MBTI Introduction

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Introduction

Definition of Personality

Enduring characteristics of an individual that are fairly consistent and

predictable is considered to be the personality of that particular individual, which is

distinguishable from others at the given situation or point of time. 

Carl Jung developed a theory of personality that said, what appeared to be

random patterns of human functioning in situations was in actuality the different

means that people prefered to use their mental capacities- of perception and judging

(organising information). 

This preference for expression of the two mental capacities was expressed in

either an introverted form or an extraverted form. Each individual’s cognitive

functioning seems to be energised more from an external world (extraversion) or the

internal world (introversion).

Self Report Measure

Self Report Measures refer to psychological measures of assessment that rely

on the individual to report their own levels of behaviour, attitude, experiences among

others. These allow for the reliable self-reports from the individual for their

experiences. However, they do not provide against personal biases of social

desirability and acquiescence.

Trait vs Type Theories of Personality

Trait Theories. The have been devised multiple ways to categorise theories of
personality like the biological, humanistic, behavioural and psychodynamic theories

of personality. One of the most used theories are trait theories and type theories. Trait

theorists like Gordon Allport and Raymond Cattell believed that personality could be

understood in terms of specific traits that each individual possessed. Allport divided

traits into cardinal,where the traits are integral to the individual, central traits which

are the prominent traits expressed in most situations and secondary traits, which traits

are usually understood in terms of preference of the individual in a particular

situation. Cattel on the other hand, categorised traits into surface level traits, which

were manifestations of the source traits and source traits,

which are the underlying structure of personality.

Type Theories. These theories consider personality to be a type or a category

that contains common characteristic features that are usually dependent on

temperament or body type as a determiner of personality. Some of the most common

type theories are Hippocrates type theory based on the four humours, Carl Jung’s

theory of personality as types of introversion and extraversion and William Sheldon’s

types of endomorphs, ectomorphs and mesomorphs. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

was developed based on Carl Jung’s theory of personality. According to Jung,

personality could be categorised into eight types that were dependent on opposing

attitudes based on which the individual had a predisposition to behave (Cattell, 1965).

He considered feeling, thinking, sensation, and intuition to be the four major functions

of personality.
Development and description of the test

MBTI was developed in the year 1942, based on Carl Jung’s theory. The Form

M of the inventory is the most used and contains 93 items. The test requires almost

15-25 minutes on average to complete. Isabel Briggs Myers and her mother

Katherine, developed the test as an attempt to work towards developing a ‘sorter

instrument’. This instrument was expected to help people easily identify their

personality type preference. In order to achieve this, they created an individual

question (indicator) and collected data to test for validity. The data collection was first

initiated with 20 close friends and relatives. After the data verified their results, larger

samples were used. In 1944, the Form C of the test was established for utilising it as a

tool to recruit employees, which later included other kinds of applications such as

helping the medical field, where professionals could be more content in this

profession.

(Boyle, 1995).

MBTI attempts to identify preferences that are driven through our interests,

values, needs, and motivation. The preferences are denoted by letters, which are E

(extraversion), I (Introversion), S (sensing), N (intuition), T (thinking), F (feelings), J

(judgement), and P (Perception). 

These 8 personality types have a combination of 16 personality types in total

that an individual can identify with. Murphy and Charles Meisgeier developed a

version of the test exclusively for the age group of 7-13. The questionnaire contains a

series of items that require the individual to make a choice between opposites to

determine habitual choices.

Each item has one answer that will be scored in favour of one of the 8

preferences according to the choice made by the subject. 


Psychometric properties

Reliability tests the consistency of whether the test measures what it aims to.

The reliability of MBTI is better than the other personality tests. On a test of this test,

three out four preferences have been the same from 75% to 90% (Boyle, 1995). The

type change in the result has been indicated within the dichotomy pair and in the one

where the clarity preference was indicated low (Scott, 1999).

Validity is the degree to which a test measures what it is supposed to measure

and how well reality is. The validity of the MBTI test has been studied and proven

over three features, on the basis of the four preference scales, the validity of the

combinations and the validity of the pair of dichotomies (Atay, 2012).

Applications of the Test

MBTI has many applications in various fields and mostly in organisational

settings. It is used test the quality system, teambuilding, leadership while recruiting

employees as well as for performance appraisal. The results of the test can be used to

develop effective coaching and training models for new employees and different

stress intervention models for different personality types. This is helpful as a

complimentary tool for organisations during interviews. Knowing group members’

preferences, leadership etc. helps the leader to know where to place them and what

roles will suit them best. This kind of appraisal improves overall work performance as

well as motivation of the group. It helps people identify the skills that they can easily

pick up on by themselves with a little self-reflection. This has therefore become

particularly useful in educational settings.


teachers and the students themselves a better idea about what works better for

them. Teachers can put students in effective groups depending on this. This also helps

the trainer to involve and engage every member according their type.
References

Atay, S. (2012). The standardization of myers-briggs type indicator into turkisk: An

application on students. Journal of Instructional Psychology, 39(2).

Boyle, G. J. (1995). Myers‐Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI): some psychometric

limitations. Australian Psychologist, 30(1), 71-74.

Cattell, R. B. (1965). The scientific analysis of personality. Baltimore: Penguin

Books.

Scott, G. D. (1999). Psychometric properties of the myers-briggs type indicator

Masterscoursework thesis, department of psychology, The University of

Melbourne.

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