Howard
Gardner, multiple
intelligences and education
Howard Gardner's work around multiple
intelligences has had a profound impact on thinking and practice in education -
especially in the United States. Here we explore the theory of multiple
intelligences; why it has found a ready audience amongst educationalists; and
some of the issues around its conceptualization and realization.
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I want my children to understand the
world, but not just because the world is fascinating and the human mind is
curious. I want them to understand it so that they will be positioned to make
it a better place. Knowledge is not the same as morality, but we need to
understand if we are to avoid past mistakes and move in productive directions.
An important part of that understanding is knowing who we are and what we can
do... Ultimately, we must synthesize our understandings for ourselves. The
performance of understanding that try matters are the ones we carry out as
human beings in an imperfect world which we can affect for good or for ill.
(Howard Gardner 1999: 180-181)
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Howard
Earl Gardner's (1943- ) work has been marked by a desire not to just describe
the world but to help to create the conditions to change it. The scale of his
contribution can be gauged from following comments in his introduction to the
tenth anniversary edition of Howard Gardner's classic work Frames of Mind. The
theory of multiple intelligences:
In the heyday of the
psychometric and behaviorist eras, it was generally believed that intelligence
was a single entity that was inherited; and that human beings - initially a
blank slate - could be trained to learn anything, provided that it was
presented in an appropriate way. Nowadays an increasing number of researchers
believe precisely the opposite; that there exists a multitude of
intelligences, quite independent of each other; that each intelligence has its
own strengths and constraints; that the mind is far from unencumbered at
birth; and that it is unexpectedly difficult to teach things that go against
early 'naive' theories of that challenge the natural lines of force within an
intelligence and its matching domains. (Gardner 1993: xxiii)
One of the main impetuses for
this movement has been Howard Gardner's work. He has been, in Smith and Smith's
(1994) terms, a paradigm shifter. Howard Gardner has questioned the idea that
intelligence is a single entity, that it results from a single factor, and that
it can be measured simply via IQ tests. He has also challenged the cognitive
development work of Piaget. Bringing forward evidence to show that at any
one time a child may be at very different stages for example, in number
development and spatial/visual maturation, Howard Gardner has successfully
undermined the idea that knowledge at any one particular developmental stage
hangs together in a structured whole.
In this article we explore
Howard Gardner's contribution and the use to which it has been put by educators.
Howard Gardner - a life
Howard Gardner was born in
Scranton, Pennsylvania in 1943. His parents had fled from Nürnberg in Germany in
1938 with their three-year old son, Eric. Just prior to Howard Gardner's birth
Eric was killed in a sleighing accident. These two events were not discussed
during Gardner's childhood, but were to have a very significant impact upon his
thinking and development (Gardner 1989: 22). The opportunities for risky physical
activity were limited creative and intellectual pursuits encouraged. As Howard
began to discover the family's 'secret history' (and Jewish identity) he began to
recognize that he was different both from his parents and from his peers.
His parents wanted to send
Howard Gardner to Phillips Academy in Andover Massachusetts - but he refused.
Instead he went to a nearby preparatory school in Kingston, Pennsylvania (Wyoming
Seminary). He appears to have embraced the opportunities there - and to have
elicited the support and interest of some very able teachers. From there Howard
Gardner went to Harvard University to study history in readiness for a career in
the law. However, he was lucky enough to have Eric Erikson as a tutor. In Howard
Gardner's words Erikson probably 'sealed' his ambition to be a scholar (1989:
23). But there were others:
My mind was really opened
when I went to Harvard College and had the opportunity to study under
individuals—such as psychoanalyst Erik Erikson, sociologist David Riesman,
and cognitive psychologist Jerome Bruner—who were creating knowledge about
human beings. That helped set me on the course of investigating human nature,
particularly how human beings think. (Howard Gardner quoted by Marge Sherer
1999)
Howard Gardner's interest in
psychology and the social sciences grew (his senior thesis was on a new
California retirement community) and he graduated summa cum laude in 1965.
