J.P. Guilford (1897-1987) was a U.S. psychologist best known for distinguishing between convergent and divergent thinking in his study of human intelligence. He proposed that divergent thinking, the ability to find multiple solutions to a problem, is a quality of creative people. Guilford developed a detailed model of intelligence consisting of operations, contents, and products dimensions. While his model broadened the view of intelligence, it has been criticized for being too complex to guide behavior prediction.
Structure of Intellect by Guilford
Guilford and his associates proposed the theory of Structure of Intellects on their attempt of factor analysis.
Process of operation ;Material or content;Product
Cognition: This involves immediate discovery, rediscovery, awareness, comprehension and understanding.
Memory recording: It is a fundamental operation. It refers to the retention of what is recognised for a short duration.
Memory retention: It means the retention of what is recognised for a long period of time.
Divergent thinking: It refers to the generation of information from the given data where the emphasis is on conventionally accepted best outcomes.
Convergent thinking: It involves thinking in different directions, searching and seeking some different variety and novelty. It is closely related with creativity. It simply means thinking out of the box.
Evaluation: It refers to the reaching of conclusion and decision as the goodness, correctness, adequacy and desirability of information.
Material or Contents:
Visual content: It refers to the concrete material perceived through ideas and thoughts.
Symbolic content: t refers to the composition of letters, digits or other conventional signs and symbols usually organised in general patterns.
Semantic content: t refers to the clear verbal form of meanings or ideas for which no examples are necessary.
Behavioural content: It refers to the social intelligence which enables one to understand human communications.
Products:
Units: This is similar to Gestalt psychology of figure and ground; relatively segregated items.
Classes: It refers to conceptions underlying sets of information or data grouped by virtue of their common properties.
Relations: It refers to the connections between items of information based on variables. These connections are more meaningful and definable.
Systems: It refers to the aggregate of items of information or data with a structure.
Transformations: It refers to the changes like redefination, modification in existing information or its functions.
Implications: It refers to the explorations of information in the form of expectancies, predictions and consequences.
IQ testing is not limited. A focus on verbal and logical skills leads to labelling of truly gifted people as underachievers. Employment opportunities where IQ screening is part of the application process.
Structure of Intellect by Guilford
Guilford and his associates proposed the theory of Structure of Intellects on their attempt of factor analysis.
Process of operation ;Material or content;Product
Cognition: This involves immediate discovery, rediscovery, awareness, comprehension and understanding.
Memory recording: It is a fundamental operation. It refers to the retention of what is recognised for a short duration.
Memory retention: It means the retention of what is recognised for a long period of time.
Divergent thinking: It refers to the generation of information from the given data where the emphasis is on conventionally accepted best outcomes.
Convergent thinking: It involves thinking in different directions, searching and seeking some different variety and novelty. It is closely related with creativity. It simply means thinking out of the box.
Evaluation: It refers to the reaching of conclusion and decision as the goodness, correctness, adequacy and desirability of information.
Material or Contents:
Visual content: It refers to the concrete material perceived through ideas and thoughts.
Symbolic content: t refers to the composition of letters, digits or other conventional signs and symbols usually organised in general patterns.
Semantic content: t refers to the clear verbal form of meanings or ideas for which no examples are necessary.
Behavioural content: It refers to the social intelligence which enables one to understand human communications.
Products:
Units: This is similar to Gestalt psychology of figure and ground; relatively segregated items.
Classes: It refers to conceptions underlying sets of information or data grouped by virtue of their common properties.
Relations: It refers to the connections between items of information based on variables. These connections are more meaningful and definable.
Systems: It refers to the aggregate of items of information or data with a structure.
Transformations: It refers to the changes like redefination, modification in existing information or its functions.
Implications: It refers to the explorations of information in the form of expectancies, predictions and consequences.
IQ testing is not limited. A focus on verbal and logical skills leads to labelling of truly gifted people as underachievers. Employment opportunities where IQ screening is part of the application process.
Test produces similar results when given at two points in time. Two versions of the same test produce similar results. Different parts of the same test produce similar results.
describes the popular tests of intelligence, aptitude and personality and its types. Elaborates the types of intelligence, aptitude and personality and how to clinically assess them
Test produces similar results when given at two points in time. Two versions of the same test produce similar results. Different parts of the same test produce similar results.
describes the popular tests of intelligence, aptitude and personality and its types. Elaborates the types of intelligence, aptitude and personality and how to clinically assess them
According to Guilford's Structure of Intellect (SI) theory (1955), an individual's performance on intelligence tests can be traced back to the underlying mental abilities or factors of intelligence.
three dimensions of intelligence postulated by Joy Paul Guilford to underlie individual differences in scores on intelligence tests, namely, contents, operations, and products. Each mental ability represents a combination of these three facets. Guilford (1959) identified five key elements of creativity: fluency, flexibility, originality, awareness, and drive. Understanding these elements removes some of the mystery surrounding creativity and paves the way for encouraging its growth.
Meaning and Concept of Intelligence, nature and functions of Intelligence, Guilford structure of intellect Model, Howard Gardner theory of Multiple Intelligence.
