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Multiple Intelligences

Multiple Intelligences. More than one way to skin a cat!. Verbal Linguistic. Oral and written communication Creating stories Debating, discussing Learning languages Playing word games Quotes, sayings. Spells easily Telling jokes, puns Uses correct grammar Writing.

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Multiple Intelligences

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  1. Multiple Intelligences More than one way to skin a cat!

  2. Verbal Linguistic

  3. Oral and written communication Creating stories Debating, discussing Learning languages Playing word games Quotes, sayings Spells easily Telling jokes, puns Uses correct grammar Writing Skills and Preferences

  4. John Dewey Joan of Arc Walter Cronkite Barbara Walters John Steinbeck Winston Churchill Bill Cosby Martin Luther King, Jr. William Shakespeare Langston Hughes Walt Whitman P.T. Barnum Ernest Hemingway Edgar Allan Poe Verbal/Linguistic People

  5. Words of Wisdom • A room without books is like a body without a soul. Cicero • The difference between the right work and the almost right work is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug. Mark Twain • Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind. Rudyard Kipling

  6. Logical/Mathematical

  7. Analyzing Computing Deducing Predicting Experimenting Organizing Playing strategy games Questioning Sequencing Solving logic problems Using abstract symbols Skills & Preferences

  8. H. R. Block Bill Gates Agatha Christie Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Alexander Graham Bell Thomas Edison Thurgood Marshall Aristotle Albert Einstein Isaac Newton Sandra Day O’Connor End States and Models

  9. Figuring Out • I think, therefore I am. Descartes • Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted. Einstein • “Contrariwise” continued Tweedledee, “If it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be ; but as it isn’t, it ain’t. That’s logic.” Lewis Carroll

  10. Visual/Spatial Intelligence Visual/Spatial Intelligence Visual/Spatial Intelligence

  11. Appreciating architecture Decorating Building models Charting, graphing Coordination Doodling Painting Remembers visual details Molding Solving jigsaw puzzles Thinking in pictures and images Skills & Preferences

  12. Frank Lloyd Wright Martha Stewart Annie Oakley Ansel Adams Anne Geddes Leif Ericson Bobby Fischer Euclid End States & Models

  13. Words of Wisdom • Thinking in pictures precedes thinking in words. Immanuel Kant • I found that I could say things with color and spaces that I had no words for. Georgia O’Keffe • Art is the only way to run away without leaving home. Twyla Tharpe

  14. Musical/Rhythmic Intelligence

  15. Composing melodies Humming Chanting Whistling Keeping time Identifying instruments Singing Perfect pitch Tapping feet, hands Understanding structure of music Reading/writing music Skills and Preferences

  16. Bach Beethoven Irving Berlin Andrew Lloyd Webber Arthur Fiedler Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington John Lennon Barbra Streisand Frank Sinatra Bob Dylan End State and Models

  17. Getting in Tune • If you have to ask what jazz is, you will never know. Louis Armstrong • It is in learning music that many youthful hearts learn to love. Dominique Ricard • The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes -- ah, that is where the art resides. Artur Schnabel

  18. Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence

  19. Acting Athletic performances Dancing Exercising Hand-eye coordination Mimicking Moving with grace Playing sports Using gestures Body language Skills and Preferences

  20. Michael Jordan Tiger Woods Steve Martin Robin Williams John Wayne Mikhail Barishnikov Mohammed Ali Fred Astaire Arnold Schwarzenegger David Copperfield Charlie Chaplin Jim Carrey End States & Models

  21. Moving to Intelligence • Great ideas originate in the muscles. Thomas Edison • I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand. Confucius • Pro football is like nuclear warfare. There are no winners, only survivors. Frank Gifford

  22. Naturalist Intelligence

  23. Analyzing similarities and differences Appreciating plants, flowers, trees Classifying and caring for plants, gardens, pets, wild animals Predicting the weather Discovering patterns in nature Protecting the environment Recognizing species, rocks, star, clouds Skills & Preferences

  24. George Washington Carver Galileo Galilei Carl Sagan Jonas Salk Louis Pasteur Rachel Carson Carles Darwin Jane Goodall Jacques Cousteau John James Audubon James Herriott End States & Models

  25. The Nature of Things • Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed. Francis Bacon • The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible. Albert Einstein • The goal of life is living in agreement with nature. Zeno of Citium (335 B.C.)

  26. Interpersonal Intelligences

  27. Caring for/teaching others Communicating with others Empathizing/ sympathizing with others Respecting different points of view Working as a team member Interacting with others Leading Being sensitive to moods Skills & Preferences

  28. Margaret Mead Princess Diana Mother Theresa Albert Schweitzer Florence Nightingale Andrew Carnegie John Kennedy Ann Landers Harriet Tubman Oprah Winfrey Sojourner Truth End States & Models

  29. Just Between Friends • The only proper intoxication is conversation. Oscar Wilde • If you judge people, you have no time to love them. Mother Theresa • Grief can take care of itself; but to get the full value of joy, you must have someone to divide it with. Mark Twain

  30. Intrapersonal Intelligence

  31. Attending to memories, fantasies, dreams Clarifying values and beliefs Controlling impulses Enjoying think time, alone time, quiet time Intuiting Cognitive thinking Skills & Preferences

  32. Nietzsche Sartre Walt Whitman Gandhi Thomas Jefferson Abraham Lincoln Buddha Christ Deepak Copra Freud Confucius Mary Baker Eddy St. Thomas Aquinas End States & Models

  33. To Know Thyself • The purpose of life is to know one’s self. Gandhi • It is not who is right, but what is right, that is important. Thomas Huxley • Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control: These three alone lead life to sovereign power. Alfred Tennyson

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