Title: La Giornata dellIntelligenza Creativa Sessione 2, mattino
1La Giornata dellIntelligenza Creativa Sessione
2, mattino
- Limportanza delle intelligenze creative e
pratiche nel percorso di successo degli studenti
universitari (come ridurre gli abbandoni, i
fallimenti, i ritardi)
2The Challenge
- Accepting students from all backgrounds while
increasing retention and graduation rates
3Suggested Solution
- Helping all students succeed, by
- Identifying potential at admissions
- Teaching to students strengths weaknesses
- Monitoring student progress and providing on-time
support as needed
4A framework for developing solutions
- Robert J. Sternbergs Theory of Successful
Intelligence - Students are SUCCESSFULLY INTELLIGENT, when they
have the abilities to succeed in life by - 1. Recognizing and capitalizing on strengths
- 2. Recognizing and correcting or compensating
for weaknesses.
5Capitalization and compensation enable people to
balance
- Adaptation to existing environments
- Shaping environments to improve them
- Selecting new environments.
- Via
- Analytical abilities
- Creative abilities
- Practical abilities
6Analytical intelligence . . .
- . . . is evoked when we
- analyze
- compare and contrast
- evaluate
- explain
- judge
- critique
7Creative intelligence . . .
- . . . is evoked when we
- create
- design
- invent
- imagine
- suppose
8Practical intelligence . . .
- . . . is involved when we
- Use
- Apply
- Implement
- Employ
- Contextualize
9Suggested solution
- Helping all students by
- Identifying potential at admissions
- Teaching to students strengths weaknesses
- Monitoring student progress and providing on-time
support as needed
101. Identifying potential in the U.S
- Going beyond analytical measures such as GPA or
SAT scores - Example A of small revision to the admissions
process Tufts Universitys Kaleidoscope project - Example B of a moderate enhancement New England
Prep School Scholarship program - Example C of an extensive change Project Rainbow
11Example A Kaleidoscope
- Question allowing for analytical skills
- In The Happy Life, Charles Eliot called books
"the quietest and most constant of friendsthe
most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the
most patient of teachers." What work of fiction
or non-fiction changed the way you live or the
way you see the world? Why? - Question allowing for practical skills
- Describe a moment in which you took a risk and
achieved an unexpected goal. How did you persuade
others to follow your lead? You may reflect on
examples from your academic, extracurricular or
athletic experiences.
12Kaleidoscope
- Question allowing for creativity
- Use an 8.5 x 11 inch sheet of paper to create
something. You can blueprint your future home,
create a new product, draw a cartoon strip,
design a costume or a theatrical set, compose a
score or do something entirely different. Let
your imagination wander.
13Example B Prep School
- Classes of Attributes Selected
- Soft-Side Variables
- (Self-Reported) Character, Values, Motivation
-
- Hard-Side Variables
- Academic Intelligence
- Practical Intelligence
14Soft-Side Instruments Student Self-Report
- Type of tasks preferred (too hard, hard, not too
hard, easy) - Self-awareness
- Self-confidence
- Commitment to learning and achievement
- Self-efficacy
- Locus of Control
- Resilience (semi-structured interview)
15Student Self-Report Example Item
- You think that if you put enough hard work into
it, you will do well in any academic
subject._____ - Strongly Agree_1
- Agree_2
- Mostly Agree_3
- Neither Agree nor Disagree_4
- Mostly Disagree_5
- Disagree_6
- Strongly Disagree_7
16Hard-Side Instruments
- Tacit Knowledge Questionnaire (known as
School-Life Questionnaire) - Constructed on the basis of
- Interviews with alumni
- Interviews with current students
- Conversations with teachers
17School-Life Questionnaire
- 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 - Not a very good
Average A very
good - choice
choice - In day schools you rarely see your teachers
outside of class. Some of them might be engaged
in sports or other extra-curricular activities,
but mostly you only see them in school-related
circumstances. At boarding school the situation
is quite different, because many teachers live on
campus and you get to see them outside the
classroom a lot.
18Cont.
- Given this situation, rate the quality of the
following behavior choices - ____ (a) Always greet teachers and smile, but
avoid seeing them outside of class. - ____ (b) Take advantage of this situation to talk
to teachers about your school-related problems. - ____ (c) Wait and see if teachers approach you,
and if so, what kinds of things they talk to you
about. - ____ (d) Talk to your teachers but avoid
discussing your problems as this might give them
a negative impression of you. - ____ (e) Try to be sensitive and make a
distinction between situations when teachers are
available and unavailable to you. - ____ (f) Always try to be noticedthe more
teachers talk to you, the better your grades will
be. - ____ (g) Always ask whether it is a good time or
not to discuss your problems with teachers.
19- 1 2
3 4
5 6 7 - Not a very good Average A very
good - choice choice
- You are taking a math class that gives you a
lot of trouble. On the first two tests you did
poorly, and for tomorrow you have a homework
problem that you are not quite sure how to solve.
