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Course Description
The Personally
Intelligent Teacher is a course designed to teach teachers about the interpersonal
and intrapersonal intelligences. The Personally Intelligent Teacher course
is based on the theoretical foundations of William James and Functional
Psychology and Howard Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences, specifically
the personal intelligences.
The model was developed from a research project at the University of Southern
California in 1985. The project resulted in the development of an elementary
and secondary curriculum to teach and develop personal intelligence in
a classroom setting. The course adapts this curriculum to teach teachers
how to recognize dynamics of the personality, how they apply to various
aspects of personal intelligence and how to apply those dynamics in the
classroom to enhance performance of themselves and their students.
Objectives
Learn the theory of personal intelligence
Identify intrapersonal and interpersonal skills that enhance classroom
performance
Identify the necessary conditions for a group to function successfully
Learn how to create support in the classroom so that students are
willing to participate
Create an ongoing positive classroom atmosphere that promotes students
taking educational risks in the classroom
Learn basic coaching skills to enhance student involvement in classroom
activities
Learn how to overcome the feeling of awkwardness when learning
new behaviors
Learn and identify the five personality dynamics that enhance personal
intelligence
Learn how to enhance these 5 personality dynamics to increase personal
and student performance
Learn techniques that will increase morale and reduce stress in
the classroom
Time Requirements
The Personally Intelligent Teacher is a 13 week 3 credit graduate level or
sixty hour professional development course taught online. Modules 1 through
8 will be completed one per week. Modules 9 and 10 will be completed over
a five-week period so students will have time to revise and complete the
final integration project.
Hardware & Computer Skills Requirements
Students may use either a Macintosh computer or a PC with Windows 95 or
higher. Students should possess basic word processing skills and have
internet access with an active e-mail account. Students also are expected
to have a basic knowledge of how to use a Web browser, such as Netscape
Navigator, Microsoft Internet Explorer or America Online's (AOL) browser.
To download a browser at no cost, visit one of the following Web sites
Netscape.com;
Microsoft.com
and AOL.com.
Course Materials
The text is Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences
by Howard Gardner. A possible supplemental test is Intelligence Reframed:
Multiple Intelligences For The 21st Century by Howard Gardner.
Final Integration Project
Participants will conduct an assessment of personal dynamics in their
classroom and design lessons that encourage the use of the personal intelligences.
Session Outline
Module 1: Introduction and Overview
Contents:
1. Understand course requirements, goals and expectations
2. Become familiar with course navigation system
3. Historical overview of personal intelligence theory and
functionalism
4. Develop an understanding of the importance for focusing
on the personal intelligences in schools
Module 2: The Theory Of Personal Intelligences
Contents:
1. Understand an operational definition of personal intelligence
2. Learn to identify interpersonal and intrapersonal behaviors
3. Application of personal intelligence theory in the classroom
for students
4. Learn how the personal intelligences apply to teaching
methods for teachers
5. Introductions using the personal intelligence model
Module 3: Creating A Classroom Climate That Supports
Personal Performance
Contents:
