In a 2003 Harvard Business Review article "The Five Minds of a Manager," Jonathan Gosling and Henry Mintzberg introduced a revolutionary framework for effective leadership in the modern global
Harvard Magazine, a magazine that caters to the alumnus of Harvard University, gives us the blather of one of their professors, Howard Gardner, who is despairing on how we eeeevil conservatives are taking over his country. To start with, the short Harvard Mag piece tries hard to explain why anyone should care about Gardner. Apparently it's mostly because of his 1983 theory of "multiple intelligences." This theory holds that humanity has different types of intelligences, that an IQ test cannot measure a person's intelligence effectively, and that our different kinds of intelligence (I've heard it called "genius") is often hard to quantify. Some have a genius in dealing with people, some have their ability in music, some in mathematics, etc. Everyone's great ability is different than the next fellow's. That this particular theory seemed innovative or groundbreaking proves that the only "genius" that people in academia have is that of
Every year, The World Federation for Mental Health observes World Mental Health Day on October 10 and the theme for this year is 'Make Mental Health & Well-Being for All a Global Priority. Even way back in 2017, a World Health Organisation (WHO) study, 'Mental Health Status of Adolescents in South-East Asia: Evidence for Action had stated that one in four children in the age
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