What kind of individuals the society needs and how individuals can serve the society are issues that education must consider and understand. Like Alfred. Adler said in his excellent Children's Personality Education: The school must be clear that it educates students for society, not for itself.
Since school education is to teach for society, society needs all kinds of talents. As the saying goes, "There must be a champion in 360 lines."
Therefore, schools should not ignore any children who give up becoming ideal students and model students. These students' pursuit of superiority is not necessarily weaker than that of normal children, but they just turn their attention to doing other things that don't require much effort.
They believe that these things are easy to succeed, whether this belief is right or wrong, it may be because they unconsciously explored and succeeded in these fields in their early years. Therefore, although they can't achieve excellent results in mathematics, they can become athletes on the sports field. Teachers should never underestimate children's achievements in these fields, but should regard such achievements as educational breakthroughs and encourage students to pursue the same progress in other fields.