Card Games for Mastering the MBTI® Preferences
Sivasailam Thiagarajan
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$129.00
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View Inside Pages
Make your introductory workshops as fun as they are educational with this collection of 11 games involving a deck of 120 MBTI game cards. Arranged in order of increasing difficulty, the games are easy to learn, fun to play for individuals or teams, and appropriate for both large and small groups. Comes with clear instructions and reproducible handouts that outline type fundamentals and explain the simple rules, objectives, and correct answers for each exercise.
| Product Detail |
| 59 pages Workbook Binder |
| 2002 Distributed Product |
| Product No. 61002 |
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$129.00
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| RELATED PRODUCTS |
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MBTI® Challenge Cards
This fun, easy card game assists people just learning about type to identify and understand the eight preferences. Deck contains 48 cards: 24 representing famous quotes descriptive of each of the four preference scales, and 24 representing behaviors associated with each of the scales.
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Building A Living Type Table
This 12-page leader's guide provides MBTI® trainers and facilitators with a detailed strategy for building a living type table by asking participants to self-report according to a verbal description of the preferences.
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Diversity Exercise: A Living Type Table Activity for Use With or Without MBTI Feedback
Gordon Lawrence, psychological type expert and author of People Types and Tiger Stripes, has created a living type table group exercise that can be used independently or as part of MBTI® feedback.
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Stages of Understanding Type
A lighthearted way to lead MBTI® workshop participants through the various stages of understanding and becoming familiar with the implications and applications of psychological type.
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Twenty Questions
This exercise, which causes people to think in a fun way, lists questions describing particular situations and asks which MBTI personality types might be most likely to exhibit the psychological behavior described.
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Words to Help Understanding of Type Concepts
This excerpt from People Types & Tiger Stripes explains E-I, S-N, T-F, and J-P from
a first person perspective. For example, "When introverting, I am focusing on
ideas, concepts, inner impressions.
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Looking at Type®: The Fundamentals
Looking at Type®: The Fundamentals is designed to give a clearer picture of results from the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® assessment or the Murphy-Meisgeier Type Indicator for Children® assessment.
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