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Sternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 2007
In the United States as well as in much of the developed world, many of us tend to take for granted that children who do well on teacher-made and standardized tests are intelligent. But different cultures have different views of intelligence, so which children are considered intelligent may vary from one culture to another. Moreover, the acts that…
Descriptors: Multiple Intelligences, Standardized Tests, Cultural Context, Intelligence
Sternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 2003
This article suggests that conventional methods of teaching may, at best, create pseudo-experts--students whose expertise, to the extent they have it, does not mirror the expertise needed for real-world thinking inside or outside of the academic disciplines schools normally teach. It is suggested that teaching for "successful intelligence" may…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Multiple Regression Analysis, Process Education, Instructional Innovation
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1998
Links the literatures on human abilities and expertise, suggesting that human abilities are a form of developing expertise. Discusses the role of tests in a scheme that regards abilities as developing expertise and presents a model that implies a shift toward practice grounded in the development of knowledge-based expertise in all children.…
Descriptors: Ability, Children, Educational Assessment, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1996
Ten myths and countermyths about intelligence are explored. It is argued that the desire for simplicity and publicity has led psychologists and others writing about intelligence to take positions that cannot be justified by current theory or recent data. However defined, intelligence is but one aspect of being human. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Environmental Influences, Ethnicity, Genetics
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1984
Argues that IQ tests work only for some people some of the time. Offers a theory that emphasizes the roles in intelligence of information-processing, the environmental context, and coping with novelty and automatization of task performance, as a possibility for improving levels of prediction. (CMG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Epistemology, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1983
Among the requirements of an intellectual skills training program are: (1) a culturally relevant theoretical basis; (2) training in information processing skills; (3) program responsiveness to students' needs and sensitivity to individual differences; (4) establishment of linkages between the training program and the real world; and (5) empirical…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Cultural Influences, Education Work Relationship, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1980
Outlines a componential theory of intelligence and describes how this theory might complement different factorial theories of intelligence. Discusses the respective uses of components and factors in educational theory and practice. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Componential Analysis, Educational Practices, Educational Theories, Factor Analysis
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J.; Horvath, Joseph A. – Educational Researcher, 1995
Argues for a reconceptualization of teaching expertise based on psychological similarities of expert teachers to one another. The authors offer a prototype-based categorization model, drawn from psychological research, on which the family resemblance among expert teachers may be founded. The authors discuss several implications of the prototype…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Knowledge Base for Teaching, Knowledge Level

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