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44+ obres 6,817 Membres 48 Ressenyes 6 preferits

Sobre l'autor

Howard Gardner is Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education and Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Harvard University; Adjunct Professor of Neurology at the Boston University School of Medicine; and Codirector of Harvard Project Zero. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (Bowker Author Biography)

Obres de Howard Gardner

Five Minds for the Future (2007) 557 exemplars
Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet (2001) — Autor — 204 exemplars
Shattered Mind (1975) 63 exemplars
To Open Minds (1989) 62 exemplars
Artful Scribbles (1980) 62 exemplars
Art, Mind & Education: Research from Project Zero (1969) — Editor — 6 exemplars
Una mente sintetica (2022) 1 exemplars
Prkning (2006) 1 exemplars
Echoes in My Mind (1981) 1 exemplars

Obres associades

MindScience: An East-West Dialogue (1991) — Col·laborador — 114 exemplars
Cerebrum 2010: Emerging Ideas in Brain Science (2010) — Col·laborador — 16 exemplars
Creativity and Development (2003) — Col·laborador — 14 exemplars
Teaching for Intelligence (1999) — Col·laborador — 11 exemplars
Happy Together: New York & The Other World (2007) — Col·laborador — 4 exemplars

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I didn't really find the conclusion convincing, and thought the inclusion of Martha Graham and Ghandi was less than helpful. Ghandi doesn't seem to fit into the narrative as well as the first 3 cases, and Graham's section was awkward since her work could not really be well described in print. Her chapter seemed underdeveloped as a result. I also had issues with the gender aspect of these cases, though Gardner does try to address gender. I wished that this set of cases had included someone along the lines of Andre Norton or Agatha Christie, women whose work could have been more easily discussed in print. Still, this was an interesting read, and offers some insight on creativity, even if I would have designed the project a little differently.… (més)
 
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JBarringer | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Dec 15, 2023 |
> Babelio : https://www.babelio.com/livres/Gardner-Les-intelligences-multiples--La-theorie-q...

> LES INTELLIGENCES MULTIPLES, de Howard Gardner - éd. Nathan (coll. Pédagogie). — Dans un tout autre genre, Les intelligences multiples de Howard Gardner, ÉD. Retz, affiche clairement son programme en sous-titre : Pour changer l'école : la prise en compte des différentes formes d'intelligence. Il s'agit d'un livre américain, dont les prémisses peuvent facilement agacer le lecteur européen (cette propension incorrigible à tester les gamins pour leur attribuer des indices de compétence…). Mais l'essentiel de la démarche vaut la peine qu'on s'y arrête : l'intelligence n'est pas monolithique, en effet, et la déclinaison présentée par le prof. de neurologie Gardner — intelligences musicale, kinesthésique, logico-mathématique, langagière, spatiale, interpersonnelle et intrapersonnelle — à partir de grands exemples célèbres, fait réfléchir. C'est vrai que nos systèmes d'éducation risquent d'occulter des pans entiers des capacités de nos enfants et que toute méthode susceptible de nous sortir de cet aveuglement mérite une vraie considération. (P.V.E.)
Nouvelles Clés, (10), Été 1996, (p. 71)
… (més)
 
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Joop-le-philosophe | Hi ha 5 ressenyes més | Mar 13, 2023 |
I first heard about Gardner's book while reading another book. Gardner was often quoted in the book Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories Transforms Our Lives (0046442072434)by Louise Desalvo. Because of her references I found myself excited about ordering Creating Minds as the next read.

Gardner's book is an important book as he looks at the lives of seven great creators within the Modern Period and their similarities and differences. It is however a very different approach from Desalvo's book. At first I was disappointed because I expected writing more in the vein of Desalvo's. Gardner's approach was analytical rather than writing to encourage personal exploration. Once getting past that (and understanding Gardner's focus on the theory of Multiple Intelligences) I could appreciate it from an educator's point of view.

His summaries of the creators Freud, Einstein, Picasso, Stravinsky, Eliot, Graham, and Gandhi was phenomenal. While I understand his premise, I'm not sure I agree with his conclusions. Perhaps this was because my original hope was to use the book to inspire my own creative mind. As a reader who is 50 years of age, his conclusions came across rather discouraging since he focuses on successful creators making contributions in their twenties.
… (més)
 
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JRobinW | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Jan 20, 2023 |
(213) Gardner and Davis, both highly-respected researchers, begin a compelling argument that today's students are looking for an "app"-geared approach to life: a search for the easiest way to get things done. "Appification" can help students harness creative and intellectual powers, but it can also push students into a mindset that only the path with the least friction and highest efficiency matters, an "end justifies the mean" approach that means students may be looking more for the grade and less for the experience, for example. Building on their own experiences as well as those of Davis's sister (a tri-generational approach), their core argument is powerful. The book alludes to their extensive research, but, perhaps in an effort to create a book that is more "readable" than academic, does not delve deeply into it. The authors know so much about this topic that I am looking forward to further insights as they drill down deeper in future works.

First came the telephone, then the television, then the Internet, and now the app. Apps are designed to make a task simpler, a search faster, or a day timelier. But what happens when apps pervade a society? At what level to automated programs change the people using them? Young people today between the ages of 15 and 25 have a hard time recalling a world without electronic devices, without smartphones, or without the Internet. Howard Gardner and Katie Davis, in The App Generation, tackle the subject and along the way, learn about the fundamental social and moral landscape of a generation raised in the digital age.

Gardner and Davis focus their attention on what they call the three I’s: identity, intimacy, and imagination. In the digital world, identity is fully customizable and can be carefully constructed by what the user posts in online forums and image galleries. Intimacy is gauged by how users interact or nurture their social connections online. Lastly, imagination is just that, but it is also measured by how different relationships and creations are viewed online. Their research integrates psychological, sociological, and philosophical studies to get at just how apps are interacting with individuals and even society as a whole. Many different angles are taken in their investigation, including focus groups and online messages.

For the most past, the authors get at what they are looking for: a better picture of how the current generation views the world through apps and what that means for the future of society. There a few times when a one-off comment is seen as an indicator for a whole group, but the discussion of the “app attitude” is fun and pertinent. While I was drawn more to the comments from individual Internet content creators, the dual fields of computer science and psychology definitely keep this book in the academics’ arena. It reads fairly quickly and has a good amount of statistics about today’s app users. An interesting but not outstanding book.
… (més)
 
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JosieRobins | Hi ha 4 ressenyes més | Dec 4, 2020 |

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Obres
44
També de
7
Membres
6,817
Popularitat
#3,586
Valoració
3.8
Ressenyes
48
ISBN
261
Llengües
14
Preferit
6

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