Howard Gardner then went to
work for a brief period with Jerome
Bruner on the famous MACOS Project ('Man: A course of study'). Bruner's work,
especially in The Process of Education (1960) was to make a profound
impact, and the questions that the programme asked were to find an echo in
Gardner's subsequent interests. During this time he began to read the work of
Claude Levi-Strauss and Jean Piaget in more details. He entered Harvard's
doctoral programme in 1966, and in the following year became part of the Project
Zero research team on arts education (with which he has remained involved to the
present). Howard Gardner completed his PhD in 1971 (his dissertation was on style
sensitivity in children). He remained at Harvard. Alongside his work with Project
Zero (he now co-directs it with David Perkins) he was a lecturer (1971-1986) and
then professor in education (1986- ). His first major book, The Shattered Mind
appeared in 1975 and some fifteen have followed. Howard Gardner is currently
Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education and adjunct professor of neurology at the Boston University School of
Medicine.
Project Zero provided an
environment in which Howard Gardner could begin to explore his interest in human
cognition. He proceeded in a very different direction to the dominant discourses
associated with Piaget and with psychometric testing. Project Zero developed as a
major research centre for education - and provided an intellectual home for a
significant grouping of researchers. A key moment came with the establishment of
the Project on Human Potential in the late 1970s (funded by Bernard van Leer
Foundation) to 'assess the state of scientific knowledge concerning human
potential and its realization'. The result was Frames of Mind (1983)
Howard Gardner's first full-length statement of his theory of multiple
intelligences.
Howard Gardner on multiple intelligences -
the initial listing
Howard Gardner viewed intelligence as 'the capacity
to solve problems or to fashion products that are valued in one or more cultural
setting' (Gardner & Hatch, 1989). He reviewed the literature using eight
criteria or 'signs' of an intelligence:
Potential isolation by brain damage.
The existence of idiots savants, prodigies
and other exceptional individuals.
An identifiable core operation or set of
operations.
A distinctive development history, along with
a definable set of 'end-state' performances.
An evolutionary history and evolutionary
plausibility.
Support from experimental psychological
tasks.
Support from psychometric findings.
Susceptibility to encoding in a symbol
system. (Howard Gardner 1983: 62-69)
Candidates for the title 'an intelligence' had
to satisfy a range of these criteria and must include, as a prerequisite, the
ability to resolve 'genuine problems of difficulties' (ibid.: 60) within
certain cultural settings. Making judgements about this was, however,
'reminiscent more of an artistic judgement than of a scientific assessment' (ibid.:
62).
Howard Gardner initially formulated a list of
seven intelligences. His listing was provisional. The first two are ones that
have been typically valued in schools; the next three are usually associated with
the arts; and the final two are what Howard Gardner called 'personal
intelligences' (Gardner 1999: 41-43).
Linguistic intelligence involves
sensitivity to spoken and written language, the ability to learn languages, and
the capacity to use language to accomplish certain goals. This intelligence
includes the ability to effectively use language to express oneself rhetorically
or poetically; and language as a means to remember information. Writers, poets,
lawyers and speakers are among those that Howard Gardner sees as having high
linguistic intelligence.
Logical-mathematical intelligence
consists of the capacity to analyze problems logically, carry out mathematical
operations, and investigate issues scientifically. In Howard Gardner's words, in
entails the ability to detect patterns, reason deductively and think logically.
This intelligence is most often associated with scientific and mathematical
thinking.
Musical intelligence involves skill in
the performance, composition, and appreciation of musical patterns. It
encompasses the capacity to recognize and compose musical pitches, tones, and
rhythms. According to Howard Gardner musical intelligence runs in an almost
structural parallel to linguistic intelligence.
Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence entails
the potential of using one's whole body or parts of the body to solve problems.
It is the ability to use mental abilities to coordinate bodily movements. Howard
Gardner sees mental and physical activity as related.
Spatial intelligence involves the
potential to recognize and use the patterns of wide space and more confined
areas.