Thinking, also known as 'cognition', refers to the ability to process information, hold attention, store and retrieve memories and select appropriate responses and actions. The ability to understand other people, and express oneself to others can also be categorised under thinking.Thought (also called thinking) is the mental process in which beings form psychological associations and models of the world. Thinking is manipulating information, as when we form concepts, engage in problem solving, reason and make decisions. Thought, the act of thinking, produces more thoughts.
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2. J.P. Guilford
(1897–1987)
was a United States psychologist, best
remembered for his psychometric study of
human intelligence, including the distinction
between convergent and divergent production.
5. Best known for….
Proposed the concept of divergent thinking, ability to
find several solutions to one problem, as a quality of
creative people
–Fluency (great number of ideas in a short period of
time)
–Flexibility (simultaneously propose a variety of
approaches to a specific problem)
–Originality (produce new, original ideas);
–Elaboration (systematize and organize the details of
an idea in a head and carry it out)
6. Guilford has suggested that there are three (3) basic
categories, or faces of intellect:
operations - the process of thinking
contents - what we think about
products - the end results of our thinking
7. J.P. Guilford developed the idea of specific intelligence
factors into a very detailed model beginning in the
1950s. Guilford(1967) conceives of intelligence as being
a combination of three dimensions, shown in the below
model:
8. Operations dimension
• Cognition
is the ability to recognize various forms of
information and to understand information.
Example: A child who can separate a mixed pile
of squares and triangles into separate piles of
squares and triangles is exercising a degree of cognition.
• Memory is the ability to store information in the mind and
to call out stored information in response to certain
stimuli.
Example: A student who immediately answer 1 when
asked to give the sine of 90° is using his or her memory.
9. • Divergent is the ability to view given information in a
new way so that unique and unexpected conclusions
are the consequence.
Example: A mathematician who discovers and proves a
new and important mathematical theorem is exhibiting
considerable ability in divergent production.
• Convergent is the ability to take a specified set of
information and draw a universally accepted
conclusion or response based upon the given
information.
Example: In algebra lesson, student who finds the
correct solution to a set of three linear equations have
used his or her convergent production ability.
10. • Evaluation is the ability to process information in order
to make judgments, draw conclusion and arrive at
decisions.
Example: If we want to solve mathematics problem we
think hard to solve it by simple method
Content dimension
• Visual is information in visual form such as are shape
or color.
example: triangle, cubes, parabola, etc.
• Auditory involves information in auditory form, such as
spoken words or music
11. • Symbolic are symbol or codes
representing concrete object or
abstract concepts.
Example: + is the mathematical
symbol for the
Operation of addition.
• Semantic of learning are those words and ideas which
evoke a mental image when they are presented as
stimuli.
Example: sun, car, white, moon, etc. are word which
evoke image in people’s minds when they hear or read
them.
12. • Behavioral contents of learning are the manifestation
of stimuli and responses in people can be also obtained
through facial expression or voice.
Product Dimension
• Unit is a single symbol, figure, word, object, or idea.
Example: each real number.
• Classes is sets of items grouped by virtue of their
common properties
Example: set of real numbers.
• Relations are connections between items of
information
Example: equality and inequality are relation in the set
of real numbers.
13. • Systems is a composition of units, classes, and
relationship into a larger and more meaningful
structure.
Example: the set of real numbers together with the
operations of addition, subs traction, multiplication,
and division and the algebraic properties of these
operations.
• Transformation is the process of modifying,
reinterpreting, and restructuring existing
information into new information. The
transformation ability is usually thought to be
characteristic of creative people.
Example: functions defined on the real number
system.
14. • Implication is a prediction or a conjecture about
the consequences of interactions among units,
classes, relations, systems, and transformations.
Example: each theorem about function on the real
numbers.
Guilford's model of intelligence has several
advantages as well as one major disadvantage.
The model broadens our view of the nature of
intelligence by adding such factors as those related
to social judgment (the evaluation of others'
behavior) and
creativity (divergent thinking).
Certainly, human mental abilities must be
complex, but Guilford's model may be too complex
to serve as a guide for predicting behavior in real
15. Guilford’s model clearly shows that
there are many different ways in which
one can examine an individual’s
understanding of material in collegiate
courses.
Educators using traditional
approaches to assess knowledge fail
to tap many other aspects of learning
that are equally important. Guilford’s
model helps educators reassess areas
of learning that are routinely being
examined and recognize important
areas that are being unintentionally
ignored.
16. Criticism
Guilford's Structure of Intellect model of human
abilities has few supporters today.
Carroll (1993) summarized the view of later
researchers:
"Guilford's SOI model must, therefore, be marked
down as a somewhat eccentric aberration in the
history of intelligence models; that so much attention
has been paid to it is disturbing, to the extent that
textbooks and other treatments of it have given the
impression that the model is valid and widely
accepted, when clearly it is not."
17. “To live is to have problems and to solve
problems is to grow intellectually.”
Joy Paul Guilford