The Jung Personality Test Or The Myers-Briggs Personality Type Test

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The Jung Personality Type Test or The Myers- Briggs Personality Type Test is quiet familiar to me as I have taken it on more than one occasion and know of its general premise. The test is very popular in the business world but has been heavily criticized by academics due to its low validity and reliability. I would have to agree with academia because even though I have taken this test several times I have never been categorized as the same personality type twice. This does not mean that there have not been similarities in my results; certain aspects of the results stay true and the percentages of specific personality traits fall within a close range of each other no matter how many times I take the test. The result of my Jung Test-- for this A few I found accurate include: outgoing, perfectionist, assertive, loving, organized, involved, open, leader, ambitious and complimentary. The few I found questionable are: attention seeking, easily hurt, emotional and image conscious. The two items I found to be unagreeable are hyperactive and group oriented (The last item being one of my greatest personal struggles because I prefer to work alone.) Finally, the laughable item is anti-tattoos; laughable because it is painfully accurate and I often threaten my son with bodily harm if ever he comes home with Extrovert and Introvert and Judgment and Perception seem interchangeable to my personality and may be viewed as unerringly the two sides of one coin for me. The test declared me the "Persuader" type and elaborated that the ENFJ type is an outstanding leader of groups and may be aggressive at helping others be the best that they can be. It also states that this personality type is 2.5% of the total population. I find this to be poignantly true. Whenever I find myself butting heads with those close to me, or those I have taken special interest in helping, it is because of this "aggressiveness" or passion that others misconstrue as me trying to "run their lives". This can be quiet frustrating because my "aggressiveness" comes from an altruistic place of wanting to help and not from a need to control. Ultimately, the test reflected many accurate elements of my personality traits but the consummate individualist that I am urges me to find objection. As the disclaimer below states depending on the accuracy of your responses to the questions-- which may vary day to day, year to year, mood to mood -- the result of the Jung test will change. Keep in mind, your results are dependent on the

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