8 Ways to Be Smarter
Intelligence isn't simply a fixed
quantity, a learning expert explained in a talk recently. How smart we are is
powerfully affected by our situation, and that's something we can control.
Somewhere
along the way in life you’ve probably taken an IQ test and were give some
number as an answer. That figure -- seemingly definitive and said to portray
some inborn capacity -- may have given you the impression that your level of
intelligence, no matter how high or low it might be, is a fixed quantity. You
can learn, sure, but basically you’re only as smart as you were born to be,
right?
But
that’s not what the latest science actually says, learning expert and author Annie Murphy Paul recently explained in a speech, which she
helpfully transcribed to her blog. Intelligence, it turns out, is way more
complicated than that.
In
the lengthy but fascinating talk, Murphy Paul lays out eight ways intelligence
is affected by context in which we put it to use and suggests ways that we can
rethink intelligence to get the best out of the brain we were born with. The
complete speech is well worth a read if you’re interested in the subject, but to
get your warmed up, here are the basic ideas she explores in greater detail in the
complete post:
Situations
can make us smarter.
They can be the physical conditions that learners experience by way of how much
stress they’re under and how much sleep and exercise they get, and the mental
conditions learners create for themselves by the levels of expertise and
attention and motivation they’re able to achieve. Situational intelligence, in
other words, is the only kind of intelligence there is.
Beliefs
can make us smarter.
Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck distinguishes two types of mindsets: the
fixed mindset, or the belief that ability is fixed and unchanging, and the
growth mindset, or the belief that abilities can be developed through learning
and practice. These beliefs matter because they influence how think about our
own abilities, how we perceive the world around us, and how we act when faced
with a challenge or with adversity.
Expertise
can make us smarter. Experts
don’t just know more, they know differently, in ways that allow them to
think and act especially intelligently within their domain of expertise...
Expertise takes a long time to develop, of course, but it’s never too early--or
too late--go deep in a subject area that interests us.
Attention
can make us smarter.
There are information-processing bottlenecks in the brain--everybody’s
brain--that prevent us from paying attention to two things at the same time. The
state of focused attention is a very important internal situation that we must
cultivate in order to fully express our intelligence.
Emotions
can make us smarter.
When we’re in a positive mood, for example, we tend to think more expansively
and creatively. When we feel anxious--for instance, when we’re about to take a
dreaded math test--that anxiety uses up some of the working memory capacity we
need to solve problems, leaving us, literally, with less intelligence.
Technology
can make us smarter.
The problem is that our devices so often make us dumber instead of smarter...
In order for tech to make ourselves smarter and not dumber, we need understand
when to take full advantage of our devices, and when to put them away.
Our
bodies can make us smarter. All the things that make the heart work better--good
nutrition, adequate sleep, regular exercise, moderate stress--make the brain
work better too.
Relationships
can make us smarter. If
you have a spouse or significant other: it’s likely that one of you is “in
charge” of remembering when the car needs to go in for inspection, while the
other is “in charge” of remembering relatives’ birthdays. This is called
transactive memory, and it’s just one of the ways that relationships with
others can make us smarter than we would be on our own...
a feeling of belonging is critical to the full expression of our ability.
Jessica
Stillman
http://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/8-ways-to-be-smarter.html?cid=em01020week25e&nav=su
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