Register now & get certified to teach english abroad!
Multiple Intelligences Robert J. Stern - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Howard Gardner is a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of  Education and a renowned author; his theory of multiple  intelligences is a critique of the notion that there exists but a  single human intelligence that can be assessed by standard  psychometric instruments.  Multiple intelligences theory proposes that it is more efficient to  describe an individual´s cognitive capacity in terms of several  relatively independent but interacting cognitive capacities rather  than in terms of a single "general" intelligence.  Gardner suggests  that there are at least nine different or distinct intelligences: 1.Linguistic: the capacity to use language to express what´s  on your mind and to understand other people. Any kind of writer,  orator, speaker, lawyer, or other person for whom...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Games in the classroom Phillip Nedd - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				In the past when someone had a diploma from a school like Harvard or  Yale it automatically means that they'll find a good job in the  future. This myth has been proven wrong in the work place. Students  with great diplomas are now finding it harder to find jobs that will  accept them. Why' The students are leaving schools with knowledge  that is unapplied and unused making them, in a sense, robots. This  phenomenon reminds us of a famous quote, 'All work and no play makes  Jack a dull boy.' So, how does one solve this dilemma' Very simply  put, application, and what better way to do it than through games.One of the hardest things to do is getting the students to use and  apply the knowledge that was taught, this could be done easily with  game. Games don't only help motivate the students...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Multiple Intelligences Mary Ann Lettieri - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In 1893, Dr. Howard Gardner an educational professor at Harvard  University developed the theory of multiple intelligences.   According to  Dr. Gardner, there are eight different personal intelligences that  make up an individual.  These intelligences work jointly to create  the whole individual.  As teachers, it's important to teach to all  of these intelligences, in order to allow all students to meet their  full potential.  The eight intelligences identified by Gardner are  linguistic, logical-mathematical, bodily-kinesthetic, musical,  spatial, interpersonal, intra-personal, and naturalistic.  Schools  often teach towards linguistic and logical-mathematical  intelligences, as this is what our culture deems most valuable.   This is unfortunate for those students whose strengths lie in...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			


