18/11/2024
WHY SHOULD YOU TAKE DERMATOGLYPHICS MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCE ASSESSMENT?
The Dermatoglyphics Multiple Intelligence Assessment (DMIA) has emerged as a valuable instrument for improving self-understanding. This evaluation technique, Based on the analysis of fingerprints, offers experiences into a person’s natural abilities, character attributes, and learning styles.
The procedure includes an assortment of fingerprint samples, which are then investigated to distinguish specific trends connected with knowledge, learning styles, emotional reactions, and possible qualities and shortcomings. The outcomes are incorporated into an extensive report that fills in as an aide for individual and professional development.
DMIA can be especially important for students and parents in pursuing informed instructive choices. The test gives insights into the best learning styles and conditions for an individual, working with better scholastic decisions.
For more information call 9150199000.
16/11/2024
WHY IS MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCE ASSESSMENT IMPORTANT?
Gardner’s multiple intelligences theory can be used for curriculum development, planning instruction, selection of course activities, and related assessment strategies. Gardner points out that everyone has strengths and weaknesses in various intelligences, which is why educators should decide how best to present course material given the subject-matter and individual class of students. Indeed, instruction designed to help students learn material in multiple ways can trigger their confidence to develop areas in which they are not as strong. In the end, students’ learning is enhanced when instruction includes a range of meaningful and appropriate methods, activities, and assessments.
DVJ INTEL WORKS helps you to know your IN-BORN MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES ACCURATELY. Call 9150199000 for more information.
15/11/2024
DID YOU KNOW?
There are three primary types of learning styles, as defined by teacher Neil Fleming: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic. Most people learn best through one or two of these methods, but there are ways to use all three learning styles to your advantage.
People have different learning styles because they vary in their ability or need to process information by sight, sound, and touch. Some may prefer visual aids like charts, while others will learn better through listening (auditory) or doing things physically (kinesthetic).
To know your child's learning style and help them become more effective in their learning phase, call us at 91501 99000.
13/11/2024
At the core of the world of fingerprints lies a fundamental truth: fingerprints are unequivocally unique.
This extraordinary characteristic is the bedrock upon which forensic science, criminal investigations, and even biometric security systems are built.
It’s a phenomenon so profound that not even identical twins, who share nearly identical genetic codes, possess the same fingerprints.
It’s as if nature herself has etched an individualised signature onto each of us.
The origins of this uniqueness trace back to our earliest stages of development, long before we take our first breaths.
While still in the womb, intricate ridges and patterns form on our fingertips as a result of a complex interplay of genetic and environmental factors.
These ridges, which may appear random at first glance, follow precise patterns that, when examined closely, reveal an intricacy unparalleled in nature.
12/11/2024
The word dermatoglyphics comes from two Greek words (derma, skin and glyphe, carve) and refers to the friction ridge formations which appear on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet. Dermatoglyphics is the scientific study of fingerprints. The term was coined by Dr. Harold Cummins, the father of American fingerprint analysis, even though the process of fingerprint identification had already been used for several hundred years.
The uniqueness of a person’s finger prints led to the analyses of one’s potential, personality and preferences by analyzing dermatoglyphics.
11/11/2024
DID YOU KNOW?
The human brain has 86 billion neurons in all: 69 billion in the cerebellum, a dense lump at the back of the brain that helps orchestrate basic bodily functions and movement; 16 billion in the cerebral cortex, the brain’s thick corona and the seat of our most sophisticated mental talents, such as self-awareness, language, problem solving and abstract thought; and 1 billion in the brain stem and its extensions into the core of the brain. In contrast, the elephant brain, which is three times the size of our own, has 251 billion neurons in its cerebellum, which helps manage a giant, versatile trunk, and only 5.6 billion in its cortex. Considering brain mass or volume alone masks these important distinctions.
07/11/2014
A pictorial representation of Imitative Behaviour!