Verbal-Linguistic
Intelligence (Word
Smart)
Description: Verbal-linguistic students love
words and use them as a primary way of thinking and solving problems. They
are good writers, speakers, or both. They use words to persuade, argue,
entertain, and/or teach.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__
Completing crossword puzzles with vocabulary words.
__ Playing
games like Scrabble, Scrabble Junior, or Boggle.
__ Writing
short stories for a classroom newsletter.
__ Writing
feature articles for the school newspaper.
__ Writing
a letter to the editor in response to articles.
__ Writing
to state representatives about local issues.
__ Using
digital resources such as electronic libraries, desktop publishing, word
games, and word processing.
__ Creating
poems for a class poetry book.
__ Entering
their original poems in a poetry contest.
__
Listening to a storyteller.
__ Studying
the habits of good speakers.
__ Telling
a story to the class.
__
Participating in debates.
|
Logical-Mathematical
Intelligence (Math Smart)
Description: Logical-mathematical students
enjoy working with numbers. They can easily interpret data and analyze
abstract patterns. They have a well-developed ability to reason and are good
at chess and computer programming. They think in terms of cause and effect.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Playing
math games like dominoes, chess,
checkers, and Monopoly.
__
Searching for patterns in the classroom, school, outdoors, and home.
__
Conducting experiments to demonstrate science concepts.
__ Using
math and science software such as Math Blaster, which reinforces math skills,
or King's Rule, a logic game.
__ Using
science tool kits for science programs.
__
Designing alphabetic and numeric codes.
__ Making
up analogies.
|
Spatial
Intelligence (Picture
Smart)
Description: Students strong in spatial
intelligence think and process information in pictures and images. They have
excellent visual receptive skills and excellent fine motor skills. Students
with this intelligence use their eyes and hands to make artistic or
creatively designed projects. They can build with Legos, read maps, and put
together 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzles.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Taking photographs for
assignments and classroom newsletters.
__ Taking
photographs for the school yearbook, school newsletter, or science
assignments.
__ Using
clay or play dough to make objects or represent concepts from content-area
lessons.
__ Using
pictorial models such as flow charts, visual maps, Venn diagrams, and
timelines to connect new material to known information.
__ Taking
notes using concept mapping, mind mapping, and clustering.
__ Using
puppets to act out and reinforce concepts learned in class.
__ Using
maps to study geographical locations discussed in class.
__ Illustrating
poems for the class poetry book by drawing or using computer software.
__ Using
virtual-reality system software.
|
Musical
Intelligence (Music
Smart)
Description: Musical students think, feel,
and process information primarily through sound. They have a superior ability
to perceive, compose, and/or perform music. Musically smart people constantly
hear musical notes in their head.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Writing
their own songs and music about content-area topics.
__ Putting
original poems to music, and then performing them for the class.
__Setting a
poem to music, and then performing it for the class.
__
Incorporating a poem they have written with a melody they already know.
__
Listening to music from different historical periods.
__ Tape
recording a poem over "appropriate" background music (i.e., soft
music if describing a kitten, loud music if they are mad about pollution).
__ Using
rhythm and clapping to memorize math facts and other content-area
information.
__
Listening to CDs that teach concepts like the alphabet, parts of speech, and
states and capitals
|
Bodily-Kinesthetic (Body
Smart)
Description: Bodily-kinesthetic students are
highly aware of the world through touch and movement. There is a special
harmony between their bodies and their minds. They can control their bodies
with grace, expertise, and athleticism.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Creating
costumes for role-playing, skits, or simulations.
__
Performing skits or acting out scenes from books or key historical events.
__
Designing props for plays and skits.
__ Playing
games like Twister and Simon Says.
__ Using
charades to act out characters in a book, vocabulary words, animals, or other
content-area topics.
__
Participating in scavenger hunts, searching for items related to a theme or
unit.
__ Acting
out concepts. For example, for the solar system, "student planets"
circle around a "student sun." Students line up appropriately to
demonstrate events in a history timeline.
__
Participating in movement breaks during the day.
__ Building
objects using blocks, cubes, or Legos to represent concepts from content-area
lessons.
__ Using
electronic motion-simulation games and hands-on construction kits that
interface with computers.
|
Interpersonal (People
Smart)
Description: Students strong in interpersonal
intelligence have a natural ability to interact with, relate to, and get
along with others effectively. They are good leaders. They use their insights
about others to negotiate, persuade, and obtain information. They like to
interact with others and usually have lots of friends.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Working
in cooperative groups to design and complete projects.
__ Working
in pairs to learn math facts.
__
Interviewing people with knowledge about content-area topics (such as a
veteran to learn about World War II, a lab technician to learn about life
science, or a politician to understand the election process).
__ Tutoring
younger students or classmates.
__ Using
puppets to put on a puppet show.
|
Intrapersonal
Intelligence (Self
Smart)
Description: People with a strong
intrapersonal intelligence have a deep awareness of their feelings, ideas,
and goals. Students with this intelligence usually need time alone to process
and create.
Learning
Activities and Project Ideas:
__ Writing
reflective papers on content-area topics.
__ Writing
essays from the perspective of historical figures, such as Civil War soldiers
or suffragettes.
__ Writing
a literary autobiography, reflecting on their reading life.
__ Writing
goals for the future and planning ways to achieve them.
__ Using
software that allows them to work alone, such as Decisions, Decisions, a
personal choice software, or the Perfect Career, a career choice software.
__ Keeping
journals or logs throughout the year.
__ Making a
scrapbook for their poems, papers, and reflections.
|
Naturalistic
Intelligence (Nature
Smart)
Description: This intelligence refers to a
person's natural interest in the environment. These people enjoy being in
nature and want to protect it from pollution. Students with strong
naturalistic intelligence easily recognize and categorize plants, animals,
and rocks.
__ Caring
for classroom plants.
__ Caring
for classroom pets.
__ Sorting
and classifying natural objects, such as leaves and rocks.
__
Researching animal habitats.
__
Observing natural surroundings.
__
Organizing or participating in park/playground clean-ups, recycling drives,
and beautification projects.
|
Saturday, June 22, 2013
Possible activities in classroom related to the multiple intelligence.
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