Bahan Bacaan Bab 3
Bahan Bacaan Bab 3
Bahan Bacaan Bab 3
1. Robert Sternberg
Robert Sternberg (born December 8, 1949) is an American psychologist
and psychometrician. He is Professor of Human Development at Cornell
University.[1]Prior to joining Cornell, Sternberg was president of the University of
Wyoming.[2] He has been Provost and Professor at Oklahoma State University, Dean of
Arts and Sciences at Tufts University, IBM Professor of Psychology and Education
at Yale University. He is a member of the editorial boards of numerous journals,
including American Psychologist. He was the past President for the American
Psychological Association.
Sternberg has a BA from Yale University and a PhD from Stanford University, under
advisor Gordon Bower. He holds thirteen honorary doctorates from two North American,
one South American, one Asian, and nine European universities, and additionally holds
an honorary professorship at the University of Heidelberg, in Germany. He is a
Distinguished Associate of the Psychometrics Centre at the University of Cambridge.
Among his major contributions to psychology are the triarchic theory of intelligence,
several influential theories related to creativity, wisdom, thinking styles, love and hate,
and is the author of over 1500 articles, book chapters, and books. A Review of General
Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Sternberg as the 60th most cited
psychologist of the 20th century.[3]
Robert Sternberg is married to Karin Sternberg, a German psychologist, with whom he
has a set of triplets, consisting of a boy and two girls.[4]Sternberg and his first wife had a
son and a daughter.
Early life
Sternberg was born on December 8, 1949, to a Jewish family, in New Jersey. Sternberg
suffered from test anxiety as a child. As a result, he became an inadequate test taker.
This upset him and he reasoned that a test was not an adequate measurement of his
true knowledge and academic abilities. When he later retook a test in a room that
consisted of younger students, he felt more comfortable and his scores increased
dramatically. The following year, he created the Sternberg Test of Mental Agility
(STOMA), his first intelligence test. This problem of test taking is what sparked
Sternberg’s interest in psychology.
Academic career
Sternberg was an undergraduate student at Yale University. Neither of Sternberg's
parents finished high school, and he was only able to attend Yale by achieving a National
Merit Scholarship and receiving financial aid.[5] He did so poorly in his introductory
psychology class that his professor insisted that he pursue another major. Determined to
succeed, Sternberg earned a B.A. summa cum laude, and was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa, gaining honors and exceptional distinction in psychology. Sternberg continued his
academic career at Stanford University, where he earned his Ph.D., in 1975.
Sternberg returned to Yale as an assistant professor of Psychology in 1975, and would
work at Yale for three decades, eventually becoming the IBM Professor of Psychology
and Education, as well as the founder and director of the Center for the Psychology of
Abilities, Competencies and Expertise.[1]
He left Yale in 2005 to assume the position of Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
at Tufts University, where he quickly began his job search for a promotion to a Provost
position.[6] After multiple unsuccessful high-profile attempts to gain other academic
leadership positions within a few years of arriving at Tufts, including at the University of
Colorado[7] and the University of Iowa,[8]Sternberg was offered a position at Oklahoma
State University in 2010, where he remained as provost for three years. In early 2013,
Sternberg was named the new president of the University of Wyoming.[9] After resigning
from the University of Wyoming in late 2013, Sternberg joined the faculty of Cornell
University.[1]
Honorary degrees
Sternberg holds thirteen honorary doctorates, including some from universities outside
the United States. The list of foreign universities that awarded the degrees includes
Complutense University of Madrid (Spain), University of Durham (UK), University of
Leuven (Belgium), University of Cyprus, University of Paris V (France), and St.
Petersburg State University (Russia).
Research interests
Sternberg's main research include the following interests:
3. Daniel Goleman
Goleman was born in Stockton, California, the son of freethinking college professors. He
received a scholarship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to attend Amherst College.
The Amherst Independent Scholar program allowed him to transfer for his junior year to
the University of California at Berkeley. He returned to Amherst where he
graduated magna cum laude. He then received a scholarship from the Ford
Foundation to attend Harvard University where he received his PhD studying
under David C. McClelland.
He studied in India using a pre-doctoral fellowship from Harvard and a post-doctoral
grant from the Social Science Research Council. While in India, he spent time with
spiritual teacher Neem Karoli Baba, who was also the guru to Ram Dass, Krishna Das
(Singer) and Larry Brilliant.[1] He wrote his first book based on travel in India and Sri
Lanka.
Goleman then returned as a visiting lecturer to Harvard, where during the 1970s his
course on the psychology of consciousness was popular. McClelland recommended him
for a job at Psychology Today from which he was recruited by The New York Times in
1984.[2]
Goleman co-founded the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning
at Yale University's Child Studies Center which then moved to the University of Illinois at
Chicago. Currently he co-directs the Consortium for Research on Emotional Intelligence
in Organizations at Rutgers University. He sits on the board of the Mind & Life Institute.[2]
Career
Goleman authored the internationally best-selling book, Emotional Intelligence (1995,
Bantam Books), that spent more than one-and-a-half years on The New York
Times bestseller list. Goleman developed the argument that non-cognitive skills can
matter as much as I.Q. for workplace success in Working with Emotional
Intelligence (1998, Bantam Books), and for leadership effectiveness in Primal
Leadership (2001, Harvard Business School Press). Goleman's most recent best-seller
is Focus: The Hidden Driver of Excellence (Harper, 2013).
In his first book, The Varieties of Meditative Experience (1977) (republished in 1988
as The Meditative Mind) Goleman describes almost a dozen different meditation
systems. He wrote that "the need for the meditator to retrain his attention, whether
through concentration or mindfulness, is the single invariant ingredient in the recipe
for altering consciousness of every meditation system".[3]
Awards
Goleman has received many awards, including: