral, and visual communication skills.
Other Type II enrichment is specific, as it usually involves advanced
methodological instruction in an interest area selected by the
student.
- Type III enrichment involves students
who become interested in pursuing a self-selected area and are
willing to commit the time necessary for advanced content acquisition
and process training in which they assume the role of a first-hand
inquirer. The goals of Type III enrichment include:
- providing opportunities for applying
interests, knowledge, creative ideas and task commitment to
a self-selected problem or area of study,
- acquiring advanced level understanding
of the knowledge (content) and methodology (process) that are
used within particular disciplines, artistic areas of expression
and interdisciplinary studies,
- developing authentic products that
are primarily directed toward bringing about a desired impact
upon a specified audience,
- developing self-directed learning
skills in the areas of planning, organization, resource utilization,
time management, decision making, and self-evaluation, and
- developing task commitment,
self-confidence, and feelings of creative accomplishment
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