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Dr. Howard Gardner
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala -- Dr. Howard Gardner of Harvard University,
one of the world’s foremost education scholars on human
intelligence, will present “From Multiple Intelligences to
Good Work” for the 2002 James P. Curtis Distinguished Lecture
Thursday, March 21, at 7 p.m. in Sellers Auditorium at the
Bryant Conference Center on The University of Alabama campus.
Gardner, the John H. and Elisabeth A. Hobbs Professor of
Cognition and Education at Harvard, is best known for his theory
of multiple intelligences which critiques the notion that there
is only a single human intelligence. This theory was detailed in
his 1983 book, “Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple
Intelligences.”
For the past 15 years, Gardner has been conducting research
through Harvard’s “Project Zero,” to design
performance-based assessments, education for understanding, and
the use of multiple intelligences to achieve more personalized
curriculum, instruction, and assessment. For more than 34 years
Project Zero has investigated the development of learning
processes in children, adults and organizations.
Gardner has published 19 books and hundreds of articles about
arts in education, assessment, early childhood and child
development, intelligence, neuroscience, psychology, and reform
issues. His recent books include “The Disciplined Mind: Beyond
Facts and Standardized Tests, the K-12 Education that Every
Child Deserves,” “Intelligence Reframed: Multiple
Intelligences for the 21st Century” and “Good Work: When
Excellence and Ethics Meet.”
Gardner also serves as an adjunct professor of psychology at
Harvard and adjunct research professor of neurology at Boston
University’s School of Medicine.
This presentation is sponsored by the UA College
of Education in conjunction with its alumni association, the
Capstone College of Education Society. Admission is free and the
general public is invited to attend. Any participant currently
employed as a teacher will receive one hour of professional
development.
Also on Thursday, Gardner will conduct two seminars for UA
College of Education graduate students and faculty. The 10 a.m.
seminar will focus on multiple intelligences; while the 3 p.m.
seminar will focus on disciplinary and interdisciplinary
understanding.
For more information, contact at Alexia M. Kartis, Capstone
College of Education Society Director, at 205/348-6881.
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