Robert Sternberg is an American educator and psychologist renowned for his work in intelligence theory and creativity. His Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, which divides intelligence into analytical, creative, and practical components, has reshaped educational strategies and approaches to learning. Sternberg's work emphasizes the importance of fostering diverse types of intelligence and creativity in students, encouraging educational systems to cultivate all aspects of human potential. His groundbreaking contributions continue to inspire educators to create environments that nurture diverse talents and encourage students to thrive in a variety of ways.

"But in any case, I did poorly on the tests and so, in the first three years of school, I had teachers who thought I was stupid and when people think you're stupid, they have low expectations for you."



"Passion is the quickest to develop, and the quickest to fade. Intimacy develops more slowly, and commitment more gradually still."



"But what many psychologists have done, probably because they did well on a test themselves and everyone wants high self esteem, is to create this little box and then do their research inside it."



"The problem is that there are very few technologies that essentially haven't changed for 60, 70 years."



"Well, first of all, we did lots of studies where we show practical intelligence doesn't correlate with G. We have probably two dozen studies that practical intelligence better predicts job success than IQ."



"If you're not adapting to the very rapidly changing environment, if you can't think creatively, you lose big in this society because there are very few jobs for you left."



"I've taught statistics, math courses and what I've found is that often if you teach them algebraically the formulas, you'll have one group of kids doing well."



"So, for example, if a child is labeled as having a learning disability, it has very concrete consequences for the kinds of services and potentially accommodations that child will get."

