Multiple Intelegence-Howard Gardner
Multiple Intelegence-Howard Gardner
Multiple Intelegence-Howard Gardner
Multiple Intelligences / 2
they like the tests that have been in use for decades, and if new ones are to be
marketed, these must correlate well with existing instruments. So much for openness
to novelty within psychometrics.
455.
Others in the field seem less bound by its strictures. The psychologist and
journalist Daniel Goleman has achieved worldwide success with his book Emotional
Intelligence (1995). Contending that this new concept (sometimes nicknamed EQ)
may matter as much as or more than IQ, Goleman draws attention to such pivotal
human abilities as controlling ones emotional reactions and reading the signals of
50others. In the view of the noted psychiatrist Robert Coles, author of The Moral
Intelligence of Children (1997), among many other books, we should prize character
over intellect. He decries the amorality of our families, hence our children; he shows
how we might cultivate human beings with a strong sense of right and wrong, who are
willing to act on that sense even when it runs counter to self-interest. Other, frankly
55popular accounts deal with leadership intelligence (LQ), executive intelligence (EQ or
ExQ), and even financial intelligence.
6.
Like Coless and Golemans efforts, my work on multiple intelligences
eschews the psychologists credo of operationalization and test-making. I began by
asking two questions: How did the human mind and brain evolve over millions of
60years? And How can we account for the diversity of skills and capacities that are or
have been valued in different communities around the world?
7.
Armed with these questions and a set of eight criteria, I have concluded that all
human beings possess at least eight intelligences: linguistic and logical-mathematical
(the two most prized in school and the ones central to success on standard intelligence
65tests), musical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, naturalists, interpersonal, and intrapersonal.
8.
I make two complementary claims about intelligence. The first is universal. We
all possess these eight intelligences and possibly more. Indeed, rather than seeing us
as rational animals, I offer a new definition of what it means to be a human being,
cognitively speaking. Homo sapiens sapiens is the animal that possesses these eight
70forms of mental representation.
9.
My second claim concerns individual differences. Owing to the accidents of
heredity, environment, and their interactions, no two of us exhibit the same
intelligences in precisely the same proportions. Our profiles of intelligence differ
from one another. This fact poses intriguing challenges and opportunities for our
75education system. We can ignore these differences and pretend that we are all the
same; historically, that is what most education systems have done. Or we can fashion
an education system that tries to exploit these differences, individualizing instruction
and assessment as much as possible.
Intelligence and Morality
8010. As the century of Binet and his successors draws to a close, wed be wise to
take stock of, and to anticipate, the course of thinking about intelligence. Although my
Multiple Intelligences / 3
crystal ball is no clearer than anyone elses (the species may lack future
intelligence, it seems safe to predict that interest in intelligence will not go away.
11. To begin with, the psychometric community has scarcely laid down its arms.
85New versions of the standard tests continue to be created, and occasionally new tests
surface as well. Researchers in the psychometric tradition churn out fresh evidence of
the predictive power of their instruments and the correlations between measured
intelligence and ones life chances. And some in the psychometric tradition are
searching for the biological basis of intelligence: the gene or complex of genes that
90may affect intelligence, the neural structures that are crucial for intelligence, or telltale
brain-wave patterns that distinguish the bright from the less bright.
12. Beyond various psychometric twists, interest in intelligence is likely to grow in
other ways. It will be fed by the creation of machines that display intelligence and by
the specific intelligence or intelligences. Moreover, observers as diverse as Richard
95Herrnstein and Robert B. Reich, President Clintons first Secretary of Labor, have
agreed that in coming years a large proportion of societys rewards will go to those
people who are skilled symbol analysts who can sit at a computer screen (or its
technological successor), manipulate numbers and other kinds of symbols, and use the
results of their operations to contrive plans, tactics, and strategies for enterprises
100ranging from business to science to war games. These people may well color how
intelligence is conceived in decades to come just as the need to provide good
middle-level bureaucrats to run an empire served as a primary molder of intelligence
tests in the early years of the century.
13. Surveying the landscape of intelligence, I discern three struggles between
105opposing forces. The extent to which, and the manner in which, these various
struggles are resolved will influence the lives of millions of people. I believe that the
three struggles are interrelated; that the first struggle provides the key to the other
two; and that the ensemble of struggles can be resolved in an optimal way.
14. The first struggle concerns the breadth of our definition of intelligence. One
110camp consists of the purists, who believe in a single form of intelligence one that
basically predicts success in school and in school-like activities. Arrayed against the
purists are the progressive pluralists, who believe that many forms of intelligence
exist. Some of these pluralists would like to broaden the definition of intelligence
considerably to include the abilities to create, to lead, and to stand out in terms of
115emotional sensitivity or moral excellence.
15. The second struggle concerns the assessment of intelligence. Again, one readily
encounters a traditional position. Once chiefly concerned with paper-and-pencil tests,
the traditionally oriented practitioner is now likely to use computers to provide the
same information more quickly and more accurately. But other positions abound.
120Purists disdain psychological tasks of any complexity, preferring to look instead at
reaction time, brain waves, and other physiological measures of intellect. In contrast,
simulators favor measures closely resembling the actual abilities that are prized. And
Multiple Intelligences / 4
skeptics warn against the continued expansion of testing. They emphasize the damage
often done to individual life chances and self-esteem by a regimen of psychological
125testing, and call for less technocratic, more humane methods ranging from selfassessment to the examination of portfolios of student work to selection in the service
of social equity.
