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Emig, Veronica Borruso – Educational Leadership, 1997
By expanding her teaching and assessment strategies according to multiple-intelligence principles, a New Hope, Pennsylvania high school teacher has reinvigorated her social studies classes. To evaluate her work and her students' progress, she developed a form called the Multiple Intelligences Inventory. She generally alternates a…
Descriptors: High Schools, Instructional Innovation, Learning Activities, Multiple Intelligences
English, Lynn – School Administrator, 1998
Robert Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence presupposes that students exhibit at least three kinds of intelligence: creative, practical, and analytical. Staff at the Wake County (North Carolina) School System designed learning activities to give students balanced experiences and a time to shine in the learning mode that suits them best.…
Descriptors: Creativity, Diversity (Student), Elementary Education, Intelligence
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Dreher, Sonja – Rural Educator, 1997
Among 10 high school seniors in a small rural high school, even the highest achievers felt that standardized testing did not adequately measure their abilities. Briefly describes various learning styles, discusses multiple intelligences, and recommends that teachers adapt instruction to students' learning styles to improve student motivation and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, Educational Practices, Educational Strategies
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Sternberg, Robert J. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Distinct from academic intelligence, successful intelligence is the acquisition and use of what one must know to succeed in a particular environment. People with high successful intelligence know their own strengths and weaknesses; are goal-oriented, highly motivated, and efficacious; follow through; own and assume responsibility for their own…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Basic Skills, Competence, Elementary Secondary Education
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Jordan, Shirley E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Howard Gardner's research explores why some students achieve (test) well, while others struggle. Gardner's ideal school features master teachers and an assessment specialist to provide regular, updated intelligence evaluations of each student's strengths, weaknesses, and inclinations. Curricula would use fresh approaches borrowed from museums and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education, Individualized Instruction
Ard, Linda; Wilkerson, Kristen – Texas Child Care, 1996
Tells how hummingbirds can serve as a source of information and fun for children, including a rationale for attracting and teaching about hummingbirds and the outdoors. Explains that children need first-hand knowledge of nature and gives details on attracting hummingbirds and selecting safe plants for a hummingbird garden. (BGC)
Descriptors: Birds, Early Childhood Education, Multiple Intelligences, Outdoor Activities
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Stanford, Pokey – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2003
An overview is presented of multiple intelligence (MI) theory along with practical applications of the model. Three basic aspects of the theory (teaching strategies, curricular adaptations, and student assessment) are described relative to the infusion of MI theory in general education classrooms to ensure appropriate inclusion for students with…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Curriculum Design, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education
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Delisle, James R. – Roeper Review, 2003
This article considers whether educators, in the quest to serve the identified gifted students, have diluted the concept of giftedness so much that the needs of truly gifted children remain unmet. It explores the watering down of the concept of giftedness and discusses scientific evidence on the heritability of intelligence. (Contains references.)…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Learning, 1988
Three articles explore current research and theory regarding children's learning styles, covering: (1) four basic ways children approach learning and corresponding teaching methods; (2) "multiple intelligences" and new thought about the boundaries of innate ability; and (3) classroom teachers' perspectives and instincts about the mystery of…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Educational Research
Downing, Charles R. – CSTA Journal, 1996
Advocates the use of interdisciplinary and cooperative assignments in science in order to develop students' critical-thinking skills. Discusses the importance of providing students with alternative avenues to learning in order to account for different types of intelligences. (JRH)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Creative Activities, Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
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Betts, Frank – Educational Leadership, 1994
In this interview, the author of "Edutrends 2010" (1992) projects future educational technology developments. We are leaving the Information Age and entering a new Communications Age that will see increased use of multimedia instruction, personalized information technologies (such as TV/VCR remote control wristwatches), informal…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education, Futures (of Society), Multimedia Instruction
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Johnson, Robert E.; Barry, Nancy H. – School Community Journal, 1993
Auburn University College of Education music education program and the college's cooperative extension service are implementing a project addressing the problems of at-risk youth. The program's premise is that children must receive help, encouragement, and support from three societal pillars (parents, school, and community) to lead successful…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Dropout Rate, High Risk Students, Higher Education
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Hatch, Thomas – Educational Horizons, 1993
Experiences of various schools in implementing Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences demonstrate that learning about innovation should be a regular, natural part of schools; barriers between insiders and outsiders should be eliminated; teachers should be prepared as change agents; and the value of academic research should be reconsidered. (SK)
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, College School Cooperation, Educational Change, Educational Cooperation
Hanna, Judith Lynne – American School Board Journal, 2000
In the 1980s, dance split from physical education and began to earn credibility as a serious, independent discipline with special characteristics fostering many kinds of learning. K-12 curricula should include dance, as the National Education Goals specify. Dance education also has great cognitive and transfer-of-learning potential. (MLH)
Descriptors: Art Education, Curriculum, Dance Education, Elementary Secondary Education
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Allix, Nicholas M. – Australian Journal of Education, 2000
Argues that although Gardner's conception of human cognition, characterized by a set of multiple and distinct cognitive capabilities, is an advance over the narrow conception of IQ, it runs into fundamental difficulties of a methodological kind and is based on a discredited empiricist theory of knowledge which work with artificial neural networks…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Psychology, Criticism, Epistemology
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