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Visual/Spatial - children who learn best visually and
organizing things spatially. They like to see what you are
talking about in order to understand. They enjoy charts,
graphs, maps, tables, illustrations, art, puzzles, costumes -
anything eye catching.
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Verbal/Linguistic - children who demonstrate strength in
the language arts: speaking, writing, reading, listening.
These students have always been successful in traditional
classrooms because their intelligence lends itself to
traditional teaching.
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Mathematical/Logical - children who display an aptitude
for numbers, reasoning and problem solving. This is the other
half of the children who typically do well in traditional
classrooms where teaching is logically sequenced and students
are asked to conform.
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Bodily/Kinesthetic - children who experience learning best
through activity: games, movement, hands-on tasks, building.
These children were often labeled "overly active" in
traditional classrooms where they were told to sit and be
still!
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Musical/Rhythmic - children who learn well through songs,
patterns, rhythms, instruments and musical expression. It is
easy to overlook children with this intelligence in
traditional education.
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Intrapersonal - children who are especially in touch with
their own feelings, values and ideas. They may tend to be more
reserved, but they are actually quite intuitive about what
they learn and how it relates to themselves.
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Interpersonal - children who are noticeably people oriented
and outgoing, and do their learning cooperatively in groups or
with a partner. These children may have typically been
identified as "talkative" or " too concerned about being social"
in a traditional setting.
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Naturalist - children who love the outdoors, animals, field
trips. More than this, though, these students love to pick up on
subtle differences in meanings. The traditional classroom has
not been accommodating to these children.
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Existentialist - children who learn in the context of where
humankind stands in the "big picture" of existence. They ask
"Why are we here?" and "What is our role in the world?" This
intelligence is seen in the discipline of philosophy.
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