Myers and Briggs Analysis The Myers and Briggs Analysis is a series of questions that when answered are examined and grouped together in order to determine the personalities of those taking this test. This particular test can result in sixteen different outcomes or types of personalities, which is determined by four different categories that judge if you are introverted or extroverted, use your senses or your intuition, your choice to think or use your feelings, and finally if you are judgmental or perceptive. These series of questions are designed to judge our personalities and help us to determine which career pathways we will be most suited for based on our personality traits and abilities to work well with others, which is important for our future decisions. The Myers and Briggs personality test is unlike many of the personality tests you will find randomly online because it was designed to examine the ways in which you focus on the world and make everyday decisions. After taking this test myself I have found out a few things about myself that I did not really notice before. According to the Myers-Briggs test my personality type is INFP, which stands for Introversion, iNtuition, Feeling, and Perceiving. At the start of this test I had no idea that I was considered an introvert because as far as I can remember I have always loved being around people and never really thought about things before acting, which is the exact personality of an extrovert. The end of this personality test has a section that describes the different traits of those under that category and as for what it says about me I do feel that it matches some of my traits to a tee, but at the same time I feel like there are a few traits that are a bit off. Perso... ... middle of paper ... ...y type is to keep a close set of friends and only a select few of them are close enough to know my core values and how I feel about them, so a potential change in my personality may be to try and let some people in to my life and stop holding everything on my own shoulders. Overall this assignment and personality test has really opened up the ways that I think about my life and hopefully will affect the way I choose to make decisions in the future. Works Cited Briggs, Isabel Myers & Briggs, Katherine. “MTBI Basics.” My MBTI Personality Type-MBTI Basics. Web. 27 January 2014. http://www.myersbriggs.org/my-mbti-personality-type/mbti-basics/ Briggs, Isabel Myers & Briggs, Katherine. “The 16 MBTI Types.” My MBTI Personality Type-The 16 MBTI Types. CPP Inc. Web. 27 January 2014. http://www.myersbriggs.org/my-mbti-personality-type/mbti-basics/the-16-mbti-types.asp
The 'Pittenger'. Cautionary comments regarding the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Consulting Psychology Journal: Practice and Research, 57(3), 210-221. University of Minnesota. (2016).
Having completed the Myers-Briggs Personality Test previously, I was identified as an INTP, which stands for introverted, intuitive, thinking, and perceiving. Accordingly, this personality is often labeled as “The Architect” or “The Logician.” Despite my previous results, I repeated the test as instructed in the assignment. Consequently, based on the outcome of the test, my personality has altered in the past year. Thus, my updated results based on this analysis were, INTJ (introverted, intuitive, thinking, and judging). However, the two personalities are similar, as only one trait seems to have varied. Therefore, instead of holding a characteristic grounded in perception, it would appear that I am inclined to mannerisms that indicate
Myers-Brigs is a personality assessment that focuses on specific traits that allow a person to capture a deeper understanding of who they are and what exactly makes them an individual. These traits are the person’s core personality of who they are behind closed doors, not how they would desire to behave. These traits are inborn and are the natural emotional reaction to the environment around us. There are four sections of the Meyers Briggs with two options in each section. Each person who completes the personality assessment is assigned four letters that represent their personal personality type. A summary is given that delves deeper into what those four letters represent. The summary includes, but is not limited to, strengths and weaknesses, relationships, and careers.
When I took the MBTI, some of the things I knew about myself were reinforced, and I also learned some new things about myself and my personality. The four letter code that I received was ISTJ, representing introversion, sensing, thinking, and judging. I expected each of these preferences, and when I read the definition of each, it further strengthened my understanding of what my personality really means in “technical terms.” My four letter code came with titles such as the Duty Fulfiller, the Responsible Realist and the Inspector, names I also agree that pertain to myself. Some of the attributes of an ISTJ personality type include serious and quiet, dependable, well-organized, hard-working, goal-striving, determined, logic-based, orderly, and traditional. If I were asked to describe myself, I would more than likely use nearly all of these terms to do so, which goes to show how accurate this test was, for me at least. But, I also can pick out some challenges that may arise because of the personality type that I am. One example relates to being an introvert, who prefer to focus on one thing at a time.
Understanding why people do what they do has baffled people for centuries. The Myers-Briggs Personality test has answer a few of these questions. Are you an Extrovert or an Introvert, Sensor or iNtuitive, a Thinker or a Feeler, a Judger or Perceiver? Once you have the tools to understand yourself, you are capable of understanding others. How does your personality complement a coworker, a family member? How can I be more understanding based on my knowledge of how a coworker comes to conclusions about life and their surroundings? Needs work
After taking this personality test I could not decide if I felt that my results were accurate about me or not. The personality test resulted in describing me as an extravert, intuitive, feeling, and judging (Humanmetrics,
BSM Consulting, Inc. "The Idealist." High-Level Description of the Sixteen Personality Types. BSM Consulting, Inc. 2012. Web. 1 Mar. 2014.
...Myers, Isabel Briggs., and Mary H. McCaulley. Myers-Briggs (MBTI) Manual: A Guide to the Development and Use of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psychologists, 1998. Print.
In our culture, most people are one of six personality types: Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, and Conventional.
JASON RENTFROW, P. (2009). World of Psychology: The Big Five Model of Personality. Retrieved March 7, 2014, from PsychCentral: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2009/11/10/the-big-5-model-of-personality/
Personality traits. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. McCrae, R. R., & Allik, I. U. (2002). The 'Secondary' of the 'Secondary'. The five-factor model of personality across cultures.
It is hard for me to agree with the Myers-Briggs type quiz because I am choosing my answers from what I think that I am like. I have taken the quiz at least 3 times and I have gotten many different type results. I take those quizzes out of boredom and/or to better understand myself. Some of my friends can read me like a book, so I ask them to psychoanalyze me sometimes just to see what they think. I think that learning psychology would make me realize things around me that I have not noticed was happening all along.
Isabel Myers and Kathryn Briggs designed The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, a tool that identifies sixteen patterns on how people are different from one another based on their actions and attitudes. This was also one of the first tools that allowed leaders an insight on themselves and those that they lead. The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator offers eight letters to describe a person, four letters make up a personality type. Each letter is used as a comparison to another (E) extroverted or (I) introverted as the first letter of a
"My MBTI Personality Type - MBTI Basics - Thinking or Feeling." My MBTI Personality Type - MBTI Basics. N.p., n.d. Web. Retrieved 29 April 2014.
Before taking the Myers-Briggs Interactive Test, I didn’t really know what to expect or what kind of questions I would be answering in order to determine what my personality type would be. Afterwards however, I wasn’t too surprised with my results of the test. Out of the sixteen different personality types, I got the INFJ personality type which simply means dominant introverted intuition. All of those letters were pretty self-explanatory and accurate according to how my temperament and personality are. The statistical conclusion was 67% introvert (I), 38% intuitive (N), 50% feeling (F), and 56% judging (J). Therefore I had a distinctive preference of introversion over extraversion, a moderate preference of intuition over sensing, a moderate preference of feeling over thinking, and a moderate preference of judging over perceiving.