Interpersonal intelligence is concerned with the capacity to understand the
intentions, motivations and desires of other people. It allows people to work
effectively with others. Educators, salespeople, religious and political leaders
and counsellors all need a well-developed interpersonal intelligence.
Intrapersonal intelligence entails the
capacity to understand oneself, to appreciate one's feelings, fears and
motivations. In Howard Gardner's view it involves having an effective working
model of ourselves, and to be able to use such information to regulate our lives.
In Frames of Mind Howard Gardner treated
the personal intelligences 'as a piece'. Because of their close association in
most cultures, they are often linked together. However, he still argues that it
makes sense to think of two forms of personal intelligence. Gardner claimed that
the seven intelligences rarely operate independently. They are used at the same
time and tend to complement each other as people develop skills or solve
problems.
In essence Howard Gardner argues that he was
making two essential claims about multiple intelligences. That:
The theory is an account of human cognition
in its fullness. The intelligences provided 'a new definition of human nature,
cognitively speaking' (Gardner 1999: 44). Human beings are organisms who
possess a basic set of intelligences.
People have a unique blend of intelligences.
Gardner argues that the big challenge facing the deployment of human resources
'is how to best take advantage of the uniqueness conferred on us as a species
exhibiting several intelligences' (ibid.: 45).
These intelligences, according to Howard
Gardner, are amoral - they can be put to constructive or destructive use.
The appeal of multiple intelligences to
educators
Howard Gardner's theory of
multiple intelligences has not been readily accepted within academic psychology.
However, it has met with a strongly positive response from many educators. It has
been embraced by a range of educational theorists and, significantly, applied by
teachers and policymakers to the problems of schooling. A number of schools in
North America have looked to structure curricula according to the intelligences,
and to design classrooms and even whole schools to reflect the understandings
that Howard Gardner develops (follow the links below to visit a
couple of examples). The theory can also be found in use within pre-school,
higher, vocational and adult education initiatives.
This appeal was not, at first,
obvious.
At first blush, this
diagnosis would appear to sound a death knell for formal education. It is hard
to teach one intelligence; what if there are seven? It is hard to enough to
teach even when anything can be taught; what to do if there are distinct
limits and strong constraints on human cognition and learning? (Howard Gardner
1993: xxiii)
Howard Gardner responds to his
questions by first making the point that psychology does not directly dictate
education, 'it merely helps one to understand the conditions within which
education takes place'. What is more:
Seven kinds of intelligence
would allow seven ways to teach, rather than one. And powerful constraints
that exist in the mind can be mobilized to introduce a particular concept (or
whole system of thinking) in a way that children are most likely to learn it
and least likely to distort it. Paradoxically, constraints can be suggestive
and ultimately freeing. (op. cit.)
Mindy L. Kornhaber (2001: 276), a researcher
involved with Project Zero, has identified a number of reasons why teachers and
policymakers in North America have responded positively to Howard Gardner's
presentation of multiple intelligences. Among these are that:
... the theory validates educators' everyday
experience: students think and learn in many different ways. It also provides
educators with a conceptual framework for organizing and reflecting on
curriculum assessment and pedagogical practices. In turn, this reflection has
led many educators to develop new approaches that might better meet the needs
of the range of learners in their classrooms.
The response to Howard Gardner is paralleled by
the adoption of Kolb's model
of experiential learning by adult and informal educators. While significant
criticism can be made of the formulation (see below) it does
provide a useful set of questions and 'rules of thumb' to help educators to think
about their practice. The way in which Howard Gardner's theory of multiple
intelligences has been translated into policy and practice has been very varied.
Howard Gardner did not, initially, spell out the implications of his theory for
educators in any detail. Subsequently, he has looked more closely at what the
theory might mean for schooling practice (e.g. in The Unschooled Mind, Intelligence
Reframed, and The Disciplined Mind). From this work three particular
aspects of Gardner's thinking need noting here as they allow for hope, and an
alternative way of thinking, for those educators who feel out of step with the
current, dominant product orientation to curriculum and educational
policy. The approach entails:
A broad vision of education. All seven
intelligences are needed to live life well. Teachers, therefore, need to attend
to all intelligences, not just the first two that have been their tradition
concern. As Kornhaber (2001: 276) has noted it involves educators opting 'for
depth over breadth'. Understanding entails taking knowledge gained in one setting
and using it in another. 'Students must have extended opportunities to work on a
topic' (op. cit.).
