Big Think Interview With Howard Gardner | Big Think

Big Think Interview With Howard Gardner
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Howard Gardner is a developmental psychologist and the John H. and Elisabeth A. Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He holds positions as Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Harvard University and Senior Director of Harvard Project Zero.
Among numerous honors, Gardner received a MacArthur Prize Fellowship in 1981. In 1990, he was the first American to receive the University of Louisville's Grawemeyer Award in Education and in 2000 he received a Fellowship from the John S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. In 2005 and again in 2008 he was selected by Foreign Policy and Prospect magazines as one of 100 most influential public intellectuals in the world. He has received honorary degrees from twenty-two colleges and universities, including institutions in Ireland, Italy, Israel, and Chile.
The author of over twenty books translated into twenty-seven languages, and several hundred articles, Gardner is best known in educational circles for his theory of multiple intelligences, a critique of the notion that there exists but a single human intelligence that can be assessed by standard psychometric instruments. During the past twenty five years, he and colleagues at Project Zero have been working on the design of performance-based assessments, education for understanding, and the use of multiple intelligences to achieve more personalized curriculum, instruction, and assessment. In the middle 1990s, Gardner and his colleagues launched The GoodWork Project. "GoodWork" is work that is excellent in quality, personally engaging, and exhibits a sense of responsibility with respect to implications and applications. Researchers have examined how individuals who wish to carry out good work succeed in doing so during a time when conditions are changing very quickly, market forces are very powerful, and our sense of time and space is being radically altered by technologies, such as the web. Gardner and colleagues have also studied curricula. Gardner's books have been translated into twenty-seven languages. Among his books are The Disciplined Mind: Beyond Facts and Standardized Tests, The K-12 Education that Every Child Deserves (Penguin Putnam, 2000) Intelligence Reframed (Basic Books, 2000), Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet (Basic Books, 2001), Changing Minds: The Art and Science of Changing Our Own and Other People's Minds (Harvard Business School Press, 2004), and Making Good: How Young People Cope with Moral Dilemmas at Work (Harvard University Press, 2004; with Wendy Fischman, Becca Solomon, and Deborah Greenspan). These books are available through the Project Zero eBookstore.
Currently Gardner continues to direct the GoodWork project, which is concentrating on issues of ethics with secondary and college students. In addition, he co-directs the GoodPlay and Trust projects; a major current interest is the way in which ethics are being affected by the new digital media.
In 2006 Gardner published Multiple Intelligences: New Horizons, The Development and Education of the Mind, and Howard Gardner Under Fire. In Howard Gardner Under Fire, Gardner's work is examined critically; the book includes a lengthy autobiography and a complete biography. In the spring of 2007, Five Minds for the Future was published by Harvard Business School Press. Responsibility at Work, which Gardner edited, was published in the summer of 2007.
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TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Is our culture biased towards one type of intelligence over another?
Howard Gardner: Well the theory claims we all had these eight intelligences and people are different from one another in their profile of intelligences and there’s no necessary link between one intelligence and the other. It also is based on the assumption that we wouldn’t have these intelligences if they haven’t been valuable in human evolution. An example I like to use is that the-we developed the natural intelligence so we knew what to eat and what not to eat, to be able to pay attention to which animals to run away from and which animals to hunt and of course which plants to eat and which ones-there’s a reason why we're sensitive to the world of nature.
Now most of us, particularly people who watch this, they go to super markets and they don't have to know anything about the wild, but I think that the neural networks which evolved to help us get around in the Savannah’s of East Africa 50,000 years ago, they're now being used for ......
Read the full transcript at bigthink.com/videos/big-think...

Пікірлер: 11

  • @HarveyEspatchelowe
    @HarveyEspatchelowe9 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate...well, love Howard Gardner. It's his concern with ethics that impresses me the most.

  • @justinevirtue1755
    @justinevirtue17558 жыл бұрын

    Mind blowing when someone speaks this way. It felt inspiring and accurate. Will examine.

  • @Happey67
    @Happey678 жыл бұрын

    I like what he said about way too many subjects and students come out with a very superficial knowledge of the subjects. Also the classrooms are focused on passing the tests rather than really learning the subjects. The later is my opinion.

  • @gico2626
    @gico262610 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant. Tune in with an open mind. You're bound to learn something.

  • @jupiterdefensor9792
    @jupiterdefensor97928 жыл бұрын

    I Love Howard Gardner because for his Brilliant mind... I am Graduating student, taking Bachelors Degree in Education (known as BACHELOR in ELEMENTARY EDUCATION) here in the PHILIPPINES. So, I would like to ask what was the Additional Multiple Intelligences aside from the Nine Multiple Intelligence that was already proposed...for my Undergraduate THESIS purpose...Please i need your response in order for me to Graduate this coming 2017...Thank You very much and God Bless..

  • @joefelcui8241

    @joefelcui8241

    3 жыл бұрын

    hello? can I message you through chat? I'm currently a BEEd student here in the PH, I just want to ask things. Thank you!

  • @cllowery
    @cllowery9 жыл бұрын

    I'm a republican, and I do think this man is VERY intelligent and has the right idea of putting others before self. Many republicans tend to be Christians where I live, but they have forgot the selflessness part of being a christian.

  • @joelfry4982
    @joelfry49827 жыл бұрын

    Would a drastic decrease in spatial intelligence affect any other form of intelligence?

  • @DigitalLoveOfficial
    @DigitalLoveOfficial10 жыл бұрын

    @Liu you must be republican... i like this guy he's a progressive/modern thinker

  • @TahneaR
    @TahneaR8 жыл бұрын

    Hear hear

  • @mrmarkl328
    @mrmarkl32810 жыл бұрын

    he's not that smart...