By Jay Davidson
In Howard Gardner’s Frames of Mind, he proposes that
there are seven main areas in which all people have
special skills; he calls them intelligences. His
research at Harvard University was in response to the
work that Alfred Binet had done in France around 1900.
Binet’s work led to the formation of an intelligence
test; we are all familiar with the “intelligence
quotient,” or “IQ,” the way that intelligence is
measured on his test.
This type of IQ test was used as the basis of another
one with which most of us are familiar: the Scholastic
Aptitude Test (SAT), which is taken my most
college-bound high school students.
Both of these tests look predominantly at two types of
intelligences: verbal and math. If a person does well on
these, s/he is considered “intelligent,” and is a
candidate for one of the better colleges or
universities. But what about everyone else? How many of
you who are reading these words have used the phrase
“not good at taking tests,” when talking either about
yourself or your child?
The Multiple Intelligences (MI) theory proposes that
there are other measures of intelligence beside these
two. I offer this information to you so that you can
understand that while many teachers have some knowledge
of MI theory, most of our schools are not fully set up
to use it to the advantage of all students.
That being the case, perhaps you can either (1) be
involved in helping your child’s teachers and school to
provide a more balanced program that develops his
intelligences that are not more included in the
curriculum or (2) find activities outside of the school
environment in which your child can develop his dominant
areas of intelligence.
You should also know that MI theory posits that each of
us has, to some degree or another, all of these
intelligences. Some of them are simply more developed
than others. Furthermore, we are all able to improve our
ability in each of these areas.
Howard Gardner stresses that the intelligences are equal
in their importance. In alphabetical order, they are:
Bodily-kinesthetic: using one's body to
solve problems and express ideas and feelings. Actors,
athletes, and dancers use their whole bodies in this
way, much the same way that craftspeople, sculptors, and
mechanics use their hands.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence:
- Do you regularly participate in a sport or some
physical activity?
- Is it difficult to sit still for long periods of
time?
- Do you enjoy working with your hands in creating
things?
- Do you find that ideas and solutions to problems
come to you while you are exercising or doing some
sort of physical activity?
- Do you enjoy spending your free time outdoors?
- Do you speak with your hands or other body
gestures?
- Do you learn more about things by touching them?
- Do you enjoy thrilling amusement park rides such
as the roller coaster and other activities like
this?
- Do you think of yourself as being
well-coordinated?
- In order to learn a new skill, do you have to
practice it to learn it, rather than read about it
or see it in a video?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Bodily-Kinesthetic
Intelligence. Does your child:
- excel in more than one sport?
- move various body parts when required to sit
still for long periods of time?
- have the ability to mimic others’ body
movements?
- enjoy taking things apart and putting them back
together?
- have a hard time keeping hands off objects?
- enjoy running, jumping, or other physical
activities?
- show skill in activities that require fine-motor
coordination, such as origami, making paper
airplanes, building models, finger-painting, clay,
or knitting?
- use his body well to express himself?
Interpersonal: perceiving the moods,
feelings, and needs of others. It includes salespeople,
teachers, counselors, and those we have come to call the
helping professions.
These questions can determine if an adult has a
strength in Interpersonal Intelligence:
- Have people always come to you for advice?
- Have you always preferred group sports to solo
sports?
- Do you usually prefer talking to other people
about a problem, rather than figure it out on your
own?
- Do you have at least three close friends?
- Do you prefer social activities over individual
pursuits?
- Do you enjoy teaching others what you can do
well?
- Are you considered to be a leader, either by
yourself or others?
- Do you feel comfortable in a crowd?
- Do you prefer to spend your time with others
than alone?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Interpersonal
Intelligence. Does your child:
- enjoy socializing with friends?
- seem to be a natural leader?
- empathize easily with others, which leads to his
give advice to friends who come to him with
problems?
- seem to be street-smart?
- enjoy belonging to organizations?
- enjoy teaching other kids - either peers or
younger ones?
- have two or more close friends?
