Coverage from the Brock Symposium

On March 24, 2015, Howard Gardner was awarded the Brock International Prize in Education for his worldwide contributions to practice in the field of education. An annual award presented to an influential or innovative educator, Gardner is the first scholar from Harvard University to be so honored.

Speaking at the Brock Prize Symposium at the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma in a conversation moderated by President Richard K. Miller of Olin College, Gardner answered questions about his groundbreaking work on multiple intelligences (MI) theory, including the power of individuation and pluralization in educating for student understanding. Gardner also described his more recent work on the Good Project, including research investigating ethics in young people, whether a moral intelligence exists, how to discover the meaning of the “good,” and the distinction between the conceptions of neighborly morality and ethics of roles in a modern society.

A full video of the symposium event featuring discussion with Howard Gardner is available via YouTube below:

Additionally, an interview with Howard Gardner on Public Radio Tulsa program StudioTulsa in which he discusses his work and the award is accessible by clicking here.

Smart Is Cool: Reinventing Intelligence

Howard Gardner’s theory of multiple intelligences has been used as the framework for a non-profit organization that is attempting to reassess the meaning of intelligence.

Smart Is Cool is a grassroots organization that seeks to celebrate the wide range of abilities that young people possess and to increase appreciation for unique areas of intelligence. With a diverse membership consisting of teachers, students, visual artists, community activists, writers, and more, Smart Is Cool aims to promote a new definition of “smart” based on the components of MI. October 22, 2015, has even been designated Smart Is Cool Day by the organization. Smart Is Cool Day will be observed nationwide among partners and has even been included in Chase’s Calendar of Events.

Similar to the way in which MI is a critique of traditional measures of intelligence, including tests that focus on a narrow range of knowledge, Smart Is Cool aims to transform the understanding of intellectual ability. As a part of its mission, the organization hosts events that showcase diverse areas of intelligence in young people and also supports youth in their creation and implementation of projects/programs that contribute to local communities.

Some examples of projects/programs that Smart Is Cool has supported include:

-A fifth grader at a Connecticut public school who published her first book called Smart Is Cool about the theory of multiple intelligences.

-Concerts for Success, a series of concerts and forums joining both urban and suburban schools in activities such as poetry reading, literary compositions, musical compositions, public speaking, and visual arts to encourage and enhance academic success.

Click here to be taken to their website where you can discover more information.

Multiple Intelligences in France

Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences has been receiving an abundance of attention in recent weeks from France and the Francophone world.

First, a conference on the topic of MI theory took place on March 24, 2015, in La Rochelle, France, co-organized by Apel (Association des parents d'élèves de l'enseignement libre), newspaper la Croix, and bi-monthly magazine Cerveau & Psycho. Gardner participated in a short, pre-recorded video interview about MI that was shown at the event, which is available below via YouTube (French subtitles):

A PowerPoint presentation shown at the conference is available by clicking here.

The conference itself generated a fair amount of publicity, including a special edition of Cerveau&Psycho (March-April 2015) with three separate full-length articles about multiple intelligences theory. These were (available in French by clicking on the appropriate description):

The magazine also published the results of a parent survey about which intelligences parents would most like to foster in their children.

Furthermore, La Croix devoted a large spread in its March 25, 2015, edition to a group of articles about multiple intelligences, which included:

Additional materials are available via the Apel website. Photos from the conference have been published on the Apel Facebook page,

Other French media outlets have also seemed to indicate a heightened awareness of multiple intelligences recently. Daily newspaper Libération featured an article about using MI theory in schools to enhance learning outcomes, and radio broadcaster France Inter's program "La tête au carré" also devoted a show to MI. Newspaper Les Échos has also published an article explaining the components of multiple intelligences. These developments follow the release of stories in L'Express and BioInfo about multiple intelligences at the end of 2014, initially reported at the end of 2014.

One group in France has even created a children's song explaining each of the components of MI, recorded by The Smartles, with animated characters to match (see the video below, with English subtitles):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgknmIlJ6yY
Finally, below is an interesting exchange from a French student studying MI theory at university that Gardner recently received.

Mr. Gardner,

I'm a student in the French university Panthéon-Assas. I come to you because I'm actually working on studying qualities of detectives. I'm working with your multiple intelligences theory, and I should be glad and proud if you could tell me few words about what you think are the intelligences of a detective (to be able to investigate as well as possible).