1. Learn to create an environment for change in the classroom.
2. Identify different stages in classroom group development
3. Conditions and skills for increasing student interpersonal
and intrapersonal intelligence in the classroom
4. Learning to coach students on behaviors for classroom success
5. Learn how personality images are created
Module 4: Learning About The Different Dynamics
Of The Personality
Contents:
1. The dynamic of Expression: The ability for people to say
what they think and how they feel
2. The dynamic of Activity: The ability for people to make
things happen and to be active in creating their life
3. The dynamic of Clarity: The ability for people to be alert,
aware and responsive to themselves and others
4. The dynamic of Feeling: The ability for people to experience,
express and show their feelings
5. The dynamic of Contact: The ability for people to make
relationships and friendships and to be able to be close to others
6. Learn how to assess strengths and weaknesses of these dynamics
Module 5: The Dynamic of Expression & Communication
Contents:
1. Understanding the importance of expression to interpersonal
intelligence
2. Identify and assess weak and strong expressive behaviors
and styles
3. Understanding how a teacher's expressive style effects
performance in the classroom
4. Enhancing and encouraging the use of different expressive
style for students
5. Learn classroom activities that increase student knowledge
of expression
Module 6: The Dynamic Of Activity & Taking
Action In Life
Contents:
1. Understanding the importance of physical movement of the
body to personal intelligence
2. Identify and assess weak and strong activity behaviors
and styles
3. Understanding how a teacher's activity style effects performance
in the classroom
4. Enhancing and encouraging the use of different activity
styles for students
5. Learn classroom activities that increase student knowledge
of activity
Module 7: The Dynamic Of Activity Clarity &
Self-Awareness
Contents:
1. Understanding the importance of clarity to personal intelligence
2. Identify and assess weak and strong clarity behaviors and
styles
3. Understanding how a teacher's clarity style effects performance
in the classroom
4. Enhancing and encouraging the use of different clarity
styles for students
5. Learn classroom activities that help develop clarity for
students
Module 8: The Dynamic of Feeling & Human
Emotion
Contents:
1. Understanding the importance of feeling and human emotion
to personal intelligence
2. Identify and assess different feeling states and styles
3. Understanding how a teacher's feeling style effects performance
in the classroom
4. Enhancing and encouraging the use of different feeling
styles for students 6
5. Learn classroom activities that help develop the ability
for students to express feelings and handle the feelings of others appropriately
Module 9: The Dynamic Of Contact & Connectedness
Contents:
1. Understanding the importance of contact and connectedness
to personal intelligence
2. Identify and assess different contact behaviors and styles
3. Understanding how a teacher's contact style effects performance
in the classroom
4. Enhancing and encouraging the use of different contact
styles for students
5. Learn classroom activities that help develop contact and
connectedness for students
6. Learn how to create the connected classroom
Module 10: Final Integration Project For Effecting
the Personal Intelligences In The Classroom
Contents:
1. Identify strategies for maintaining a classroom that supports
and continues to develops intrapersonal intelligence
2. Design a personal program that supports and continues to
develop the teacher's intrapersonal intelligence
3. Complete final exam
4. Complete course and instructor evaluation
Grading
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Assignment |
Points |
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Grading
Scale |
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|
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|
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Forum
Participation |
30 |
|
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100
93 |
A |
|
|
|
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Reading
And Reviews |
30 |
|
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92
85 |
B |
|
|
|
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Final
Integration Project |
40 |
|
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84
77 |
C |
|
|
|
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Total
Points |
100 |
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|
|
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Student
Requirements
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1. |
Participation:
Participation in all Forum activities and dialogue
with colleagues. |
|
2. |
Reading
Assignments: Students will complete all assigned reading
in the textbook, Web sites and answer questions in the
appropriate Forum thread. |
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3. |
Culminating
Activity: Participants will conduct an assessment
of personal dynamics in their classroom and design lessons
that encourage the use of different intelligences. |
Student
Academic Integrity
Participants guarantee
that all academic class work is original. Any academic dishonesty or plagiarism
(to take ideas, writings, etc. from another and offer them as one's own),
is a violation of student academic behavior standards as outlined by our
partnering colleges and universities and is subject to academic disciplinary
action.
Bibliography
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Ceci,
S.J. (1990), On Intelligence . . . More or Less: A
Bio-Ecological Treatise on Intellectual Development,
Enclewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall |
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Coles, R. (1997), Moral Intelligence, New York:
Random House |
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Csikszenmilhalyi,
M. (1996), Creativity, New York: Harper Collins |
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Elias,
M.J., Weissberg, R.P., (2000), Primary Prevention:
Educational Approaches to Enhance Social and Emotional
Learning, Journal of School Health. 16 (12), 186 |
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Gardner,
H. (1983), Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligence,
New York: Basic Books (second edition, 1993) |
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Gardner,
H. (1993), Multiple Intelligence: The Theory In Practice,
New York: Basic Books |
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Goleman,
D. (1995), Emotional Intelligence: Why it Can Matter
More Than IQ, New York : Bantam Books |
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Hart,
J.L. (1998), Becoming a Father: The Real Work of Man's
Soul, Deerfield Beach, FL, Health Commuications, Inc. |
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James,
W. (1962), Talks to Teachers on Psychology and to Students
on Some of Life's Ideals, New York: Dover Publications,
Inc. |
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Mayer,
J.D., Perkins, D.M. Caruso, D.R. (2001), Emotional
Intelligence and Giftedness, Roeper Review, 23 (3)
131-7 |
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Pfeiffer,
S.I. (2001), Emotional Intelligence: Popular but Elusive
Construct, Roeper Review. 23 (3) 138-142 |
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Rovenger,
J. (2000), Fostering Emotional Intelligence, School
Library Journal, 46 (12) 40-41 |
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Sternberg,
R. (1984), Toward a Triarchic Theory of Human Intelligence,
New York: Viking |
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Sternberg,
R. (1996), Successful Intelligence, New York: Simon
and Shuster |
Online Resources
ALPS
Active Learning Practice for Schools, is an electronic
community dedicated to the improvement and advancement of educational
instruction and practice
Dr.