Developing local and flexible programmes.
Howard Gardner's interest in 'deep understanding', performance, exploration and
creativity are not easily accommodated within an orientation to the 'delivery' of
a detailed curriculum planned outside of the immediate educational context. 'An
"MI setting" can be undone if the curriculum is too rigid or if there
is but a single form of assessment' (Gardner 1999: 147). In this respect the
educational implications of Howard Gardner's work stands in a direct line from
the work of John Dewey.
Looking to morality. 'We must figure out
how intelligence and morality can work together', Howard Gardner argues, 'to
create a world in which a great variety of people will want to live' (Gardner
1999: 4). While there are considerable benefits to developing understanding in
relation to the disciplines, something more is needed.
Are there additional intelligences?
Since Howard Gardner's
original listing of the intelligences in Frames of Mind (1983) there has
been a great deal of discussion as to other possible candidates for inclusion (or
candidates for exclusion). Subsequent research and reflection by Howard Gardner
and his colleagues has looked to three particular possibilities: a naturalist
intelligence, a spiritual intelligence and an existential intelligence. He has
concluded that the first of these 'merits addition to the list of the original
seven intelligences' (Gardner 1999: 52).
Naturalist intelligence enables
human beings to recognize, categorize and draw upon certain features of the
environment. It 'combines a description of the core ability with a
characterization of the role that many cultures value' (ibid.: 48).
The case for inclusion of
naturalist intelligence appears pretty straightforward, the position with regard
to spiritual intelligence is far more complex. According to Howard Gardner
(1999: 59) there are problems, for example, around the 'content' of spiritual
intelligence, its privileged but unsubstantiated claims with regard to truth
value, 'and the need for it to be partially identified through its effect on
other people'. As a result:
It seems more responsible
to carve out that area of spirituality closest 'in spirit' to the other
intelligences and then, in the sympathetic manner applied to naturalist
intelligence, ascertain how this candidate intelligence fares. In doing so, I
think it best to put aside the term spiritual, with its manifest
and problematic connotations, and to speak instead of an intelligence that
explores the nature of existence in its multifarious guises. Thus, an explicit
concern with spiritual or religious matters would be one variety - often the
most important variety - of an existential intelligence.
Existential intelligence,
a concern with 'ultimate issues', is, thus, the next possibility
that Howard Gardner considers - and he argues that it 'scores reasonably well on
the criteria' (ibid.: 64). However, empirical evidence is sparse - and
although a ninth intelligence might be attractive, Howard Gardner is not disposed
to add it to the list. 'I find the phenomenon perplexing enough and the distance
from the other intelligences vast enough to dictate prudence - at least for now'
(ibid.: 66).
The final, and obvious,
candidate for inclusion in Howard Gardner's list is moral intelligence. In
his exploration, he begins by asking whether it is possible to delineate the
'moral domain'. He suggests that it is difficult to come to any consensual
definition, but argues that it is possible to come to an understanding that takes
exploration forward. Central to a moral domain, Howard Gardner suggests, 'is a
concern with those rules, behaviours and attitudes that govern the sanctity of
life - in particular, the sanctity of human life and, in many cases, the sanctity
of any other living creatures and the world they inhabit' (ibid.: 70). If
we accept the existence of a moral realm is it them possible to speak of moral
intelligence? If it 'connotes the adoption of any specific moral code' then
Howard Gardner does not find the term moral intelligence acceptable (ibid.:
75). Furthermore, he argues, researchers and writers have not as yet 'captured
the essence of the moral domain as an instance of human intelligence' (ibid.:
76).