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,

Scholar in France

***

Dear Scholar,

Thank you for your note and your interest in multiple intelligences.

You raise an interesting question. As detectives are conventionally portrayed in the media (I have never spoken to a detective in person), they rely heavily on making deductions. That seems to me like logical-mathematical intelligence. But detectives are also interested in motivation—why would X have robbed or killed Y?—and that involves interpersonal intelligence. Depending on the nature of the clues, any intelligence could be involved. For example, if a victim left a note to be read, that involves linguistic intelligence. Or if there is a physical trail to be pursued, that activates spatial intelligence. And so on.

So, as in many areas of life, proficiency can involve a number of intelligences, and individuals might differ on which intelligences they make use of.

I hope that this answers your query.

With best wishes,

Howard Gardner

We are excited to announce all of these developments from France, and we look forward to seeing how multiple intelligences theory will continue to receive interest in French-speaking parts of the world!

A Surprising Finding from the IQ World: Educational Implications

Notes by Howard Gardner

As a principal proponent of multiple intelligences, I have often been critical of scholarly work on the traditional notion of a single intelligence. From a scientific point of view, I think that multiple intelligences theory accounts better for the range of human performances. From an educational perspective, IQ testing is much better at classifying people than at helping them. It is an extraordinarily blunt instrument.

An article in Psychological Science reports a surprising finding. As the title of the study indicates, in primary school, literacy and numeracy turn out to be more heritable than psychometric (IQ) intelligence. The term "heritability" can be off-putting; technically, it refers to the sources of variation within a population. But in practical terms, it simply means that a certain proportion of one’s performance can be attributed to one’s genetic background: if we know about the performances of your grandparents on a set of tasks, it will help us predict how you will perform on similar tasks.

The surprise is that school is supposed to teach you literacy and numeracy, while it does not concern itself directly with improving intelligence (which is thought by many to be largely heritable and hence difficult to nudge upwards). And yet, it turns out that more of performance on literate and numeracy test can be attributed to one’s genetic background.

The authors speculate on the possible reasons for this unexpected finding. It may be, as they believe, that because school focuses on the Three Rs, it actually levels the playing field across individuals, and, according to behavioral genetics theory, that leveling actually increases the potency of the heritability factor. (Put differently, when there are no successful interventions, then environmental factors emerge as more powerful.)

But I am interested in this result for a different reason. Rather than focusing simply on IQ, as so often happens in psychometric research, the scientists are looking at more specific factors--in my terms, at linguistic intelligence and at logical-mathematical intelligence. (And, at least in principle, they could look at spatial intelligence, musical intelligence, interpersonal intelligence, etc.)

Moreover, to the extent that students show different strengths in these different intelligences, it suggests two things:

1) We can identify student intellectual potentials in more specific areas; and

2) We can experiment with educational approaches that are more specifically addressed to specific capacities, such as those involved with language and number.

To read the article in its entirety click here.


Musical Intelligence: Sensing and Interpreting Music in the Brain

Notes by Howard Gardner

According to my definition, an intelligence should not be tied uniquely to a single sensory system. Linguistic intelligence operates, whether one listens, reads, or detects patterns in Braille; spatial intelligence is active in individuals who are blind.

For that reason, musical intelligence has posed a dilemma for me. On the one hand, it seems to be a quite separate human faculty, one analogous in power and complexity to numerical or linguistic computation, and worthy of including within the family of intelligences. On the other hand, for most persons, for most of the period of history, musical creation and perception has been closely tied to the auditory system. I have had to play the ‘rhythm’ card to base music’s super-sensory status on the multi-modality status of rhythm and on the importance of bodily intelligence in the production of musical patterns.

But as technology improves, and as our understanding of the human brain increases, it seems increasingly likely that music can be dissociated, in significant part, from the “auditory-exclusivity channel.” We have already experienced many efforts to visualize musical compositions, some obviously more successful than others, some algorithmic, others involving considerable artistic choice. At concerts now, we see interpreters attempting to convey the sounds and words of musical compositions to deaf individuals in the audience. I take seriously the views of neuroscientist Gottfried Schlaug: “Music has the unique ability to go through alternative channels and connect different sections of the brain.”

Recent studies have also shown the ability of music to boost cognitive development in the young, to facilitate more effective processing of information from the senses, and to create connectivity between different parts of the brain. To read more, please click here.