What does Sternberg mean by 'successful intelligence'?
Sternberg defines successful intelligence as the ability to determine what you want to do with your life and to succeed at it within environmental constraints, encompassing creative, analytical, and practical skills rather than only IQ-measured analytical ability.
How should teachers adapt instruction according to Sternberg?
Teachers should vary instructional methods and tasks—incorporating memorization, analysis, creative tasks, and practical applications—so that students with different strength profiles are reached at different times.
Why must assessments align with varied teaching methods?
If tests emphasize only one skill (e.g., memory), students may learn narrowly to pass those tests; aligning assessments with diverse instructional approaches ensures evaluation of analytical, creative, and practical abilities.
How do cultural conceptions of intelligence affect student performance?
Different cultural or ethnic groups and their parents may value different skills (cognitive vs. social); when parents' views match teachers', students tend to do better in school, while mismatches can hinder performance.
What change does Sternberg propose for college admissions?
He suggests broadening admissions criteria to include measures of creative, practical, and wisdom-based abilities, which can better predict real-world success and help reduce ethnic disparities in outcomes.