16. The final struggle concerns the relationship between intelligence and the
qualities we value in human beings. Although no one would baldly equate intellect
130and human worth, nuanced positions have emerged on this issue. Some (in the Bell
Curve mold) see intelligence as closely related to a persons ethics and values; they
believe that brighter people are more likely to appreciate moral complexity and to
behave judiciously. Some call for a sharp distinction between the realm of intellect on
the one hand, and character, morality, or ethics on the other. Societys ambivalence on
135this issue can be discerned in the figures that become the cultures heroes. For every
Albert Einstein or Bobby Fischer who is celebrated for his intellect, there is a Forrest
Gump or a Chauncey Gardiner who is celebrated for human and humane traits that
would never be captured on any kind of intelligence test.
17. Thanks to the work of the past decade or two, the stranglehold of the
140psychometricians has at last been broken. This is a beneficent development. Yet now
that the psychometricians have been overcome, we risk deciding that anything goes
that emotions, morality, creativity, must all be absorbed into the new (or even the
New Age) intelligence. The challenge is to chart a concept of intelligence that
reflects new insights and discoveries and yet can withstand rigorous scrutiny. An
145analogy may help. One can think of the scope of intelligence as represented by an
elastic band. For many years the definition of intelligence went unchallenged, and the
band seemed to have lost its elasticity. Some of the new definitions expand the band,
so that it has become taut and resilient; and yet earlier work on intelligence is still
germane. Other definitions so expand the band that it is likely finally to snap and the
150earlier work on intelligence will no longer be of use.
18. Until now the term intelligence has been limited largely to certain kinds of
problem-solving involving language and logic the skills at a premium in the
bureaucrat or the law professor. However, human beings are able to deal with
numerous kinds of content besides words, numbers, and logical relations for
155example, space, music, the psyches of other human beings. Like the elastic band,
definitions of intelligence need to be expanded to include human skill in dealing with
these diverse contents. And we must not restrict attention to solving problems that
have been posed by others; we must consider equally the capacity of individuals to
fashion products scientific experiments, effective organizations that draw on one
160or more human intelligences. The elastic band can accommodate such broadening as
well.
19. So long as intelligences are restricted to the processing of contents in the world,
we avoid epistemological problems as we should. Intelligence should not be
5Multiple Intelligences / 5
expanded to include personality, motivation, will, attention, character, creativity, and
165other important and significant human capacities. Such stretching is likely to snap the
band.
20. Lets see what happens when one crosses one of these lines for example, when
one attempts to conflate intelligence and creativity. Beginning with a definition, we
extend the descriptor creative to those people (or works or institutions) who meet
170two criteria: they are innovative, and their innovations are eventually accepted by a
relevant community.
21. No one denies that creativity is important and, indeed, it may prove even more
important in the future, when nearly all standard (algorithmic) procedures will be
carried out by computers. Yet creativity should not be equated with intelligence. An
175expert may be intelligent in one or more domains but not necessarily inclined toward,
or successful in, innovation. Similarly, although it is clear that the ability to innovate
requires a certain degree of intelligence, we dont find a significant correlation
between measures of intellect and of creativity. Indeed, creativity seems more
dependent on a certain kind of temperament and personality risk-taking, tough180skinned, persevering, above all having a lust to alter the status quo and leave a mark
on society than on efficiency in processing various kinds of information. By
collapsing these categories together, we risk missing dimensions that are important
but separate; and we may think that we are training (or selecting) one when we are
actually training (or selecting) the other.
18522. Next consider what happens when one stretches the idea of intelligence to
include attitudes and behaviors and thus confronts human values within a culture. A
few values can be expressed generically enough that they command universal respect:
the Golden Rule is one promising candidate. Most values, however, turn out to be
specific to certain cultures or subcultures even such seemingly unproblematic ones
190as the unacceptability of killing or lying. Once one conflates morality and
intelligence, one needs to deal with widely divergent views of what is good or bad and
why. Moreover, one must confront the fact that people who score high on tests of
moral reasoning may act immorally outside the test situation even as courageous
and self-sacrificing people may turn out to be unremarkable on formal tests of moral
195reasoning or intelligence. It is far preferable to construe intelligence itself as morally
neutral and then decide whether a given use of intelligence qualifies as moral,
immoral, or amoral in context.
23. As I see it, no intelligence is moral or immoral in itself. One can be gifted in
language and use that gift to write great verse, as did Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, or
200to foment hatred, as did Joseph Goebbels. Mother Teresa and Lyndon Johnson,
Mohandas Gandhi and Niccol Machiavelli, may have had equivalent degrees of
interpersonal intelligence, but they put their skills to widely divergent uses.
24. Perhaps there is a form of intelligence that determines whether or not a situation
harbors moral considerations or consequences. But the term moral intelligence
Multiple Intelligences / 6
205carries little force. After all, Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin may well have had an
exquisite sense of which situations contained moral considerations. However, either
they did not care or they embraced their own peculiar morality, according to which
eliminating Jews was the moral thing to do in quest of a pure Aryan society, or wiping
out a generation was necessary in the quest to establish a communist state.
210
[Article provided by Peter Strange]
Answer
240 the following question in Hebrew.
5.
Discuss the arguments paragraph 5 of those opposed to the conservative
approach in psychometrics.
Answer: ______________________________________________________________
245
Answer the following question in Hebrew.
6.
What important aspects of intelligence paragraphs 6-8 are disregarded by
our standard intelligence tests?
250Answer: ______________________________________________________________
Answer: ______________________________________________________________
300
14.
305
Answer the following question in Hebrew.
15. What is the main idea in this article?
310Answer: ______________________________________________________________
315
320
325