As I construe it, the
central component in the moral realm or domain is a sense of personal agency
and personal stake, a realization that one has an irreducible role with
respect to other people and that one's behaviour towards others must reflect
the results of contextualized analysis and the exercise of one's will.... The
fulfillment of key roles certainly requires a range of human intelligences -
including personal, linguistic, logical and perhaps existential - but it is
fundamentally a statement about the kind of person that has developed to be.
It is not, in itself, an intelligence. 'Morality' is then properly a statement
about personality, individuality, will, character - and, in the happiest
cases, about the highest realization of human nature. (ibid.: 77)
So it is, that Howard Gardner
has added an eighth intelligence - naturalist intelligence - to his list. He has
also opened the door to another possibility - especially that of existential
intelligence - but the court is out on that one.
Howard Gardners's multiple intelligences - some
issues and problems
There are various criticisms
of, and problems around, Howard Gardner's conceptualization of multiple
intelligences. Indeed, Gardner himself has listed some of the main issues and his
responses (1993: xxiii-xxvii; 1999: 79-114). Here, I want to focus on three key
questions that have been raised in debates. (There are plenty of other questions
around - but these would seem to be the most persistent):
Are the criteria Howard
Gardner employs adequate? John White (1997) has argued that there are
significant issues around the criteria that Howard Gardner employs. There are
questions around the individual criteria, for example, do all intelligences
involve symbol systems; how the criteria to be applied; and why these particular
criteria are relevant. In respect of the last, and fundamental question, White
states that he has not been able to find any answer in Gardner's writings (ibid.:
19). Indeed, Howard Gardner himself has admitted that there is an element of
subjective judgement involved.
Does Howard Gardner's
conceptualization of intelligence hold together? For those researchers
and scholars who have traditionally viewed intelligence as, effectively, what is
measured by intelligence tests - Howard Gardner's work will always be
problematic. They can still point to a substantial tradition of research that
demonstrates correlation between different abilities and argue for the existence
of a general intelligence factor. Howard Gardner (1993: xxiv) disputes much of
the evidence and argues that it is not possible, as yet, to know how far
intelligences actually correlate. More recent developments in thinking around
intelligence such as Robert Sternberg's (1985, 1996) advancement of a 'triarchic
model' have shared Gardner's dislike of such standard intelligence theory.
However, in contrast to Howard Gardner, Robert Sternberg does not look strongly
at the particular material that the person is processing. Instead he looks to
what he calls the componential, experiential and contextual facets of
intelligence. A further set of criticisms centre around the specific
intelligences that Howard Gardner identified. For example, it can be argued that
musical intelligence and bodily-kinesthetic intelligence are better approached as
talents (they do not normally need to adapt to life demands).
Is there sufficient
empirical evidence to support Howard Gardner's conceptualization? A common
criticism made of Howard Gardner's work is that his theories derive rather more
strongly from his own intuitions and reasoning than from a comprehensive and full
grounding in empirical research. For the moment there is not a properly
worked-through set of tests to identify and measure the different intelligences.
I once thought it possible
to create a set of tests of each intelligence - an intelligence-fair version
to be sure - and then simply to determine the correlation between the scores
on the several tests. I now believe that this can only be accomplished if
someone developed several measures for each intelligence and then made sure
that people were comfortable in dealing with the materials and methods used to
measure each intelligence. (Gardner 1999: 98)
Howard Gardner himself has not
pursued this approach because of a more general worry with such testing - that it
leads to labeling and stigmatization. It can be argued that research around the
functioning of the brain generally continues to support the notion of multiple
intelligence (although not necessarily the specifics of Howard Gardner's theory).
There are further questions
around the notion of selfhood
that Howard Gardner employs - something that he himself has come to recognize. In
the early 1990s he began to look to the notion of distributed cognition as
providing a better way of approaching the area than focusing on what goes on in
the mind of a single individual (Hatch and Gardner 1993) (see the discussion of social/situational
orientations to learning).
