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Teaching for Successful Intelligence

Teaching for Successful Intelligence. Robert J. Sternberg Tufts University. Contact Information. Robert J. Sternberg, Dean, School of Arts and Sciences, Director, PACE Center Tufts University, Ballou Hall Medford, MA USA 02155. Contact Information. E-mail:

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Teaching for Successful Intelligence

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  1. Teaching for Successful Intelligence Robert J. Sternberg Tufts University

  2. Contact Information Robert J. Sternberg, Dean, School of Arts and Sciences, Director, PACE Center Tufts University, Ballou Hall Medford, MA USA 02155

  3. Contact Information • E-mail: • robert.sternberg@tufts.edu

  4. Organization • Introduction • The Nature of Successful Intelligence • Teaching for Successful Intelligence • Research Support • Caution • Conclusions

  5. Global Mission of Presentation • To demonstrate how to teach and assess students using the theory of successful intelligence—to help all students achieve at an optimal level.

  6. Motivation • Some students learn well when taught in conventional ways, but others do not. They are intelligent, but not in the usual way. The goal of teaching should be to reach all students.

  7. The Problem • When we do not teach to all students, we risk creating self-fulfilling prophecies that doom certain students to mediocrity who could be good or even excellent achievers.

  8. The Concept of Successful Intelligence We need a concept of intelligence and learning skills that is broader than the conventional concept. Successful intelligence is such a concept.

  9. The Concept of Successful Intelligence Successful intelligence is • the ability to achieve success in life, given one’s personal standards, within one’s sociocultural context;

  10. The Concept of Successful Intelligence • in order to adapt to, shape, and select environments;

  11. The Concept of Successful Intelligence • via recognition of and capitalization on strengths and remediation of or compensation for weaknesses;

  12. The Concept of Successful Intelligence • through a balance of analytical, creative, and practical abilities.

  13. Motivation for “Triarchy of Abilities” • Alice: • A student high in memory and analytical abilities • Barbara: • A student high in creative abilities

  14. Motivation for “Triarchy of Abilities” • Celia: • A student high in practical abilities • Paul: • A student high in analytical and creative abilities but low in practical abilities

  15. The Triarchic View of Intelligence There are three aspects of intelligence: • analytical • creative • practical

  16. The Concept of Successful Intelligence Conventional (Analytical) Intelligence Creative Practical Intelligence Intelligence

  17. The Linkage • You need creative skills to come up with ideas. • You need analytical skills to evaluate whether they are good ideas. • You need practical skills to implement the ideas and convince others of their value.

  18. Bases for Achievement • Learning and thinking skills • Learning and thinking dispositions

  19. Instructional and Assessment Techniques • Balanced use of instruction and assessment that is • Memory-Based • Analytically-Based • Creatively-Based • Practically-Based

  20. Teaching/Assessing for Memory-Based Learning • Remember • Recall • Recognize

  21. Teaching/Assessing for Memory-Based Learning • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why? • How?

  22. An Example from My Classroom • The cerebellum is in the • *A. hindbrain • B. midbrain • C. left brain • D. right brain

  23. An Example from My Classroom For most people, comprehension of language occurs mostly in the ____ hemisphere of the brain.

  24. Analytical Skills • analyze • compare and contrast • evaluate • explain • judge • critique

  25. Analytical Attitude • Recognize existence of problem • Define problem

  26. Analytical Attitude • Mentally represent problem • Allocate resources to problem • Formulate strategy to solve problem

  27. Analytical Attitude • Monitor results of strategy • Evaluate results

  28. Analytical Evaluation • To what extent is the product • Informed? • Logical? • Organized? • Balanced?

  29. An Example from My Classroom • Critique the ethics behind Stanley Milgram’s studies of obedience, discussing why you believe that the benefits did or did not outweigh the costs of the research.

  30. Creative Skills • create • design • invent • imagine • suppose

  31. Creative Attitude • Redefine problems • Analyze solutions • Sell solutions • Recognize strengths and limits of knowledge

  32. Creative Attitude • Surmount obstacles • Take sensible risks • Attain self-efficacy • Find what you love to do • Tolerate ambiguity

  33. Creative Attitude • Continue to grow • Maintain a sense of perspective and humor • Allow time • Defy the crowd

  34. Evaluation of Creative Products • To what extent is the product: • Informed? • Novel? • Compelling? • Task-appropriate?

  35. An Example from My Classroom • Suppose you gave the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV) to children growing up in a remote African village in Kenya. What kinds of results might you expect in comparison with results from a large American city? Why?

  36. Practical Skills • Use • Apply • Implement • Employ • Contextualize

  37. Practical Attitudes • Allocate study time effectively • Find places and times to concentrate • Relate what you learn to what you know

  38. Practical Attitudes • Work toward a concrete goal • Know how and when you will be assessed • Look for uses in what you learn

  39. Practical Attitudes • Make it interesting • Use visual imagery and other mnemonics

  40. Evaluation of Practical Products • To what extent is the product: • Informed? • Feasible with respect to time and place? • Feasible with respect to human resources? • Feasible with respect to material resources?

  41. An Example from My Classroom • How do gambling casinos employ reinforcement techniques to keep people gambling at slot machines?

  42. Principles of Teaching for Successful Intelligence • The goal of instruction is the development of expertise through the creation of a well and flexibly organized, easily retrievable knowledge base

  43. Principles of Teaching for Successful Intelligence • Instruction should involve teaching for analytical, creative, and practical thinking as well as for memory learning

  44. Principles of Teaching for Successful Intelligence • Assessment should also involve analytical, creative, and practical as well as memory components

  45. Principles of Teaching for Successful Intelligence • Instruction and assessment should enable students to: • Identify and capitalize on strengths • Identify and correct or compensate for weaknesses

  46. Sample Course Requirements • Examinations • Multiple-choice or short-answer items • Choice of 2 out of 3 (or 4 out of 6) essays (which are, respectively, primarily analytical, creative, or practical)

  47. Sample Course Requirements • Examinations • Term paper/project (assigned or unassigned topic) • Oral presentation (assigned or unassigned topic)

  48. Applications of the Concept of Successful Intelligence: Triarchic Teaching Advantages of Triarchic Teaching • Enables students to capitalize on strengths and remediate or compensate for weaknesses • Enables students to encode learning material more deeply and elaborately

  49. Applications of the Concept of Successful Intelligence: Triarchic Teaching Advantages of Triarchic Teaching • Enables students to encode learning material in multiple ways • Motivates students more strongly • Prepares students better for actual job requirements

  50. Excuses and Responses • Tests only measure rote recall • These methods are only for strong students • These methods are only for weak students

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