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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. An Introduction. Origins of Myers-Briggs. Based on the work of Swiss psychologist C. G. Jung, who presented his psychological type theory in his book Psychological Types (published 1921, translated into English 1923 )

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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

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  1. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator An Introduction

  2. Origins of Myers-Briggs • Based on the work of Swiss psychologist C. G. Jung, who presented his psychological type theory in his book Psychological Types(published 1921, translated into English 1923) • Katherine Briggs and Isabel Briggs-Myers created the MBTI to make Jung’s theory understandable by and accessible to the general public.

  3. What Myers-Briggs Is Assessment Used by most Fortune 100 companies Administered more than 2 million times a year in 30+ languages in 70+countries Aids in relationships, self-understanding, leadership, decision making… Usage An indicator—not a test, so there are no right or wrong answers or good or bad types Looks only at normal behavior Describes 4 aspects of people’s nature

  4. Nature vs. Nurture Terms used by experts to explain personality Nature Includes family, cultural, and environmental influences Nurture Includes inborn tendencies and inherited characteristics Jung believed BOTH play a role in adult personality development, but type was designed to measure NATURE only.

  5. What Myers-Briggs Is Not Intelligence Maturity Emotions IQ Development Stress Trauma Emotional Health Myers-Briggs does not measure: Myers-Briggs also does not tell you what you can and cannot do!!

  6. Handedness Exercise Use your preferred hand to sign your name on a sheet of paper. Now use your other hand to sign your name on a sheet of paper, and compare. We can accomplish the task of signing our names with either hand, but the preferred hand will always be more natural, comfortable, and automatic.

  7. Jung’s Theory We will look at four pairs of opposites—like our right and left hands. We all use both sides of each pair, but one is our natural preference. Jung believed that our preferences do not change; they stay the same over our lifetime. What changes is how we use our preferences, the environment’s impact on how our types manifest, and often the accuracy with which we can measure the preferences.

  8. For the Visual Learners…

  9. Extraversion and Introversion The direction in which we focus our attention and energy and how we gain mental energy

  10. People who Prefer… Extraversion Focus their energy and attention inward Are interested in the inner world of thoughts and reflections, and enjoy interacting with it Tend to think before speaking Need to know a person before opening up Give depth to life Can seem withdrawn and secretive to extraverts Introversion • Focus their energy and attention outward • Are interested in the world of people and things, and enjoy interacting with it • Often think as they speak • Tell you about themselves openly • Give breadth to life • Can seem shallow and intruding to introverts

  11. For the Visual Learners… E I

  12. Key Words Extraversion Reflection Inward Privacy Concentration Few Quiet Think-Do-Think Introversion Action Outward People Interaction Many Expressive Do-Think-Do

  13. It’s All About Preference We all do Extraverted and Introverted things.But we usually do not do themwith equal comfort.Most of us have a preference for one over the other.

  14. Where Do You Fit? Given the choice, which do you prefer: Extraversion or Introversion?

  15. Sensing and Intuition The way we take in information and the kind of information we like and trust

  16. People who Prefer… Sensing Go beyond what is real or concrete and focus on meaning, associations, and relationships See patterns and meaning in information and like overviews Are conceptual, abstract, and imaginative Live in future possibilities Like new ideas and ways of doing things May seem like impractical dreamers to sensors Intuition • Prefer to take in information using their five sensesand past experiences • Like facts and details and use them to see the overall design • Are practical and realistic • Live in the present, the here and now • Like set procedures and established routines • May seem materialistic and overly literal to intuitives

  17. For the Visual Learners… • What do you see in this picture? S N 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sensing types will often list objects in the picture (calendar, cow, couple, hen, golden egg) Intuitive types will often report the overall feel of the picture (happy surprise, people look shocked, little farm town)

  18. Key Words Sensing Ideas Imaginative General Future Change Theoretical What could be Intuitition Facts Realistic Specific Present Keep Practical What is

  19. It’s All About Preference We all do Sensing and Intuitive things.But we usually do not do themwith equal comfort.Most of us have a preference for one over the other.

