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Understanding and Interpreting the MBTI and Strong. Presented By: Jackie Dernek. MBTI Objectives. What is the MBTI and why is it important in career Development? What are the characteristics of your own MBTI type and how will they impact your personal and professional development?
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Understanding and Interpreting the MBTI and Strong Presented By: Jackie Dernek
MBTI Objectives • What is the MBTI and why is it important in career Development? • What are the characteristics of your own MBTI type and how will they impact your personal and professional development? • How might an assessment like this be useful when working with clients?
Background of the MBTI • Based on the work of Carl Jung • Differences in behavior are a result of inborn tendencies. • As we act on these tendencies, we develop patterns of behavior. • Developed in the 1940s • 40+ years of research • Most widely used personality indicator in the world • Administered to approximately one to three million people each year. NC State University
What is the MBTI? • A self-report assessment tool that determines personality type. • An indicator of preferences. • A way to sort, not measure. • Research backed. • Rich in theory. • Professionally interpreted. • Important note: there are over 100 aspects of personality, MBTI highlights only sixteen!
Four Scales of the MBTI • The chart is grouped into four basic scales with opposite poles. • The four scales are: • extraversion/introversion • sensing/intuitive • thinking/feeling • judging/perceiving
MBTI Key Words Extraversion Introversion • Energized by being with others • Breadth • Sociable • Initiates • Interaction • Many • Energized by being alone • Depth • One-to-one discussion • Reflects • Concentration • Close relationships • Few
MBTI Key Words Sensing Intuition • Perceiving with senses • Reliance on experience • Practicality • In touch with physical realities • Attending to the present • Attention to detail • Perceiving with memory and associations • Seeing patterns and meanings • Seeing possibilities • Prefers adding new skills • Looks at “big picture” • Identifies complex patterns
MBTI Key Words Thinking Feeling • Cause and effect reasoning • Objective • Logic • “Tough Minded” • Fair –wants everyone to be treated equally • Decisions based on impact on people • Guided by values • Strive for harmony • “Tenderhearted” • Fair –wants everyone treated as an individual
MBTI Key Words Judging Perceiving • Focus on completing tasks • Deciding and planning • Organizing and scheduling • Controlling and regulating • Goal oriented • Wants closure • Focus on starting tasks • Taking in information • Adapting and changing • Curious and interested • Open-minded • Resists closure in order to obtain data
How to Interpret Your Score • Your type consists of four letters that represent your four preferences. • The results illustrate the clarity of your MBTI preferences. • A larger number suggests you are quite sure that you prefer that pole. • A lower number suggests that you are less sure about your preference for that pole.
The MBTI 16 Types • Based on 1996 data from the US population—CPP) • http://www.delta-associates.com/type-percentages/
Guidelines • A person’s type is regarded as a working hypothesis. • Everyone uses every preference. We favor, however, one preference over the other on each of the four scales. • High scores do not indicate greater skill, magnitude, or use of a preference. Scores indicate clarity of choice. • Type can explain some human behavior—not all. • Type is not an excuse for doing or not doing something. • Avoid stereotyping someone on the basis of his or her type.
Uses for our Clients • Increase client self-awareness through greater understanding of personality type. • Help client to understand others by knowing more about themselves. • Understanding how a client’s personality type fits into their career search. • Appreciate how personality impacts personal satisfaction and job performance. • *Understanding your own MBTI score can help you identify potentially challenging situations or prejudices you may have that may impact your interactions with clients.
Simulation Activity • In groups of 4-5 discuss the situation given to you and formulate an action plan for how you would help this client. • Situation A • Situation B • Situation C • Situation D
Strong Interest Inventory Objectives • What is the Strong and why is it important in career development? • What are the characteristics of your Strong, and how will it impact your personal and professional development? • How might an assessment like this be useful when working with clients?
Strong Background • The most widely used interest assessment in North America. • Based on Holland’s theory of vocational interests: • Realistic • Investigative • Artistic • Social • Enterprising • Conventional
Strong Guidelines • Will NOT predict with certainty what occupation one should consider. • It can be a useful tool for identifying work setting and occupations that may be satisfying. • It indicates how similar or dissimilar one’s interests are in comparison with people in a wide variety of occupations. • Remember it’s just one tool of many!!
How the Assessment Works • The Strong is organized in four ways: • General Occupational Themes (GOT) • An overall view of your interest patterns • Basic Interest Scales • Specific interest areas based upon your GOT • Occupational Scales • Specific interest patterns to people working in the field that share your likes and dislikes • Personal Style Scales • Your preferences on 5 different scales
Your Personal BIS Scores • Notice the kind of job categories in which you have an elevated score. • How do you feel about these scores? In your opinion, are they accurate why or why not?
Using the Strong with Clients • It can be helpful in identifying interests, which can lead to greater job satisfaction. • It can be helpful information to assist with career and educational planning. • 3-Step Process--include the client in all phases: • Preparation • Interpretation • Exploration
Activity • Twenty Things You Like to Do!