She's only eleven and she already thinks that school is a waste of time despite achieving great results.
There is a lot wrong with the education system in the UK.
Stanford University EPGY is a good online program for gifted children, even as young as your daughter. The math program is good; there is even a music program. http://epgy.stanford.edu/courses/math/ The advantage of the Stanford courses is that they are designed for teaching advanced topics to youngsters.
In California high schoolers and even gifted elementary school children can take courses at the junior colleges. There are special courses for elementary age children, but those in high school take regular level college level courses. Maybe such programs exist in the UK.
A good outside program can provide the motivation to put up with the rest of the crap. Then all you have to do is convince the authorities to exempt her from advanced arithmetic because she is taking calculus.
I don't know. The above statement makes me think the problem isn't the schools but the world that comes after. Our schools may be based on "an industrial era" but the reality is so are most jobs. Accountants have to follow strict rules, as do lawyers, doctors, etc...
Given that, and the fact that I still see a problem in how your daughter is treated, I think the answer is not in changing our current schools as much as it is in profiling kids and tailoring a new enviornment for those it doesn't work for. We need a way to determine whose strengths are creative and whose are methodical and then design an education program for the creative while leaving the current one in place for the methodical.
Heh, I still remember being told off for something similar 14ish years ago...
How many resources should they apply to the top 2% of children?
Resources spend on the cleverest kids will probably provide a bigger return on investmant than for other kids, so about 5%
We seem to have found the problem.
For all the gifted and unique snow-flakes out there, the sooner they learn to cope with a system (and a world) which doesn't cater to their extraordinary talents, the better off they'll be.
I tried a computer course, failed after year 1, and took Media Studies for 2 years and passed.
A few years passed, and then I completed my first ever computer course (eg, having never passed any computer course) which was a 3-year degree.
It is possible to do higher learning further into adulthood, and easier!
[Edit] What has this to do with creativity? Well, not a lot. But I've written stories all my life. I also think excessive use of alcohol kills creativity, and these days, a degree is half about getting drunk and socialising.
My only advice is: Keep writing, even if it means missing out socially. Also try and keep things interesting. I signed up to help a computing legend with his software before my degree, and that was no end of fun. I was volunteering at an ACM conference when I was barely into my 2nd year of University, thanks to this work. He also guest lectured at my University, which was really strange.
In short - find a mentor, even if it doesn't pay.