- serve as a magnet for social activities with
others?
Intrapersonal: turning inward with a
well-developed self-knowledge and using it successfully
to navigate oneself through the world.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Intrapersonal Intelligence:
- Do you regularly spend time alone meditating,
reflecting, or thinking about important life
questions?
- Have you attended counseling sessions or
personal growth seminars to learn more about
yourself?
- Do you have a hobby or interest that you keep to
yourself?
- Have you set goals for yourself regularly?
- Do you have a realistic view of your strengths
and weaknesses?
- Would you prefer spending time by yourself
rather than with many people around you?
- Do you keep a diary or journal to record the
events of your inner life?
- Are you either self-employed or have you given
serious consideration to starting your own business?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Intrapersonal
Intelligence. Does your child:
- show a sense or independence or a strong will?
- have a realistic sense of her abilities and
weaknesses?
- do well when left alone to play or study?
- "march to the beat of a different drummer" in
living and learning?
- have a hobby or interest she doesn’t talk about
much?
- have a good sense of self-direction?
- prefer working alone to working with others?
- accurately express how he is feeling?
- learn from failures and successes?
- have good self-esteem?
Linguistic: using words, either
orally or written, in an effective manner. This
intelligence is associated with storytellers,
politicians, comedians, and writers.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Linguistic Intelligence:
- Have you always enjoyed books and given them
importance?
- Do you hear words in your head before you speak
or write them?
- Do you enjoy talk shows more than television or
movies?
- Do you enjoy word games, puns, rhymes,
tongue-twisters, and poetry?
- Do you have a highly developed vocabulary and
enjoy knowing words that other people do not know?
- In your own education, did you enjoy subjects
related to words and ideas, such as English and
social studies, more than math and science?
- Have you enjoyed learning to read or speak other
languages?
- In your speech, do you refer to information that
you have read or heard about?
- Have you been praised, recognized, or paid for
your writing?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Linguistic Intelligence.
Does your child:
- write better than average for her age?
- enjoy telling stories and jokes?
- have a good memory for names, places, dates, and
other information?
- enjoy word games, either visually or auditorally?
- enjoy reading books?
- spell better than other children the same age?
- appreciate rhymes, puns, tongue twisters?
- enjoy books on tape without needing to see the
book itself?
- enjoy hearing stories without seeing the book?
- have an excellent vocabulary for his age?
- communicate thoughts, feelings, and ideas well?
Logical-Mathematical: understanding
and using numbers effectively, as well as having good
powers to reason well. Exemplars are mathematicians,
scientists, computer programmers, and accountants.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Logical-Mathematical Intelligence:
- Have you always done math in your head easily?
- When you were in school, were math and/or
science your best subjects?
- Do you enjoy playing games that require logical
thinking?
- Do you set up experiments to see "what if" in
your course of jobs around the house or at work?
- Do you look for logical sequences and patterns,
with the belief that almost everything has a logical
explanation?
- Do you read science periodicals or keep track of
the latest scientific developments?
- Do you like finding logical flaws in things that
people say and do?
- Do you feel the need to have things measured,
categorized, analyzed, or quantified in some way?
- I think in clear, abstract, wordless, imageless
concepts.
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Logical-Mathematical
Intelligence. Does your child:
- demonstrate curiosity about how things work?
- have fun with numbers?
- enjoy math at school?
- enjoy math and/or computer games?
- play and enjoy strategy games such as chess and
checkers, brain teasers, or logic puzzles?
easily put things into categories?
- like to do experiments, either at school when
assigned or on her own?
- show an interest in visiting natural history or
discovery-type museums and exhibits?
Musical: relating in a wide range of
ways to music. This can take many forms, as a performer,
composer, critic, and music-lover.
These questions can determine if an adult has a highly
developed Musical Intelligence:
- Do you have a pleasant singing voice?
- Can you tell when a musician plays a note
off-key?
- Do you frequently listen to music?
- Do you play a musical instrument?
- Was it easy for you to learn to play a musical
instrument?
