| Thread Closed |
Multiple Intelligence Tests |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Jan16-05, 06:11 PM | #1 |
|
|
Multiple Intelligence Tests
Here's my opinion, I'd like some other thoughts on it though...
Multiple intelligence tests are, for lack of a better word, bull****. It's just a bunch of crap made up my teachers (or whoever) to make less intelligent students feel better, and possibly kill off the would-be-enormously-huge-egos, that smarter students would otherwise have. First thing is first: What makes people think that there are seperate types of "intelligence" for different people? Can they not accept the fact that some people can't do anything right? One analogy that first MI tests perfectly, is the elementry teachers telling students, "You can do anything if you put your mind to it". Most of those students obviously can't. Though a bit banal, if that were true, who would make my burgers and pizza? As for personal experience, a few years ago, I didn't like English at all. I did not like reading, nor did I like reading. I would refuse to read books, and I would just use internet contractions, when faced with writting. However, one day, I saw my friend reading Lord of the Rings, and it was HUGE! Yes, it is quite a big book. I was an arrogant kid, so I thought, "If he can do it, why can I not?" My beliefs were not unfounded. I picked up Lord of the Rings, and I finished all three books, and The Silmarillion. I went from barely being able to read, to being able to read faster than just about everyone in my class, in a couple of months. Now, I can read three lines at a time, when I need to. I can't do it for intense scientific reading, but light fiction is easy because I can processes it all. Though I still don't like reading, I can do it, very well. As for writting, I was kind of forced to write. School of course, required me to write. I actually started writting after reading Tolkien, since I loved his writting style. Yes, I can write now, too. It's interesting, because in the period of less than one year, I went from not being able to spell, to a better writter than people who had English as their first language. Isn't that sad? Now let's talk about math. I was always able to do math, though I didn't really like doing math. I'm not sure, but I'm pretty sure this was because it never challenged me. What's the use in spending all those years in elementry and most of junior high learning that simple math? It's completely useless. It can be foced on kids in a couple of weeks. I knew the algebra they taught us in grade nine, when I was in grade five. PEOPLE STILL DIDN'T UNDERSTAND IT IN GRADE 9. Once I hit highschool, and I met concepts that I didn't already know, and became a little more interested. The higher I went each grade, my marks improved, especially when I jumped from normal to Advanced, when I could. Odd, eh? :) Let's talk about art. When I was a kid, I loved drawing! My uncle (I believe it's uncle, I've never been too familiar with the English family system), said my drawing capabilities at that age were amazing. This meant a lot, seeing how he's an artist. As I grew up, I just got fed up with drawing. It posed no challenge, and so, I gave it up. Musically, I can learn quite fast. I was never able to play trumpet too well, because my lip muscles wern't strong enough to hit the really high notes. However, I picked up guitar, and I learn extremely quickly. I am tone deaf, yes, but I can always correct that when I have time. Okay, interpersonal and intrapersonal are the stupidest forms of "intelligence" that I've ever heard of. Why the hell do you need intelligence to keep to yourself? Why do you need intelligence to talk to other people? I don't understand this crude thinking. Athletic "intelligence".... wow, heh. That's funny. Why is there intelligence in athletics? Athletics requires skill, yes, but that's not exactly intelligence. I've been trained in martial arts, I play badminton, tennis, table tennis, squash, and I swim. I excel in every one of those. Now, you wonder what my points were for some of those things I mentioned? Well, let's take the art example for instance. How does not doodling mean I suck at art, when I could easily pick it up? How does not reading mean I suck at reading, when I can read faster and understand more than other people that do read? I think I've given enough proof. Sorry that I only used personal examples, it's hard otherwise, to use examples. I don't think I've missed any. If I have, feel free to point it out and I'll tell you about it. |
| PhysOrg.com |
science news on PhysOrg.com >> Hong Kong launches first electric taxis >> Morocco to harness the wind in energy hunt >> Galaxy's Ring of Fire |
| Jan16-05, 06:35 PM | #2 |
|
|
maybe intelligence isn't the word you need to use since you seem to have a predisposed definition that it just means you are smart. i think people have different levels of understanding certain things, and a lot of that understanding might be attributed to how much a person likes it. for example, music-not everyone can make music on their own. look at beethoven. he was deaf and made music that is still appreciated today.
Howard Gardner then have given a more informed opinion about the topic. |
| Jan16-05, 06:43 PM | #3 |
|
|
I wasn't talking about me, though I had only examples of me. I could not go and file through someone else's life to find examples. I will go read what's on that link though. :)
|
| Jan16-05, 06:58 PM | #4 |
|
|
Multiple Intelligence Tests
Okay, I've read the parts of that article that concerns this.
