Multiple Intelligences in Teaching and Education: Lessons Learned from Neuroscience †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Neuroscientific Evidence Supporting the Validity of MI Theory
3. Using Neuroscience to Leverage Student Success with the Multiple Intelligences
- How to set the stage of the classroom/school to create the context for maximum learning?
- How to enhance cognitive engagement in the instruction and curricular materials?
- How to promote academic excellence?
- How to teach for effective transfer of knowledge from the classroom to real life?
- How to develop the “whole child” and instill the love of lifelong learning?
“…the brain and its neuronal activity must be considered a hybrid of both biological and social influences. In other words, our brains are biosocial. The brain is a relational organ that bridges the gap between the biological world of the organism and the social world of the environment and its culture”.[18] (p. 352)
“…neuroimaging studies clearly show that patterns of brain activation and structure vary in systematic ways between individuals differing in working memory and other higher cognitive abilities. Both experience and genetic factors may contribute to such individual differences… has implications for human performance”.[22] (p. 70)
“Intrapersonal intelligence involves the capacity to understand oneself, to have an effective working model of oneself—including one’s own desires, fears, and capacities—and to use such information effectively in regulating one’s own life”.[2] (p. 43)
“Recent findings in the neurosciences indicate reciprocal and parallel neural pathways between the cerebellum—traditionally viewed as controlling gross and fine motor functions but now hypothesized to play a role in thought itself—and the frontal cortex, where working memory and executive functions such as planning, monitoring, task management, and focusing attention occur”.[19]
“…Feelings are influenced by powerful, subjective, cognitive elaborations, and cultural interpretations of bodily and mental states in context. Unlike emotions, feelings are conscious and can sometimes become reportable. Feelings contribute to self-narratives and meaning-making”.[19] (p. 349) (emphasis added)
4. Conclusions
- Identifiable cerebral systems;
- Evolutionary history and plausibility;
- Core set of operations;
- Meaning encoded in a symbol system;
- A distinct developmental history & mastery;
- Savants, prodigies, and exceptional people;
- Evidence from experimental psychology;
- Psychometric findings.
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | For a more detailed summary see www.MIResearch.org. |
Intelligences | Core Cognitive Units | Primary Regions | Subregions |
---|---|---|---|
Interpersonal | Social Perception Interpersonal Understanding Social Effectiveness Leadership | Frontal Temporal Cingulate Parietal | Medial-Temporal Amygdala Dorsolateral PFC Anterior Cingulate Superior Temporal Sulcus |
Intrapersonal | Self-Awareness Self-Regulation Executive Functions Self-Other Management | Frontal Cingulate Temporal Parietal Subcortical | Prefrontal-Cortex Anterior Cingulate Dorsomedial PFC Lateral Prefrontal Ventromedial |
Logical-Mathematical | Mathematical Reasoning Logical Reasoning | Frontal Parietal Temporal | Prefrontal Intraparietal Sulcus Inferior Parietal Lobule |
Linguistic | Speech Reading Writing Multimodal Communication of Meaning | Temporal Frontal Parietal | Superior Temporal Gyrus Inferior Frontal Gyrus Broca’s Area Posterior Inferior Frontal Gyrus |
Spatial | Spatial Cognition Working with Objects Visual Arts Spatial Navigation | Frontal Parietal Temporal Occipital | Premotor Cortex Motor Cortex Medial Temporal Prefrontal |
Musical | Music Perception Music and Emotions Music Production | Frontal Temporal Subcortical Cerebellum | Superior Temporal Gyrus Primary Auditory Cortex Premotor Cortex Basal Ganglia Supplementary Motor |
Kinesthetic | Body Awareness/Control Whole Body Movement Dexterity Symbolic Movement | Frontal Parietal Subcortical Cerebellum | Motor Cortex Primary Motor Cortex Premotor Cortex Basal Ganglia |
Naturalist | Pattern Cognition Understanding Living Entities Understanding Animals Understanding Plant Life Science | Temporal Subcortical | Superior Temporal Sulcus Amygdala Brainstem Thalamus Midbrain Basal Ganglia |
1. Culture Matters |
2. Every Brain is Unique—Activate Strengths! |
3. Know Thyself |
4. Embodied Cognition and the Emotional Rudder |
5. Make it Mean Something! |
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Shearer, B. Multiple Intelligences in Teaching and Education: Lessons Learned from Neuroscience. J. Intell. 2018, 6, 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence6030038
Shearer B. Multiple Intelligences in Teaching and Education: Lessons Learned from Neuroscience. Journal of Intelligence. 2018; 6(3):38. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence6030038
Chicago/Turabian StyleShearer, Branton. 2018. "Multiple Intelligences in Teaching and Education: Lessons Learned from Neuroscience" Journal of Intelligence 6, no. 3: 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence6030038
APA StyleShearer, B. (2018). Multiple Intelligences in Teaching and Education: Lessons Learned from Neuroscience. Journal of Intelligence, 6(3), 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence6030038