Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences:
A Theory for Everyone
A Theory for Everyone
Being intelligent does not always mean that someone tests well
-- a problem with which teachers and school administrators have struggled
since the earliest days of organized education. Howard Gardner's theory of
multiple intelligences helps educators think differently about
"IQ," and about what being "smart" means. The theory
is changing the way some teachers teach.
When
Howard Gardner's book, Frames of Mind: The
Theory of Multiple Intelligences (Basic Books, 1983) burst on the scene, it seemed to answer many
questions for experienced teachers. We all had students who didn't fit the
mold; we knew the students were bright, but they didn't excel on tests.
Gardner's claim that there are several different kinds of intelligence gave us
and others involved with teaching and learning a way of beginning to understand
those students. We would look at what they could do well, instead of what they
could not do.
Later
Gardner books, such as The Unschooled Mind:
How Children Think and How Schools Should Teach (Basic Books, 1991) and Multiple Intelligences: The Theory in Practice (Basic Books, 1993) helped us understand how
multiple intelligences could help us teach and evaluate our students in new and
better ways.
WHO IS HOWARD GARDNER?
Howard Gardner, Ph.D. is a professor at Harvard University and the
author of many books and articles. His theory of multiple intelligences has
challenged long-held assumptions about intelligence -- especially about a
single measure of intelligence. Dr. Gardner also co-directs Harvard's Project
Zero.
THE ORIGINAL SEVEN
INTELLIGENCES
Howard
Gardner first identified and introduced to us seven different kinds of intelligence
inFrames of Mind.
·
Linguistic intelligence: a sensitivity to the meaning and
order of words.
·
Logical-mathematical intelligence: ability in mathematics and other
complex logical systems.
·
Musical intelligence: the ability to understand and
create music. Musicians, composers and dancers show a heightened musical
intelligence.
·
Spatial intelligence: the ability to "think in
pictures," to perceive the visual world accurately, and recreate (or
alter) it in the mind or on paper. Spatial intelligence is highly developed in
artists, architects, designers and sculptors.
·
Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence: the ability to use one's body in
a skilled way, for self-expression or toward a goal. Mimes, dancers, basketball
players, and actors are among those who display bodily-kinesthetic
intelligence.
·
Interpersonal intelligence: an ability to perceive and
understand other individuals -- their moods, desires, and motivations.
Political and religious leaders, skilled parents and teachers, and therapists
use this intelligence.
·
Intrapersonal intelligence: an understanding of one's own
emotions. Some novelists and or counselors use their own experience to guide
others.
Then,
Gardner identified an eighth intelligence, the naturalist intelligence.
HOWARD GARDNER TALKS
ABOUT AN EIGHTH INTELLIGENCE
Gardner
discussed the "eighth intelligence" with Kathy Checkley, in an
interview for Educational Leadership, "The First Seven... and the
Eighth." Gardner said, "The naturalist intelligence refers to the
ability to recognize and classify plants, minerals, and animals, including
rocks and grass and all variety of flora and fauna. The ability to recognize
cultural artifacts like cars or sneakers may also depend on the naturalist
intelligence. (S)ome people from an early age are extremely good at recognizing
and classifying artifacts. For example, we all know kids who, at 3 or 4, are
better at recognizing dinosaurs than most adults."
Gardner
identified Charles Darwin as a prime example of this type of intelligence.
The
naturalist intelligence meshed with Gardner's definition of intelligence as
"the human ability to solve problems or to make something that is valued
in one or more cultures." And the naturalist intelligence met Gardner's
specific criteria:
·
"Is there a
particular representation in the brain for the ability?
·
"Are there
populations that are especially good or especially impaired in an intelligence?
·
"And, can an
evolutionary history of the intelligence be seen in animals other than human
beings?"
IMPLEMENTING GARDNER'S
THEORY IN THE CLASSROOM
When
asked how educators should implement the theory of multiple intelligences,
Gardner says, "(I)t's very important that a teacher take individual
differences among kids very seriously The bottom line is a deep interest in
children and how their minds are different from one another, and in helping
them use their minds well."
An
awareness of multiple-intelligence theory has stimulated teachers to find more
ways of helping all students in their classes. Some schools do this by adapting
curriculum. In "Variations on a Theme: How Teachers Interpret MI
Theory," (Educational Leadership, September 1997), Linda Campbell
describes five approaches to curriculum change:
·
Lesson
design. Some schools focus on
lesson design. This might involve team teaching ("teachers focusing on
their own intelligence strengths"), using all or several of the
intelligences in their lessons, or asking student opinions about the best way
to teach and learn certain topics.
·
Interdisciplinary
units. Secondary schools
often include interdisciplinary units.
·
Student
projects. Students can learn to
"initiate and manage complex projects" when they are creating student
projects.
·
Assessments. Assessments are devised which allow students
to show what they have learned. Sometimes this takes the form of allowing each
student to devise the way he or she will be assessed, while meeting the
teacher's criteria for quality.
·
Apprenticeships. Apprenticeships can allow students to
"gain mastery of a valued skill gradually, with effort and discipline over
time." Gardner feels that apprenticeships "should take up about
one-third of a student's schooling experience."
With
an understanding of Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences, teachers,
school administrators, and parents can better understand the learners in their
midst. They can allow students to safely explore and learn in many ways, and
they can help students direct their own learning. Adults can help students
understand and appreciate their strengths, and identify real-world activities
that will stimulate more learning.
Article
by Anne Guignon
Education World®
Copyright © 2010 Education World
Education World®
Copyright © 2010 Education World
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