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  • Sometimes it seems like tests dictate your life. Almost every big decision seems to involve

  • a test; will I get my permit, or will I be taking the bus? Will my scores get me into

  • an Ivy league school or will I be heading to my safety school? Today, we're going

  • to tell you about a test that'll help you far more than good grades or great parallel

  • parking skills. It won't dictate your life, but it'll help you understand yourself,

  • and others, better.

  • Welcome to WellCast: Today we're taking a suggestion from our coworker Danny, and

  • our loyal viewer 8MissGreeny8. We'll be looking at the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator,

  • a personality test that actually started as a way to get women into the workforce. Now

  • it's taken by 2.5 million American men, women and children each year. We'll show

  • you how this test can help you become more aware of your personal traits, and then teach

  • you how to use this awareness to get more out of yourself at school. Ready?

  • The Myers-Briggs test was first developed in the 1940s by Isabel Myers and her daughter-in-law,

  • Katherine Cook Briggs, two amateur psychologists who were huge fans of a Swiss psychiatrist

  • named Carl Jung, and his theory on personality types.

  • When the U.S. entered World War II, many women entered the workforce for the first time.

  • Myers saw a very specific need in the market for a personality testone that would help

  • women figure out what sort of jobs they'd be well-suited for. Thus, the Meyers-Briggs

  • test was born.

  • Today's exercise will give you an introduction to the different personality types, so you

  • can start to think about which categories you fall into.

  • Pause and print this WellCast worksheet. Next to each category, tick off the box that you

  • think applies most to you.

  • One: Are you an extrovert or an introvert? Are you a Fluttershy or a Rainbow Dash? This

  • category deals with what stimulates peopleare you the kind of person who gets pumped up

  • in busy, social situations, or are you more fulfilled when reading a book? Extroverts

  • respond to external stimulibeing around a large group of people, for examplewhereas

  • introverts are stimulated internallyby reflection, toying around with ideas and analyzing

  • an interesting train of thought.

  • Two: Do you sense or do you intuit? This category deals with how you gather information and

  • learn. Some people rely mainly on the information at handthey look for facts, concrete details,

  • tangible data. They're mainly focused on minutiae and want to get to the bottom of

  • things quickly. Much like Joe Friday, they want "the facts, ma'am." Others prefer

  • to look for connections between ideas rather than nailing down facts, and are more interested

  • in the bigger picture than the nitty-gritty details. These fall under intuition category.

  • Three: Would you consider yourself more a thinker or a feeler?

  • This one is the classic Spock vs. Kirk dilemma. How do you make decisions? Do you analyze

  • all the data at hand exhaustively, write out pro and con lists, think logically through

  • a problem? Or do you go with your gut, let your emotions be your compass for a situation?

  • Four: Are you perceiving or judging? An easy way to look at this one is to ask yourself

  • how you respond to deadlines. If you plan your work out far in advance and manage to

  • get everything done on time, you're probably "judging." On the other hand, if you see

  • deadlines as more of a suggestion than that hard-and-fast rule, and are constantly changing

  • your work up until the last minute, you're a perceiver.

  • At the bottom of the worksheet, put it all together. What did you come up with? ESFP?

  • INTJ?

  • Annoyingly, taking the official test costs moneybut there are several fairly good,

  • free knock-offs available on the Internet. (Click here, here and here.) Try taking one

  • of these tests now, and see how your answers stack up.

  • Let's recap: Today we went over the four main personality categories of the Myers-Briggs

  • personality test, an indicator developed in the 40s by amateur psychologists. Your personality

  • is a series of four letters: E (extrovert) or I (introvert), S (sensing) or N (intuitive),

  • F (feeling) or T (thinking), and P (perceiving) or J (judging). We also explained how knowing

  • your four letters can help you get more out of life.

  • Next week, we're going to show you eight great methods for improving your productivity

  • based on your personality typehow to accentuate your strengths and combat your weaknesses

  • when it comes to finishing a paper or getting through a difficult week at school.

Sometimes it seems like tests dictate your life. Almost every big decision seems to involve

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