-
20Cont.
- Given this situation, rate the quality of the
following behavior choices - ____ (a) Try to find a solution, or at least some
explanation of how to arrive at a solution, in
the book . - ____ (b) Give it a try if you cant solve the
problem youll just have to tell the teacher you
didnt understand it. - ____ (c) Ask some of your classmates if theyve
found the solution, telling them you want to
compare it with yours (although you dont
actually have one). - ____ (d) Try hard, and if it doesnt work, give
up on it you can always pretend you had
forgotten you had homework. - ____ (e) Suggest to some of your classmates that
you study together. - ____ (f) Go to see the one student in the class
who you know is really smart and ask him for
help. - ____ (g) Try hard, take a lot of notes, then come
to the teacher before class and tell her/him that
you tried and failed.
21- 1 2 3
4
5 6 7 - Not a very good Average A very
good - choice choice
- Students who are used to living at home and
going to school nearby need to adjust to being
away from home when they go to boarding school.
All students miss home at times. A few students
become very homesick. Knowing that it is
sometimes difficult to be away from family and
friends, imagine that you are in the situation of
having just started boarding school.
22Cont.
- Given this situation, rate the quality of the
following behavior choices - ____ (a) Write, e-mail, and call your friends and
family as often as possible. - ____ (b) Ask your friends and family to come to
visit you so that you can show them your new
surroundings. - ____ (c) Go home to visit your friends and family
whenever possible. - ____ (d) Try to make new friends and not think
too much about home. - ____ (e) Force yourself not to call or write your
friends and family too often. - ____ (f) Tell your parents how difficult a time
you are having and discuss the possibility of
going back to your hometown school.
23Predicting GPA Hierarchical/Stepwise Regression
24What matters?
- Very high motivation to achieve (internal locus
of control) - Sensible self-confidence
- Expert knowledge of the school environment
25Example C Rainbow
- Analytical
- multiple choice items
- Practical
- multiple choice items
- performance tasks (tacit knowledge inventories)
- Creative
- multiple choice items
- performance tasks
26Vignette Sample ItemCollege Life Tacit-Knowledge
Inventory
- 1 2 3
4 5 6
7 - Not at all
Neither Extremely - Characteristic
Characteristic nor Characteristic - Uncharacteristic
- You are enrolled in a large introductory lecture
course. Requirements consist of three term-time
exams and a final. Please indicate how
characteristic it is of your behavior to spend
time doing the following, if your goal is getting
an A in the course. - ___Attending class regularly.
- ___Attending optional weekly review sessions, if
there are any, with the T.A. - ___Reading assigned text chapters thoroughly.
- ___Taking comprehensive class notes.
- ___Speaking with the Professor after class and
during office hours. - ___Talking to students who took the course last
year. - ___Studying regularly instead of cramming in the
night before exams. - ___Doing the extra credit or optional reading
assignments. - ___Skimming the required reading in the morning
before class.
27Vignette Sample ItemGeneral Workplace
Tacit-Knowledge Inventory
- 1 2 3
4 5 6
7 - Extremely Very Somewhat Neither Bad
Somewhat Very Extremely - Bad Bad Bad
Nor Good Good Good
Good - Youve been assigned to work on a project for a
day with a fellow employee whom you really
dislike. He is rude, lazy, and rarely does a
proper job. What would be the best thing for you
to do? - ___Tell the worker that you think he is
worthless. - ___Warn the worker that, if he is not on his
toes today, you will complain to the supervisor. - ___Avoid all conversation and eye contact with
the other worker. - ___Be polite to the other worker and try to
maintain as business-like a manner as possible so
that hopefully he will follow your example for
the day. - ___Tell your supervisor that you refuse to work
with this man. - ___The project is going to be impossible to
accomplish with this worker, so you may as well
not even try--you can always blame your bad work
partner. - ___See if you can convince one of your friends to
take your place and work with this employee. - ___Demand a raise from your supervisor you
should not have to tolerate these conditions.
28Everyday Situational Judgment - Movies
- Examinees see seven digitized movies depicting
various real-life situations that college
students confront or may confront. - Show a sample clip Which math?
29Cont.
- What is the most effective solution to this
situation in terms of James achieving academic
success? - __1) Take the easy class and sit in on the
difficult one. - __2) Take the easy one.
- __3) Take the more challenging class.
- __4) Take the easy class and ask his friend the
physics major to make the material more
interesting for him. - __5) Take the challenging class and have his
friend the physics major help him with his
homework.
