Sunday, April 26, 2020
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Essays - Personality Tests,
  Myers-Briggs Type Indicator  One of the most enduring typological classifications was devised by Jung and has  served as the foundation for the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (Anastasi, 1997).    The Myers-Briggs (MBTI) designates one's personality type, based upon a  classification scheme, which consists of four basic scales and two types within  each scale. Thus, there are sixteen possible Myers-Briggs personality types. The  scheme is based upon the intuitions of Carl Jung, whose gifted insight revealed  that all people at all times are best understood in terms of  extroversion/introversion, sensation/intuition, and objective/subjective. The  latter category has since been subdivided into two classes by revisionists:  feeling/thinking, and perceiving/judging. Classifying people did not originate  with Jung. In the middle of the fifth century B.C.E., Hippocrates explained the  four temperaments in terms of dominant humors in the body: melancholic,  sanguine, phlegmatic, or choleric. The melancholic, he claimed, was dominated by  yellow bile in the kidneys, the sanguine by humors in the blood, the phlegmatic  by phlegm, and the choleric by the black bile of the liver. Hippocrates was  simply adding to the ancient Greek insight that all things reduce to earth, air,  water and fire. Each of the four elements had its dualities: hot/cold and  dry/moist. A persons physical, psychological, and moral qualities could  easily be understood by his temperament, his dominant humors, the four basic  elements, or whether he was hot and wet or cold and dry. The ancient personality  type indicator worked for over one thousand years. Today, most of us have  abandoned Hippocrates' personality scheme because we do not find it to have any  meaningful use. In the early 1940`s, Isabel Briggs Myers and Katherine Cook    Briggs began developing the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator to make Carl Jung`s  theory of human personality under-standable and useful in everyday life. The    MBTI is based on Jung`s ideas about perception and judgment. The essence of the  theory is that much seemingly random variation in behavior is actually quite  orderly and consistent, being due to basic differences in the way individuals  prefer to use their perception and judgment. Perception involves all the ways of  becoming aware of things, people, happenings, or ideas. Judgment involves all  the ways of coming to conclusions about what has been perceived. The Educational    Testing Service first published the MBTI as a research instrument in 1962. In    1977, its use began to multiply. The main aim of the MBTI is to identify from  self-report, the basic preferences of people in regard to perception and  judgment, so that the effects of each preference, singly and in combination, can  be established by research and put to practical use. If people differ  systematically in what they perceive and in how they reach conclusions, then it  is only reasonable for them to differ correspondingly in their reactions,  interests, values, motivations, and skills (McCaulley, 1995). At the heart of    MBTI use is the belief that individuals have naturally occurring preferences for  certain attitudes and approaches to the world as well as for certain modes of  perceiving it and making judgments or decisions pertaining to it. These  preferences should not be equated with abilities. Identifying one`s own  preferences can be an aid in seeking work, relationships and so forth, whereby  what comes most naturally to the person will be the very thing that will be the  most demanded, desirable, appropriated, or appreciated. Understanding other  persons` preferences can aid in communication and make working or living  together more effective and satisfying (Carskadon, 1994). McCaulley and Myers  (1985) state that the MBTI differs from other personality instruments in these  ways: It is designed to implement a theory; therefore the theory must be  understood to understand the MBTI.  The theory postulates dichotomies;  therefore some of the psychometric properties are unusual.  Based on the  theory, there are specific dynamic relationships between the scales, which lead  to the descriptions and characteristics of sixteen types. The type descriptions  and the theory include a model of development that continues throughout life.    The scales are concerned with basic functions of perception and judgment that  enter into almost every behavior; therefore, the scope of practical applications  is very wide. The MBTI consists of four separate indices which direct the use of  perception and judgment. The Myers Briggs model of personality is based on four  preferences, which can be seen in Table 1. These preferences affect what people  do in any situation and how they draw conclusions about what they perceive. The  preferences are: 1. Where is your primary source of energy?  (Introversion/Extroversion) 2. How do you prefer to take in information?  (Sensing/Intuition) 3. How do you prefer to make decisions? (Thinking/Feeling)    4. How    
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