Gardner's multi-level intelligence view and its enlightenment to preschool education.
Howard, a professor of psychology at Harvard University? Gardner spent several years analyzing the human brain and its influence on education. Gardner pointed out that each of us has at least seven different types of intelligence, two of which have been highly valued in traditional education, while the other five have been neglected or neglected for a long time. The first is called language intelligence, which means the ability to read, write and communicate in language. The second is logical or mathematical intelligence, that is, the ability to reason and calculate. The other five intelligences he listed are: (1) musical intelligence. (2) Spatial or visual intelligence. The kind of ability used by architects, sculptors, painters, navigators and pilots. (3) Sports intelligence or physical intelligence. (4) Interpersonal intelligence. The ability to get along with people? It is the kind of ability that salespeople, agitators and negotiators should have. (5) Inner intelligence or introspection. The enlightenment of Gardner's multi-level intelligence view to preschool education is to advocate children's complete learning, that is, to provide children with a complete and multi-faceted learning environment, to stimulate children's all-round development in seven aspects of intelligence as soon as possible, and to realize the enlightenment of human potential and the cultivation of healthy body and mind. ?