30- Creative Performance tasks
- Written stories (2)
- Oral stories (2)
- Cartoon captions (3)
-
31Written Stories
- SHORT STORY TASK TITLES
- A Fifth Chance
- 2983
- Beyond the Edge
- The Octopuss Sneakers
- Its Moving Backwards
- Not Enough Time
32Oral Stories
33Cartoon Titles
________________________________________________
_______________________
34Summary
- SAT alone explains about 9.8 of GPA variance
- New measures alone explain about 16.3 of GPA
variance - And, new measures explain about 8.6 of GPA
variance beyond SAT alone, whereas SAT explains
about 0.7 of GPA beyond new measures
35Suggested Solution
- Helping all students by
- Identifying potential at admissions
- Teaching to students strengths weaknesses
- Monitoring student progress and providing on-time
support as needed
362. Teaching to ALL students
37Teaching to MEMORY skills
- RECALL who did certain things (e.g., proposed a
theory), - RETELL what things they did (e.g., the nature of
the theory), - RECITE how certain things are done (e.g.,
computing a standard deviation), - LIST when certain things are done (e.g., when
squaring of terms is done in a formula), etc.
38Teaching to ANALYTICAL skills
- ANALYZE (a literary plot, a theory in the
sciences, a mathematical problem) - COMPARE AND CONTRAST (two characters in a novel,
two systems of government, the styles of two
artists) - EVALUATE (a poem, a cultural custom, a strategy
in tennis) - EXPLAIN (the use of grammar in a sentence, your
interpretation of an historical event, the
solution to a scientific problem)
39A High School Psychology Example
- You have read about two alternative theories of
sleep the restorative theory of sleep and an
evolutionary theory of sleep, sometimes referred
to as the preservation and protection theory. - Briefly describe and compare and contrast these
two theories. State what you see as the
advantages and disadvantages of the evolutionary
theory compared to the restorative theory.
40Exercise
- Work in groups of 2 or 3 and come up with an
example of an analytical activity that you do
with your students. - Model the activity for the rest of the group, as
if they were the students.
41Teaching to PRACTICAL skills
- USE (a lesson that a literary character learned
in your life, a mathematical lesson in the
supermarket, a lesson learned on the playing
field in everyday life) - APPLY (what you learned in a foreign-language
class to an interaction with a foreigner, a
lesson from history to the present, a scientific
principle to everyday life)
42A High School Math Example
- Think of something you do every day, and have
been doing every day for the most part of your
life. It can be any action, like brushing your
teeth, smiling to greet friends, or listening to
CDs. Calculate how many times a day you perform
this action, then estimate how many times you do
it in a month, then in a year, and finally how
many times you are likely to have done it in your
life. Express these results using the scientific
notations you have learned in this section.
43Exercise
- Work in groups of 2 or 3 and come up with an
example of a practical activity that you do with
your students. - Model the activity for the rest of the group, as
if they were the students.
44Teaching to CREATIVE skills
- CREATE (a poem, a sculpture, a new game)
- DESIGN (a new system of government for the
classroom, a scientific investigation, a
comfortable home) - IMAGINE (what life would be like in another
country, what it would be like to be president of
a country, how bees communicate to each other) - SUPPOSE (worldwide temperatures increased 5
degrees on average, people were paid to inform
on neighbors who do not support the political
party in power, the ozone layer were completely
depleted)
45A High School Physics Example
- Unit on vectors using airplane data
- Imagine that the earth rotated in the opposite
direction, or at a different rate. How would this
affect your planes arrival time?
46Exercise
- Work in groups of 2 or 3 and come up with an
example of a creative activity that you do with
your students. - Model the activity for the rest of the group, as
if they were the students.
47Assess what you teach
- Align teaching and assessment
- Examples from AP studies showing decreased
differences between ethnic groups with practical
and creative assessment items vs. analytical and
memory items
48Results of the AP studies
49Suggested Solution
- Helping all students, including first-generation,
low-income students, succeed, by - Identifying potential at admissions
- Teaching to students strengths weaknesses
- Monitoring student progress and providing
on-time support as needed
50Assessing and tracking students
- Admissions
- Academic programming Placement / diagnostic
exams, Focus groups, Student Academic Self
Assessment, Other Surveys, Advising, Mentoring,
Tutoring - Graduation
- Alumni Survey on strengths and weaknesses
51(No Transcript)
52Developing a system for tracking students
- Identify what data is collected and by whom
(e.g., admissions office, academic resource
center, advisors) - Centralize data and facilitate data flow (e.g.,
software, outside expertise)
53Providing on-time support
- Use the student information database to provide
appropriate student support - Evaluate impact of support program, develop
additional programs as needed
54Conclusion
- The theory of successful intelligence can provide
one framework for considering and addressing
students strengths and weaknesses at admissions,
in teaching, and in providing on-going evaluation
and support
55Next steps
- What can be done at the Università degli Studi di
Trento? - Examples from other Italian Universities?
56Contact information
- Linda Jarvin
- linda.jarvin_at_tufts.edu
- http//pace.tufts.edu/
- http//celt.tufts.edu/