Thomas Armstrong Dr. Armstrong discusses Gardner's
theory and offers suggestions on how to teach and learn at least
eight different ways
ASCD: Multiple
Intelligences A wonderful exploration of the
theory; our own MI profiles; and specifics on each intelligence
area
Developing
Higher Order Thinking Skills and Multiple Intelligences
The activities enclosed within, were developed by teachers
for teachers to help teachers create learning environments that
are not only educational, but exciting and fun
Education
World Curriculum: Multiple Intelligences: A Theory
for Everyone
Exploring Multiple
Intelligences Information from New Dimensions
of Learning
Dr. Howard
Gardner Home page for numerous articles on Multiple
Intelligences Theory by the founder himself
Gardner School
The framework for this school located in Vancouver, Washington,
is based on Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences
Harvard PROJECT ZERO
Project Zero is an educational research group at the
Harvard Graduate School of Education. Their mission is to understand
and enhance learning, thinking, and creativity in the arts,
as well as humanistic and scientific disciplines, at the individual
and institutional levels
Official
Homepages Of The Key School The Key School is
a magnet school in Indianapolis where the curriculum is centered
on MI strategies
Learning
Styles Links for researching Learning styles
developed at James Madison University
A
Learning Styles Survey for College The site offers
you a chance to immediately find your preferred learning styles.
Developed by the Catherine Jester, Learning Disability Specialist,
Diablo Valley College
MIDAS-Multiple
Intelligences Developmental Assessment Scales
A self report measure of intellectual disposition that may be
completed by a child of an adult
Multiple
Intelligences and Learning Styles How can exploration
of the Internet support a variety of learning styles and multiple
intelligences?
Multiple
Intelligences and Technology: A Winning Combination!
See how learning is enhanced when teachers combine strategies
that encompass both the theory of Multiple Intelligences and
the integration of technology
New
City School! An internationally recognized M.I.
School in St. Louis, Missouri. Reframing Our Classrooms, Reframing
Ourselves: Perspectives from a Virtual Paladin
Teacher's
Net A discussion of Gardner's MI Theory and education
Time
Cover Story On Multiple Intelligences
Use
ALL Your Smarts: Multiple Intelligences for Diverse Library
Learners As libraries move toward a fuller concept
of library instruction through information literacy, they need
a better understanding of how people learn and show what they
know. Here is a site developed by the Vermont Library Association
that does just that!
Westmark School
Westmark School in Encino, California has put together this site
which links to information on Multiple Intelligences, Learning Styles, Brain
Development, and more. This is a terrific resource for teachers needing
help with students who learn differently
Course
Authors
John L. Hart and Richard Revheim
John L. Hart (Ph.D., 1985 University of Southern California)
is presently as Associate Professor at the School of Social
Work, New Mexico Highlands University. He is a national board
certified clinician (BCD) and was in private practice in Los
Angeles, California for over twenty years. Dr. Hart is an
expert in group psychotherapy and training and is currently
the liaison for the New Mexico region for the Association
for the Advancement of Social Work with groups. His Personality
Fitness Training for Children and Youth program is widely
used as a group model in public schools in the United States
and in Norway. He is well known in the United States and in
Europe for his advanced training seminars for psychiatrists,
psychologists, and social workers that are annually held in
Norway at the Clinic for Functional Psychology and at Modum
Bad.
Richard Revheim (M.A. Psychology) is a school psychologist
who has successful developed cross-age teaching, peer counseling,
conflict mediation, group counseling, dropout prevention and
drug intervention programs for schools. He has over 25 years
of experience in public education, has conducted teacher education
workshops on a national and international level and held board
positions on mental health and drug boards and was president
of the National Council On Self-Esteem. He is a co-author
of the Personality Fitness Programs and Personally Intelligent
Teacher course.
Register
To register to take TEI's Personally Intelligent Teacher online graduate
course, go to the Course
Registration page.
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