What it is essentially saying, is that, some people can do things, better than other people. Correct? Again with a personal example: Is it true, that if I specially select someone in my school, that they can do SOMETHING better than me? No. There's a chance, but it's not definate. If we consider learning: Is there something he/she will learn faster than me? Maybe, but if they're not already better, I would doubt it. You mentioned that not everyone can make music, like did Beethoven. I agree. I recently heard Beethoven's Fifth, incooperated into a metal song. However, this is much like comparing a normal 'bit' to a quantum 'bit', is it not? Just because a bit renders 1, if it isn't 0, doesn't mean a qubit will. To explain my analogy a bit more, well, I'll try: What "IF"... What "IF", all the people who are capable of making music like him, did not like music? What if, all the chemists, and physicists of today, could have made 'better' music, than Beethoven? However, they did not 'choose' to follow that path. If someone has the potential to learn something, but does not like that area, does that mean, he/she is stupid--lacking the intelligence? I highly doubt that. That's really my argument. I apologize if it made me look like I was boasting. |
| Jan17-05, 08:38 AM | #5 |
|
|
|
| Jan17-05, 06:57 PM | #6 |
|
|
|
| Jan17-05, 07:47 PM | #7 |
|
|
It's one thing to talk about skills; they are clearly individual dependent. We remember that Michael Jordan, who was THE master player of basketball at the time, could only get up to the farm team level in baseball.
But it's just spin or hype to call each skill a "form of intelligence". Firstly it downgrades real cognitive skills, which are the all-purpose get ahead for most people. Secondly, it endangers common education, if every student is only supposed to study what they're good at. And thirdly it slides into stereotype. What's the difference between a musical IQ and "a natural sense of rhythm"? |
| Jan17-05, 07:56 PM | #8 |
|
Recognitions:
|
In sixth grade we had a kid in class for the first part of the school year who should have been in what they call "Special Education." He was not only retarded (to use a word that was in vogue back then, and which may now be non-P.C.), but he was deliberately disruptive. The pace of the teaching was geared for him, it seemed to the rest of us. He wasn't "getting it," and the rest of us had to suffer through dreary repetition on the part of the teacher. After maybe two months, they finally must have realized how unfair it was to the other 30 kids in the class, and they shipped him off to some other school, I guess. At any rate, I never saw him again.
|
| Jan17-05, 08:29 PM | #9 |
|
|
|
| Jan18-05, 12:40 AM | #10 |
|
|
I believe that MI is in regards to the manner in which people think. Some people think in a more mathematical orderly fashion others in a more abstract fashion. I think the idea is that it is supposed to help you find what you have a natural affinity towards and help teachers find a way of learning which you have a natural affinity for aswell.
It is likely that there are schools out there that exploit this sort of concept in order to make it look like they are realy educating even though they aren't just so they can get more money. Dorje, I'm sorry if you find that offensive but I know that at least here in California that sort of thing does happen quite a bit. Off topic but I just noticed that the thread count for the Skepticism & Debunking forum has reached 666. ;-p |
| Jan18-05, 02:34 PM | #11 |
|
|
|
| Jan18-05, 05:44 PM | #12 |
|
|
There was actually a mathematical basis for his theory? *sigh*
Yet, out of all the things the media exploit, this isn't one of them. People have become so irrational... |
| Jan18-05, 07:33 PM | #13 |
|
|
If you can find it, I recommend Jensen's old book Bias in Mental testing. Among many other goodies, there is his account of Gardiner's theory.
|
| Jan18-05, 08:14 PM | #14 |
|
|
Thanks for the recommendation. I'll go try and find it once my exams are over and done with =)
|
| Jan18-05, 08:53 PM | #15 |
|
|
I remember taking the MI test and there was one thing in particular that I noticed: It is not an aptitude test. The questions were all questions about what the test-taker thinks of certain things. It tests preferences rather than ability.
|
| Jan18-05, 10:48 PM | #16 |
|
|
|
| Jan28-05, 06:02 AM | #17 |
|
|
The idea that something as nebulous and complicated as intelligence can be indicated with anything approaching a significant result, is at once both preposterous and laughable; most psychologists believe that IQ tests passed the age of 16, tend to indicate you level of education rather than any inate abilities and many go so far as to dissmiss them entirely as for a multiple test, why would we have the nerve to try to tell people what there good and bad at; that is for a person to do for himself, why put pressure on anyone to do a particular thing because there good at it; At school I excelled at maths and reading and was consequently skipped ahead a year, however my cog tests showed me to have a merely highish ability range, my IQ would allow me to join MENSA, but I wouldn't join that bunch of elitist sonbs if you payed me, however the one area where I truly excell, creativity is entirely ephemeral and unquantifiable, since we measure genius as the ability to use inspiration and creativity it is not for us mortals to try to box what is in fact unknowable.
Personally I believe trying to get to know someone will yield a more accurate indication of where there strengths and weaknesses lie, after all Einstein was almost placed into a remedial school by his parents because he had severe difficulty communicating when he was younger, he got nowhere in school and struggled to achieve a pass with his degreee, Universities wouldn't hire him because of statistics, he had the last laugh at the ignorance of the lablers, he went on to revolutionise physics as we know it, I think that about sums up what trying to judge intelligence truly means, leave judgements to god if he exists; and dont lable people with nonsense tests ![]() I have seen the truth and it was nought but lies and misjudgements, what is truth? It's whatever you judge it to be me just then Jan 2005
|
| Thread Closed |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: Multiple Intelligence Tests
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Can Artificial Intelligence ever reach Human Intelligence? | General Discussion | 274 | ||
| ARGH. Multiple multiple choice | Introductory Physics Homework | 6 | ||
| What is intelligence? | General Discussion | 10 | ||
| Artificial Intelligence vs Human Intelligence | General Discussion | 38 | ||