The 12 Types of Intelligence (and Counting)
nine) intelligence categories. Linguistic and verbal intelligence (good with words) Logical - mathematical intelligence (good at math and solving logic problems) Visual - spatial intelligence (good with pictures) Body - movement intelligence (good at sports and movement) Musical intelligence (good at music and rhythm) Interpersonal intelligence (go
... See moreZoe McKey • Create Remarkable Success: Discover Your Strengths, Forge Your Own Path, and Build The Life You Want: Maximize Your Abilities
Intelligence Reframed: Multiple Intelligences for the 21st Century (1999), the first of which he believes should be added to the basic seven: (1) naturalist intelligence, as an ability to draw upon features of the natural environment, (2) and existential intelligence, which signals human concerns with ultimate issues and the nature of existence.12
... See moreCatherine Schaeffer • Moving Consciously: Somatic Transformations through Dance, Yoga, and Touch
There are different kinds of intelligence. I used to teach art students, and they loved learning about multiple intelligences because it validated their skills and abilities that fell outside the traditional definition of IQ.
Julie Dirksen • Design for How People Learn (Voices That Matter)
Howard Gardner (developmental psychologist) on 7 Types of Leadership that can help understand the way different people think:
Linguistic: ability to speak and write well
Logic-mathematical: ability to use logic and mathematical skills to solve problems
Spatial: ability to think and reason about objects in three dimensions
Musical: ability to perform an
Hasan Riaz added
Howard Gardner in his famous Frames of Mind, the Theory of Multiple Intelligences (1983) identifies seven main modes of learning as (1) linguistic, (2) logical-mathematical, (3) bodily kinesthetic, (4) spatial-visual, (5) musical, (6) interpersonal, and (7) intrapersonal.
Catherine Schaeffer • Moving Consciously: Somatic Transformations through Dance, Yoga, and Touch
Rather than eight intelligences, Sternberg’s model proposes three: analytical, creative, and practical.
Henry L. Roediger III • Make It Stick
Psychologists today generally accept that individuals possess at least two kinds of intelligence. Fluid intelligence is the ability to reason, see relationships, think abstractly, and hold information in mind while working on a problem; crystallized intelligence is one’s accumulated knowledge of the world and the procedures or mental models one has
... See moreHenry L. Roediger III • Make It Stick
Fluid intelligence is one of two kinds of intelligence that make up IQ. The other is crystallized intelligence, the storehouse of knowledge we have accumulated through the years.