  20. Where Do You Fit? Given the choice, which do you prefer: Sensing or Intuition?

  21. Thinking and Feeling The process we use to make decisions and the way we organize and prioritize information

  22. People who Prefer… Thinking Use a person-centered, values-based process Focus on relationships Have difficulty telling people unpleasant things Believe fairness means treating each individual as a whole person May seem overly emotional & irrational to Thinking types Feeling • Make their decisions based on impersonal, objective logic • Focus on problems and tasks • When required, can fire or reprimand people • Believe fairness, justice, and equitability are very important • May seem cold and detached to Feeling types

  23. For the Visual Learners… Maybe it would be a good idea to look at how you manage your time so that you don’t get your work in late again, and perhaps you could talk to her about your work load if it is still too much after that. Warning!! What you are about to see is a dramatization portrayed by trained actors! It illustrates a very stereotypical conversation between Thinking and Feeling types… TERRIBLE!! My boss yelled at me because I turned my work in 5 minutes late, and I have way too much to do, and I’m so frustrated because I don’t want her to think I am a bad employee, and I think she hates me! My time management skills are fine, and I can handle my work load!! I know everything will be ok… I just had a really bad day, and I need to vent. I don’t need you to fix it… How was your day today? Huh?????? Um… Ok…??? What has caused this person to become upset, and how can it be reasonably fixed? Aww, I’m so sorry you’re upset. I’m here if you need an ear to listen, a shoulder to cry on, or anything else… T F

  24. Key Words Thinking Heart Personal People Subjective Praise Understand Merciful Feeling Head Distant Things Objective Critique Analyze Firm but fair

  25. It’s All About Preference We all do Thinking and Feeling things.But we usually do not do themwith equal comfort.Most of us have a preference for one over the other.

  26. Where Do You Fit? Given the choice, which do you prefer: Thinking or Feeling?

  27. Judging and Perceiving How we organize our environment and how we plan and complete tasks

  28. People who Prefer… Judging Seek to experience the world, not organize it Look at the world and see options that need to be explored Like to leave things open, gather more information Tend to think there is plenty of time Often have many unfinished projects and have trouble planning May have trouble deciding May seem disorganized and irresponsible to Judging types Perceiving • Want the external world to be organized and orderly • Look at the world and see decisions that need to be made • Like getting things settled and finished • Like to plan ahead to avoid a rush • Often cling to plans and dislike interruptions, even for important matters • May make decisions too quickly • May seem rigid, demanding and inflexible to Perceiving types

  29. For the Visual Learners… DEADLINE J P 5 4 3 2 1 DEADLINE

  30. Key Words Judging Flexible Information Experience Later Options Spontaneous Wait Perceiving Organized Decision Control Now Closure Deliberate Plan

  31. It’s All About Preference We all do Judging and Perceiving things.But we usually do not do themwith equal comfort.Most of us have a preference for one over the other.

  32. Where Do You Fit? Given the choice, which do you prefer: Judging or Perceiving?

  33. Now…. You should have chosen one letter from each of the following options to give you a Self-Estimate Type.

  34. The 16 Types

  35. Levels of Confidence in Personal Type

  36. Expectations • 2/3–3/4 of any group will agree with their reported type and the general description of their type. • When people disagree, it’s usually on one preference—and often one on which they had a “slight” result. • When people report having changed type,it is likely that they have had an incorrect administration—the “mind-setting” was not done properly, resulting in the reporting of “work type”or “ideal self.”

  37. Type Distribution

  38. I Hope You Have Enjoyed Learning About Type Today "The great events of world history are, at bottom, profoundly unimportant. In the last analysis, the essential thing is the life of the individual. This alone makes history, here alone do the great transformations first take place, and the whole future, the whole history of the world, ultimately spring as a gigantic summation from these hidden sources in individuals. In our most private and most subjective lives we are not only the passive witnesses of our age, and its sufferers, but also its makers. We make our own epoch." ~ C.G. Jung

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