Conclusion
While there may some
significant questions and issues around Howard Gardner's notion of multiple
intelligences, it still has had utility in education. It has helped a significant
number of educators to question their work and to encourage them to look beyond
the narrow confines of the dominant discourses of skilling, curriculum, and
testing. For example, Mindy Kornhaber and her colleagues at the Project SUMIT
(Schools Using Multiple Intelligences Theory) have examined the performance of
a number of schools and concluded that there have been significant gains in
respect of SATs scores, parental participation, and discipline (with the
schools themselves attributing this to MI theory). To the extent that Howard
Gardner's multiple intelligences theory has helped educators to reflect on their
practice, and given them a basis to broaden their focus and to attend to what
might assist people to live their lives well, then it has to be judged a useful
addition.
Project SUMIT (2000) uses the
metaphor of Compass Points -'routes that educators using the theory
have taken and which appear to benefit students'. They have identified the
following markers that characterize schools with some success in implementing
practices that attend to multiple intelligences theory.
Culture: support for diverse learners and
hard work. Acting on a value system which maintains that diverse
students can learn and succeed, that learning is exciting, and that hard work
by teachers is necessary.
Readiness: awareness-building for
implementing MI. Building staff awareness of MI and of the different
ways that students learn.
Tool: MI is a means to foster high
quality work. Using MI as a tool to promote high quality student work rather
than using the theory as an end in and of itself.
Collaboration: informal and formal
exchanges. Sharing ideas and constructive suggestions by the staff in formal
and informal exchanges.
Choice: meaningful curriculum and
assessment options. Embedding curriculum and assessment in activities that are
valued both by students and the wider culture.
Arts. Employing the arts to develop
children's skills and understanding within and across disciplines.
Informal educators can
usefully look at this listing in respect of their projects and agencies. The
multiple intelligences themselves also provide a good focus for reflection.
Arguably, informal educators have traditionally been concerned with the domains
of the interpersonal and the intrapersonal, with a sprinkling of the
intelligences that Howard Gardner identifies with the arts. Looking to naturalist
linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligences could help enhance their
practice.
IMPLEMENTING GARDNER'S THEORY IN THE CLASSROOM
When asked how educators should implement the
theory of multiple intelligences, Gardner says, "(I)t's very important that
a teacher take individual differences among kids very seriously … The bottom
line is a deep interest in children and how their minds are different from one
another, and in helping them use their minds well."
An awareness of multiple-intelligence theory has
stimulated teachers to find more ways of helping all students in their classes.
Some schools do this by adapting curriculum. In "Variations on a Theme: How
Teachers Interpret MI Theory," (Educational Leadership, September
1997), Linda Campbell describes five approaches to curriculum change:
-
Lesson design. Some schools focus on
lesson design. This might involve team teaching ("teachers focusing on
their own intelligence strengths"), using all or several of the
intelligences in their lessons, or asking student opinions about the best
way to teach and learn certain topics.
-
Interdisciplinary units. Secondary
schools often include interdisciplinary units.
-
Student projects. Students can learn
to "initiate and manage complex projects" when they are creating
student projects.
-
Assessments. Assessments are devised
which allow students to show what they have learned. Sometimes this takes
the form of allowing each student to devise the way he or she will be
assessed, while meeting the teacher's criteria for quality.
-
Apprenticeships. Apprenticeships can
allow students to "gain mastery of a valued skill gradually, with
effort and discipline over time." Gardner feels that apprenticeships
"…should take up about one-third of a student's schooling
experience."
With an understanding of Gardner's theory of
multiple intelligences, teachers, school administrators, and parents can better
understand the learners in their midst. They can allow students to safely explore
and learn in many ways, and they can help students direct their own learning.
Adults can help students understand and appreciate their strengths, and identify
real-world activities that will stimulate more learning.
Further reading and references
The main Howard Gardner
writings on multiple intelligences are as follows:
Gardner, Howard (1983; 1993) Frames
of Mind: The theory of multiple intelligences, New York: Basic Books. The
second edition was published in Britain by Fontana Press. 466 + xxix pages. (All
references in this article refer to this second, 10th Anniversary, edition). A
major addition to the literature of cognitive psychology being the first full
length explication of multiple intelligences.
