Meyers Briggs Type Indicator MBTI .pdfKatharine C. Briggs (1875– 1968), an American,read Jung’s...

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Meyers Briggs Type Indicator

Transcript of Meyers Briggs Type Indicator MBTI .pdfKatharine C. Briggs (1875– 1968), an American,read Jung’s...

  • Meyers Briggs Type Indicator

  • Your Results

    • Any confirmations?

    • Any surprises?

    • Anything from the JoHari window?

    SafeTech Solutions, LLP

  • Carl Gustav Jung(1875–1961), a Swisspsychiatrist, developed a theory of personality:Differences between people are not random. Instead theyform patterns—types.

    Psychological Types(published 1921, translatedinto English 1923)

    Carl G.Jung

  • Katharine C. Briggs (1875–1968), an American, read Jung’s Psychological Types in 1923.

    She spent the next 20 years studying, developing, and applying Jung’s theory.

    Katharine C. Briggs

  • Isabel Briggs Myers(1897–1980) developed Jung’s theory in partnership with Briggs.

    Beginning in 1943, she developed questions that became the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® instrument.

    Isabel Briggs Myers

  • Jung’s Personality Theory

    • Every person carries out two kinds of mental processes:

    1. We take in information

    2. Then we make decisions about the information

    • Everyone has preferred ways of using these mental processes

  • Jung observed that we all live in two worlds:

    1.The outer world of things, people, and events

    and

    2.The inner world of our own thoughts, feelings, and reflections

    Jung’s Personality Theory

  • • Each person has a preference for either the outer world or the inner world

    Jung’s Personality Theory

  • • Jung believed that preferences are innate—“inborn predispositions”

    • He also recognized that they are shaped by environmental influences, such as family, culture, and education

    NatureMBTI® instrument

    NurtureEnvironment

    vs.

    Jung’s Personality Theory

  • MBTI

    • Introspective self-report questionnaire

    • About psychological preferences and pairs

    • Popular in business world

    • Used by 89 of the Fortune 100 for hiring, training, and promotion.

    • 2.5 million administrations/ yr

    • Critique: reliability & validity

  • MBTI4 preferences• Where do we get our psychological energy?

    • from within ourselves (Introverted) • from external sources (Extroverted)

    • How do we take in and absorb Information? • trust our five senses (Sensing) • rely on our instincts (iNtuitive)

    • How do we prefer to make decisions? • Decide based on logic and objective consideration (Thinking)• Decide based on our personal, subjective value systems (Feeling).

    • How do we deal with the external world or live our lives? • organized and purposeful, and more comfortable with scheduled, structured environments

    (Judging), • flexible and diverse, and more comfortable with open, casual environments

    (Perceiving)?More

  • Possible

    Personal Logical

    Present

    NFValuing

    Manifesting universal values and valuing principle

    SFRelating

    Including and building trustworthiness

    STDirecting

    Action from a strategic perspective

    NTVisioning

    Pulling people with ideas to an optimistic futureENFJ

    Teacher

    INFJCounselor

    ENFPChampion

    INFPHealer

    ESFPPerformer

    ISFPComposer

    ESFJProvider

    ISFJProtector

    INTJMastermind

    INTPArchitect

    ISTPOperator

    ISTJInspector

    ENTJField Marshall

    ENTPInventor

    ESTPPromoter

    ESTJSupervisor

  • https://www.16personalities.com/personality-types

    https://www.16personalities.com/personality-types

  • TeamsFirst doing our own work makes for great teams

  • Possible

    Personal Logical

    Present

    NFValuing

    Manifesting universal values and valuing principle

    SFRelating

    Including and building trustworthiness

    STDirecting

    Action from a strategic perspective

    NTVisioning

    Pulling people with ideas to an optimistic futureENFJ

    Teacher

    INFJCounselor

    ENFPChampion

    INFPHealer

    ESFPPerformer

    ISFPComposer

    ESFJProvider

    ISFJProtector

    INTJMastermind

    INTPArchitect

    ISTPOperator

    ISTJInspector

    ENTJField Marshall

    ENTPInventor

    ESTPPromoter

    ESTJSupervisor

  • Why might teams suffer from the Dysfunctions?

    • FEAR (the perception of what could be)• Vulnerability

    • No meaningful, measurable, and actionable focus (mission, vision, and values)

    • Lack of thematic goal

    • No structure

    • No one “owns” the team

    • Lack of significant investments into the team

    • The team and individuals paths are unclear

    • Power and politics are not being lead

    • Expectations and accountability are missing

  • Your team’s journey

    • Where are you at as a team? (discovery)

    • Create and put into writing team agreements, expectations, and how breaches will be handled (norms)

    • Invest in the team, not just the outputs

    • Make regular offsite planning sessions sacred

    • Regularly test the norms

    • Someone must own the team

  • Required CE Quiz & Evaluation Information

    • You must complete the quiz and evaluation to receive CE credit.

    • You have two weeks to complete the quiz & eval

    • You must acquire a passing score of 80% or better to receive your CE

    • CE web-link:

    • https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_d1jUHo53HJtYicR

    • You must be in presenter mode or copy and paste the address to utilize the link.

    • This link can also be found in the informational email

    https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_d1jUHo53HJtYicR