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Rani, M. Usha; Prakash, Srinivasan – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2015
Intelligence involves the ability to think, solve problems, analyze situations, and understand social values, customs, and norms. Intelligence is a general mental capability that involves the ability to reason, plan, think abstractly, comprehend ideas and language, and learn. Intellectual ability involves comprehension, understanding, and learning…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Intelligence Differences, High School Students, Intellectual Disciplines
Baker, Marshall A.; Robinson, J. Shane – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2017
Student motivation is often an overlooked product of classroom instruction. Researchers have repeatedly called for broader measures to adequately assess and understand the effects of various instructional methods. This study sought to determine the effects of an experiential approach to learning on student motivation, as defined by Keller's (1987)…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Experiential Learning, Teaching Methods, Outcome Measures
Jackson, Allen; Gaudet, Laura; McDaniel, Larry; Brammer, Dawn – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2009
Our understanding of how people learn is continually changing. Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences revolutionized the field education, because it accounts for a broader range of human potential in children and adults and suggests that individuals learn in a multitude of ways. Gardner's theory suggests there are a variety of…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Curriculum Development, Multiple Intelligences, Educational Practices
Bullough, Robert Vern, Sr. – 1970
A study was conducted to determine the relative effectiveness of several different visual, visual-verbal, and verbal treatments on the recall of factual information. The primary measure of individual differences of subjects involved in the study was that of intelligence quotient (I.Q.). The study attempted to determine whether or not treatments…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Intelligence Differences, Pictorial Stimuli, Recall (Psychology)
Peer reviewedErickson, Richard C. – English Journal, 1975
Psychological labels are too often used by educators as a justification for ignoring student problems, rather than taking steps to help solve them.
Descriptors: Emotional Adjustment, Intelligence Differences, Junior High Schools, Psychological Evaluation
Gardner, Howard – 1993
This reader brings together work by Howard Gardner and his colleagues at Project Zero (Harvard Graduate School of Education) to provide a coherent picture of what has been learned about the educational applications of multiple intelligences theory from school projects and formal research over the past decade. The chapters are: (1) "In a Nutshell";…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Differences, Intelligence Differences
McMenemy, Richard A. – Acad Therap Quart, 1969
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Exceptional Child Education, Individual Characteristics, Intelligence Differences
Faggella, Kathy; Horowitz, Janet – Instructor, 1990
Seven forms of intellectual accomplishment are identified; each type forms the basis of a certain learning style. This article outlines how to recognize the characteristics of each form of intelligence and how to supply the materials, activities, and experiences that will reinforce these strengths in students. (IAH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Instructional Materials, Intelligence
Dale, Evelyn J. – 1983
Given the uncertainty of the future and the rapidity with which computer technology is changing, a generalist position on the objectives of educational computing is desirable. This position insists that learning how to think and solve problems is the foundation of education and suggests that basic learning needs to be an integral part of the…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computers, Educational Objectives, Intellectual Development
Hunter, Madeline – Instructor, 1970
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Intelligence Differences, Learning Processes, Psychomotor Skills
Pezzullo, Thomas R.; And Others – 1972
Heritability is defined as the proportion of a manifested trait's varience that is due to genetic variation. Sixty-five pairs of twins were employed to investigate the heritability of: (1) short term memory (Jensen's Level 1), operationalized using of modified "digit span" test; (2) the general intellective factor (Jensen's Level II),…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Compensatory Education, Genetics, Heredity
Teele, Sue – 2000
This book offers practical applications for exploring multiple intelligences in the classroom to help each student express his or her own personal learning rainbow. Special features of the book include seven complete lesson plans ready to be adapted to any grade level; objectives, activities, and applications that meet U.S. and California…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Style, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMolloy, Geoffrey; Das, J. P. – Australian Journal of Education, 1979
This study examines some relationships pertaining to socioeconomic status and cognitive ability patterns in fourth graders. Specifically, it explores the relative merits of Jensen's hierarchical theory of two levels of cognitive ability, in contrast to a process scheme, positing two parallel modes of coding information. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
Nordberg, Robert B. – 1977
Three distinct theories can be set forth for viewing intelligence: a "super-intellect theory" associated with the belief in innate ideas; a sensualistic theory that posits no intellectual role beyond synthesizing of sense-data; and a concept of intelligence as a power to abstract, judge, and reason. Many chronic and current educational…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Academic Aptitude, Curriculum, Educational Objectives
Peer reviewedVialle, Wilma – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1994
Describes an eight-month study conducted in five day care centers for children of impoverished families, using Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences as a framework to train the day care providers and to work with preschool children. Suggests that Gardner's framework is productive for all children, and is particularly applicable to children…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Cognitive Style, Disadvantaged Youth, Intellectual Development

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