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AREA OF STUDY 2: INTELLIGENCE & PERSONALITY

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Presentation on theme: "AREA OF STUDY 2: INTELLIGENCE & PERSONALITY"— Presentation transcript:

1 AREA OF STUDY 2: INTELLIGENCE & PERSONALITY
UNIT 2: SELF AND OTHERS AREA OF STUDY 2: INTELLIGENCE & PERSONALITY

2 INTELLIGENCE TESTS Go to the following websites to find out how intelligent you are!!! DO YOU AGREE WITH YOU RESULTS? WHY OR WHY NOT?

3 INTELLIGENCE How would you describe intelligence?
Are there different kinds of intelligence? Does intelligence change over time? To what extent is intelligence inherited?

4 So how do we know it exists?
INTELLIGENCE INTELLIGENCE IS A HYPOTHETICAL CONSTRUCT (We can’t see or touch intelligence, it’s intangible) So how do we know it exists?

5 INTELLIGENCE Because we can’t see it or touch it, this makes it really hard for psychologists to come up with a commonly accepted definition of intelligence A widely accepted definition of psychology is; Intelligence involves the ability to learn from experience, to acquire knowledge, to reason and solve problems, to deal with people and objects, and to adapt effectively to the environment

6 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY 11.1 (pg.459)

7 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
PSYCHOLOGIST DESCRIPTION ALFRED BINET INTELLIGENCE AS AN AGE-RELATED SET OF ABILITIES DAVID WECHSLER INTELLIGENCE AS VERBAL AND PERFORMANCE ABILITIES HOWARD GARDNER THEORY OF MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES ROBERT STERNBERG TRIARCHIC THEORY OF INTELLIGENCE RAYMOND CATTELL JOHN HORN JOHN CARROLL MODEL OF PSYCHOMETRIC ABILITIES PETER SALOVEY JOHN MAYER ABILITY BASED MODEL OF EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

8 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
ALFRED BINET Intelligence As An Age-Related Set of Abilities Was employed by the French government to identify children in schools with learning difficulties 3 YEAR OLDS LEAST INTELLIGENT 5 YEAR OLDS 7 YEAR OLDS MOST INTELLIGENT

9 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY 11.2 (pg.460)

10 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
DAVID WECHSLER Intelligence As Verbal & Performance Abilities Believed that other psychologists focused too much on those skills that allow people to do well at school Viewed intelligence as: ‘The global and aggregate capacity to act purposefully, to think rationally, and to deal effectively with the environment’

11 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
DAVID WECHSLER Intelligence As Verbal & Performance Abilities VERBAL ABILITY PERFORMANCE ABILITY

12 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
DAVID WECHSLER Intelligence As Verbal & Performance Abilities Wechsler suggested 4 conditions that need to be present for any behaviour to be described as intelligent Awareness Goal Directed Rational Worthwhile

13 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY 11.3 (pg.461)

14 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
HOWARD GARDNER Theory Of Multiple Intelligences

15 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
HOWARD GARDNER Theory Of Multiple Intelligences Linguistic Musical Logical/Mathematical Naturalistic Spatial Existential Bodily-Kinesthetic Intrapersonal Interpersonal

16 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
HOWARD GARDNER Theory Of Multiple Intelligences Believes that each intelligence is different and independent A person can be strong in one or two intelligences, weak in others Is body control (kinesthetic) an intelligence? Refers to ‘Savant Syndrome’ = low overall intelligence high intelligence in one area

17 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY 11.4 (pg.466)

18 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
ROBERT STERNBERG Triarchic Theory Of Intelligence

19 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
ROBERT STERNBERG Triarchic Theory Of Intelligence ANALYTICAL = the ability to complete academic problem-solving tasks CREATIVE = the ability to successfully deal with new and unusual situations by drawing on existing knowledge and skills PRACTICAL = the ability to adapt to everyday life by drawing on existing knowledge and skills

20 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
ROBERT STERNBERG Triarchic Theory Of Intelligence Sternberg proposes that these three parts involve abilities that are different, separate and not ‘fixed’ A person may be stronger in one and not the others When a person is equal in all 3, Sternberg describes that person as having ‘successful intelligence’

21 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY 11.8 (pg.468)

22 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
CATTELL/HORN/CARROLL Model Of Psychometric Abilities Metric = measurement Psycho = psychological abilities Cattel & Horn first developed a theory called the Gf-Gc theory Gf = Fluid Intelligence = reasoning for problem solving Gc = Crystallised Intelligence = the use of knowledge and skills we acquire through experience

23 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
CATTELL/HORN/CARROLL Model Of Psychometric Abilities Horn-Cattell Gf-Gc theory + Carroll 3-stratum theory = CHC model (developed by Kevin McGrew & Dawn Flanagan)

24 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE

25 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY (pg.472)

26 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
SALOVEY & MAYER Ability Based Model of Emotional Intelligence Emotional Intelligence = the ability to recognise the meanings of emotions and their relationships, and to reason and problem solve on the basis of emotions 4 BRANCHES OF ABILITIES INVOLVED IN ‘EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE’

27 WAYS OF DESCRIBING INTELLIGENCE
SALOVEY & MAYER Ability Based Model of Emotional Intelligence 4 BRANCHES of ABILITIES in Emotional Intelligence PERCEIVING EMOTIONS FACILITATING THOUGHT UNDERSTANDING EMOTIONS MANAGING EMOTIONS

28 HOMEWORK LEARNING ACTIVITY (pg.476)


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