- Do you think your life would not be as rewarding
without music?
- Do you usually have music going through your
mind?
- Can you keep time to music?
- Do you know the tunes to many different songs or
musical selections?
- Can you usually sing back a melody accurately
after you hear a new selection only once or twice?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Musical Intelligence.
Does your child:
- tell you when she recognizes that music is
off-key?
- easily remember song melodies and sing them?
- have a pleasant singing voice, either alone or
in a chorus?
- play a musical instrument?
- speak or move in a rhythmical way?
- hum or whistle to himself?
- tap on the tabletop or desktop while working?
- show sensitivity to noises in the environment?
- respond emotionally to music she hears?
Naturalist Intelligence: excellent
at recognizing and classifying both the animal and plant
kingdoms, as well as showing understanding of natural
phenomena.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Naturalist Intelligence:
- Do you like to spend time in nature?
- Do you belong to a volunteer group related to
nature?
- Do you enjoy having animals around the house?
- Are you involved in a hobby that involves
nature, such as bird watching?
- Can you easily tell the differences among
species of flora and fauna?
- Do you read books or magazines, or watch
television shows or movies that feature nature?
- On vacation, do you prefer natural settings to
cultural attractions?
- Do you enjoy visiting zoos, aquariums, or other
places where the natural world is studied?
- Do you enjoy working in your garden?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Naturalist Intelligence.
Does your child:
- talk about favorite pets or preferred natural
spots?
- enjoy nature preserves, the zoo, or natural
history museum?
show sensitivity to natural formations? (Note that
in urban environments, this type of "formation" can
include cultural icons.)
- like to play in water?
- hang around the pet in school or at home?
- enjoy studying environment, nature, plants, and
animals?
- speak out about animal rights and earth
preservation?
- collect bugs, flowers, leaves, or other natural
things to show to others?
Spatial: perceiving the
visual-spatial world in an accurate way, so as to be
able to work in it effectively. The people who do this
cover a wide range of fields that, upon first glance, do
not seem to have much in common. Compare, for example,
hunters, sailors, engineers, inventors, and surgeons to
interior decorators, architects, painters, and
sculptors.
These questions can determine if an adult has a strength
in Spatial Intelligence:
- Have you always been able to reproduce clear
images in your mind, even when your eyes are closed
or the objects are not in front of you?
- Are you sensitive to color?
- Do you take a lot of photographs or home movies?
- Do you enjoy jigsaw and other visual puzzles?
- Do you have vivid dreams?
- Do you usually have an easy time getting around,
even if it’s your first time in a new place?
- Do you enjoy drawing or doodling?
- Was geometry easier for you than algebra?
- Do you have an easy time reading maps and
translating their information into reality?
- Do you enjoy books and magazines with many
illustrations, photos, and design elements?
These are some questions to determine if children may
be exhibiting a well-developing Spatial Intelligence.
Does your child:
- recall visual details in objects?
- have an easy time learning to read and
understand maps and charts in books?
- daydream a lot?
- enjoy the visual arts?
- demonstrate ability in using art materials and
creating drawings, sculptures, or other
three-dimensional objects?
- enjoy visual presentations such as videos,
television, and movies?
- get a lot of information from illustrations in
books she reads?
- scribble, doodle, or draw on all available
surfaces?
I have seen limited reference to another
intelligence: Naturalist, which is described as being
able to recognize plant or animal species in the
environment. This one is not included in the two Gardner
books I list it here for your perusal, but it was added
after this original research.
Howard Gardner’s books on
this topic are
Frames of Mind
and Multiple Intelligences: The Theory in Practice.
In addition, Thomas
Armstrong continues the work in his
Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom.
To get a sense of your child’s areas of strength, go to
www.familyeducation.com, where you can find a page
entitled Test Your Child’s Talents, which is based on
Armstrong’s book.
This article has been
incorporated and expanded in
Teach Your Children Well: A Teacher’s Advice for Parents.
This article is reprinted with the author's permission.