Gardner, Howard (1989) To
Open Minds: Chinese clues to the dilemma of contemporary education, New York:
Basic Books. This book includes a significant amount of material on Gardner's
early life.
Gardner, H. (1991) The
Unschooled Mind: How children think and how schools should teach, New York:
Basic Books.
Gardner, Howard (1999) Intelligence
Reframed. Multiple intelligences for the 21st century, New York: Basic Books.
292 + x pages. Useful review of Gardner's theory and discussion of issues and
additions.
Gardner, Howard (1999) The
Disciplined Mind: Beyond Facts And Standardized Tests, The K-12 Education That
Every Child Deserves, New York: Simon and Schuster (and New York: Penguin
Putnam).
References
Brualdi, A, C. (1996)
'Multiple Intelligences: Gardner's Theory. ERIC Digest', Eric Digests, http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed410226.html
Bruner, J (1960) The
Process of Education, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Gardner, H. (1975) The
Shattered Mind, New York: Knopf.
Gardner, H., Csikszentmihalyi,
M. and Damon, W. (2001) Good Work: Where Excellence and Ethics Meet, New
York: Basic Books.
Gardner, H., & Hatch, T.
(1989). Multiple intelligences go to school: Educational implications of the
theory of multiple intelligences. Educational Researcher, 18(8),
4-9.
T. Hatch and H. Gardner (1993)
'Finding cognition in the classroom: an expanded view of human intelligence' in
G. Salomon (ed.) Distributed Cognitions. Psychological and educational
considerations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kornhaber, M. L. (2001)
'Howard Gardner' in J. A. Palmer (ed.) Fifty Modern Thinkers on Education.
From Piaget to the present, London: Routledge.
Project SUMIT (2000) SUMIT
Compass Points Practices © http://www.pz.harvard.edu/SUMIT/COMPT.HTM
Scherer, M. (1999) 'The
Understanding Pathway: A Conversation with Howard Gardner', Educational
Leadership 57(3) http://www.ascd.org/readingroom/edlead/9911/scherer2.html
Smith, L. G. and Smith, J. K.
(1994) Lives in Education. A narrative of people and ideas 2e, New York:
St Martin's Press.
Sternberg, R. J.
(1985) Beyond IQ: A triarchic theory of human intelligence. New York:
Cambridge University Press.
Sternberg, R. J. (1996) Successful
intelligence. New York: Simon & Schuster.
White, J. (1998) Do Howard
Gardner's multiple intelligences add up? London: Institute of Education,
University of London.
Williams, W. M., Blythe, T.,
White, N., Li, J., Sternberg, R. J., & Gardner, H. (1996). Practical
intelligence for school. New York: HarperCollins College Publishers.
Links
Project Zero: It's mission is
to: 'understand and enhance learning, thinking, and creativity in the arts, as
well as humanistic and scientific disciplines, at the individual and
institutional levels'. The site provides details of Howard Gardner, current
initiatives, a history of the project, plus a listing of publications etc.
The Good Work Project: The project 'researches how leading professionals carry out work that
is of high quality and socially responsible' and is part of collaboration
with Howard Gardner. This site provides details of the projects and current
publications.
Project SUMIT (Schools
Using Multiple Intelligences Theory): site gives the background to the project
and provides links to some of the schools etc.
Walter McKenzie's Multiple Intelligences Page: collection of pieces and links that explore Howard
Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences.
New City School: is one
of many that have tried to integrate Howard Gardner's theory of multiple
intelligences into their practice. Take a tour of the school and glimpse their
vision of multiple intelligences.
See, also, The Gardner School,
Vancouver WA.
About: Kimeiko
Hotta Dover provides about a review of internet resources on Howard Gardner. See,
also, her internet guide to multiple
intelligences.
Multiple Intelligences
Bookshelf: useful listing of web and other resources.
To cite this article:
Smith, M. K. (2002) 'Howard Gardner and multiple intelligences', the
encyclopedia of informal education, http://www.infed.org/thinkers/gardner.htm.
© Mark K. Smith 2002