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Sternberg, Robert J.; Glaveanu, Vlad; Karami, Sareh; Kaufman, James C.; Phillipson, Shane N.; Preiss, David D. – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
A deeper understanding of the processes leading to problem framing and behind finding solutions to problems should help explain variability in the quality of the solutions to those problems. Using Sternberg's WICS model as the conceptual basis of problem solving, this article discusses the relations between creative, analytical, practical, and…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Creative Thinking, Logical Thinking, Cognitive Processes
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
This article explores the advantages of viewing intelligence not as a fixed trait residing within an individual, but rather as a person × task × situation interaction. The emphasis in the article is on the role of persons solving tasks embedded in situations involving learning, intellectual abilities, and competencies. The article opens with a…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Personality Traits, Problem Solving, Learning Processes
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Education Sciences, 2021
This article introduces the concept of adaptive intelligence--the intelligence one needs to adapt to current problems and anticipate future problems of real-world environments--and discusses its implications for education. Adaptive intelligence involves not only promoting one's own ability to survive and thrive, but also that of others in one's…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Adjustment (to Environment), Creative Thinking, Logical Thinking
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Intelligence, 2019
Intelligence typically is defined as consisting of "adaptation to the environment" or in related terms. Yet, it is not clear that "general intelligence" or g, traditionally conceptualized in terms of a general factor in a psychometrically-based hierarchical model of intelligence, provides an optimal way of defining intelligence…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Psychometrics, Adjustment (to Environment), Definitions
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2017
Serious identification of the gifted started with the work of Lewis Terman early in the 20th century. Terman's model, based largely on IQ, may have made sense in the early 20th century, but it no longer makes sense today. The problems that society needs its gifted individuals to solve in the 21st century require much more than IQ--in addition to…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Talent Identification, Intelligence Quotient, Models
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Sternberg, Robert J. – International Journal of Educational Psychology, 2012
This article argues for the importance of teaching for ethical reasoning. Much of our teaching is in vain if it is not applied to life in an ethical manner. The article reviews lapses in ethical reasoning and the great costs they have had for society. It proposes that ethical reasoning can be taught across the curriculum. It presents an eight-step…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Models, Teaching Methods, Context Effect
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Liberal Education, 2010
Ethical reasoning is a way of thinking about issues of right and wrong. Processes of reasoning can be taught, and school is an appropriate place to teach them. The reason is that, although parents and religious schools may teach ethics, they do not always teach ethical reasoning--or at least, they do not always do so with great success. They may…
Descriptors: General Education, Ethics, Values Education, Logical Thinking
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1993
This response to Stanovich (EC 607 092) considers the relationship between rationality and intelligence. It sees rationality as a relatively minor part of intelligence and proposes the concept of practical intelligence (or the lack thereof) as an alternative to Stanovich's concept of dysrationalia. (DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Definitions, Intelligence, Learning Disabilities
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1981
Two nonentrenched tasks are described, one requiring projection into the future of states of objects, the other requiring complex anological reasoning where multiple terms of analogies can be replaced by alternative answer options. Some speculations are made about the implications of these results for educational theory and practice. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Individual Differences
Guyote, Martin J.; Sternberg, Robert J. – 1978
The "transitive-chain" theory of syllogistic reasoning proposes that information about set relations is presented in memory by pairs of informational components and that information about set relations is integrated by applying a small set of rules to transitive chains that are found by rearranging informational components stored in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Deduction, Higher Education
Sternberg, Robert J.; Turner, Margaret E. – 1978
A study was conducted among 64 students in an introductory psychology class at Yale University to clarify the components of syllogistic reasoning used in a syllogistic evaluation task. A modified form of componential analysis was used to decompose the syllogistic evaluation task with abstract content into the subtasks of encoding and encoding plus…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Componential Analysis, Deduction
Sternberg, Robert J. – 1978
A theory of the nature of mental abilities is presented. In this theory, mental abilities are hierarchically organized into four progressively deeper levels--the levels of composite tasks, subtasks, information-processing components, and information-processing metacomponents. Composite tasks can be decomposed into subtasks, subtasks into…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Individual Psychology, Intelligence
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Sternberg, Robert J.; Downing, Cathryn J. – Child Development, 1982
Investigates the hypothesis that strategy development might occur within or beyond the period of formal operations, but that this development might be discernible only beyond the second order of analogical relations. Adolescent strategy development in the solution of third-order analogies resembled in pattern the preadolescent development found in…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Analogy, College Students, Difficulty Level
Sternberg, Robert J.; And Others – 1978
A progress report of work done in formulating a theory of deductive reasoning is given. Models for the three main kinds of syllogisms that have been investigated by students of human reasoning (categorical, conditional, and linear) have been formulated and tested. The theory and data for each of the three kinds of syllogisms is summarized. Some…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adults, Convergent Thinking, Deduction
Sternberg, Robert J. – 1978
The unified theory described in this paper characterizes human reasoning as an information processing system with a hierarchical sequence of components and subtheories that account for performance on successively narrower tasks. Both deductive and inductive theories are subsumed in the unified componential theory, including transitive chain theory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Critical Thinking, Deduction
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