Triarchic
Triarchic
Intelligence Intelligence
Overview of Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of
Intelligence
• Analytical (componential)
• Creative (experiential)
• Practical (contextual)
Sternberg feels that IDs in intelligence are related to IDs in the use of these
cognitive processes. He feels that people with better reasoning ability
generally spend more time understanding the problem but reach their
solution faster than those who are less skilled at the task.
Creative Intelligence: this involves insights, synthesis and the ability to react
to novel situations and stimuli. This he considers the Experiential aspect of
intelligence and reflects how an individual connects the internal world to
external reality.
Sternberg considers the Creative facet to consist of the ability which allows
people to think creatively and that which allows people to adjust creatively
and effectively to new situations.
Sternberg believes that more intelligent individuals will also move from
consciously learning in a novel situation to automating the new learning so
that they can attend to other tasks.
Basic assumption: That there are two broad classes of abilities associated
with intelligence: novelty skills and automatization skills. A task measures
intelligence if it requires the ability to deal with novel demands or the ability
to automatize information processing (two ends of a continuum).
Practical Intelligence: this involves the ability to grasp, understand and deal
with everyday tasks. This is the Contextual aspect of intelligence and
reflects how the individual relates to the external world about him or her.
Sternberg states that Intelligence is: "Purposive adaptation to, shaping of,
and selection of real-world environments relevant to one's life" (Sternberg,
1984, p.271)