Posts Tagged ‘Multiple Intelligences’

Teaching Qualities Desired By All School Districts

January 28th, 2010

Each school district is looking for their teachers to possess specific qualities, regardless of the subject that is being taught. If you are looking for and want to land a new teaching position, make certain that these qualities are conveyed in your resume and/or cover letter:

Passionate about the subject. Ability to reach out to, support, and motivate all students. Talent for differentiating instruction. Demonstrated capability to develop creative lesson plans that promote hands-on learning. Help students develop problem solving, socialization, and other key skills. Ability to increase literacy rates and instil a love for reading and writing.

Why these traits are important to hiring districts:

Your enthusiasm and excitement for a subject, regardless of what it is, is infectious. If students see that Mathematics can be fun, they are far more likely to remain interested and focused. Each classroom is different and encompasses multiple intelligences and learning styles. A good teacher is able to reach out to each student, spark his or her interest, and provide the appropriate support and motivation. Supporting a student may involve providing after-school tutoring, collaborating with staff and parents to develop an Individualized Education Plan or Program, adapting instructional techniques, or simply offering more positive encouragement. Children deserve the chance to learn and succeed, and it is up to you to help each and every one of them. Differentiating instruction relates directly to the point above. Since students learn via different methods, it is key that you are able to be adaptable and remain flexible in your teaching styles. By facilitating auditory, visual, tactile, and kinesthetic learners, you are able to ensure that the children are able to understand and retain the information through whichever manner suits them best. Creativity sparks interest and curiosity and decreases boredom. By keeping lesson plans fun and hands-on, students remain focused, on-track, and eager to learn more. These skills are crucial for progressing to the next academic level, as well as succeeding in the real world. Since teachers are one of the primary points of contact for children, it is crucial that problem solving and socialization skills are modeled in the classroom and fostered by the instructor. Even if you are not an English or Language Arts teacher, you can still utilize literature to instruct students. Convey what types of literary activities you incorporate into everyday lessons and demonstrate what kind of impact it has left on students.

There are several different methods for showcasing these traits in your resume and cover letter. You can put them under your job description or achievements listed under the different job positions; create an areas of expertise section, which focuses on the aforementioned qualities; or highlight them in the introductory paragraph of your resume. Within the cover letter, you may choose to develop a separate paragraph detailing your greatest strengths (i.e. the qualities listed above). Regardless of where you include them, make sure they are somewhere in your documents. If a potential employer sees that you lack these desired qualities, he or she will move on to the next candidate. However, if you make these traits really stand out in your documents, you as a teacher will stand out as well.

Candace Davies, Owner of A+ Resumes for Teachers is certified as a Professional Resume Writer, Certified Interview Coach, Certified Employment Interview Professional, Associate Certified Career Coach, and Electronic Career Coach.

Visit her website at http://www.resumes-for-teachers.com or email candoco@telus.net

For Administrators:

http://www.resumes-for-principals.com/PIE/Principals-Interview-Edge.php

For Teachers:

http://www.resumes-for-teachers.com/ebook/Teachers-Interview-Edge.php




By: Candace Davies

Find out about multiple intelligences to improve your learning

December 19th, 2009

Have you ever wondered why on some occasions you can remember information easily while on other occasions you aren`t able to recall it at all?

Well it could have to do with the fact that in one situation you are in an environment which is compatible with your personal learning style, while in the other case the teaching is just not presented in a manner which is right for you. Every human being has a certain learning style which is connected with a certain strength. In order to make your learning as effective as possible anyone should know the own learning style which is based on his strongest intelligences and talent structure.

His intelligences? There’s only one intelligence in the person, right?

Well, following the theorie of Harvard professor of education Howard Gardner there are seven different intelligences. Those are:

Linguistic : good in reading, writing, listening and talking, spells easily Logical-Mathematic Intelligence: good in abstract thinking, counting, performing calculations, orderly note-taking Spatial Intelligence: thinking in pictures, good in reading map, likes arts, good sense of colour, uses metaphors Musical Intelligence: sensitive to rhythm, the composing and singing Bodily-Kinaesthetic Intelligence: good in control of one’s body, good timing, good reflexes, learns good by moving, skilful and purposeful movements (dancers, athletes and surgeons) Intrapersonal Intelligence: good negotiator, empathy, enjoys company, likes to mediate disputes, good self-understanding Interpersonal functioning: good understanding of others and one’s relations to others, intuitive, self-motivated wants to separate from mainstream, being high in social skills (psychologists, teachers and politicians are often equipped with this type of intelligence).

Gardner states if we all had exactly the same kind of mind and there was only one kind of intelligence, then everybody could be taught the same things in the same way and assess them in the same way and that would be fair. Once it is realised though that people have very different kinds of minds, different kinds of talents, like some people are good and thinking spatially, some in thinking language, others are very logical, other people need to be hands on and explore actively and try things out, then education, which treats everybody the same way, is the most unfair education.

He adds, then we have this myth that the only way to learn something to read in a textbook or hear a lecture on it.

Gardner admits himself and those seven intelligences are not definitive, but can show the facets of the human mind and each human will have combinations of those. Not all experts agree with this theory as you can read yourself here (Howard Gardner Under Fire: The Rebel Psychologist Faces His Critics).

Each reader may find out for himself whether this knowledge about the different intelligences helps understanding and learning a new subject in the future better.

So knowing about your special talents and intelligences is the first step in helping you to advance your learning. Obviously it would be helpful to use as many of those talents while learning as possible. At the same time you should leave out the channels which don’t fit your preferred intelligences, may it be reading, hearing or something else.

The second step to improve the learning would be finding out about the own learning style. For that we need to acknowledge three different sectors which are relevant for the learning:

how do you receive information easily  (kinesthetic, auditory, visual for instance)? how do you organise and implement information more easily (step by step approach or big picture)? what circumstances would help you to receive and implement information you are learning (being alone in library, study buddies, calm or music playing?

How do  you find your own learning style while using your strongest intelligences?

Actually there are  several tests available these days to find out about your preferred learning style. Here I found a site for you where you can take the test and find out your learning style for free and print it out; simply click this  link (click on learning styles in the second paragraph of the site).

Its is pretty close to the intelligence types Gardner is using with slight differences, but you will be able to find out your strength easily.

Anyone interested in improving his learning exponentially should go and take that test now, because it brings valuable insight for the rest of the life.

People who are interested in finding out even more about Gardner and his seven intelligences finds some excellent references here:




By: dirk tietjen