Metadata
Title
Advising Interactive Worksheet: Intellectual Identity
Category
general
UUID
e7884bc60ae84f39a5c49d686c0d0b8a
Source URL
https://advising.stanford.edu/current-students/advising-resource-toolkit/intelle...
Parent URL
https://advising.stanford.edu/current-students/advising-resource-toolkit
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T02:50:25+00:00
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Advising Interactive Worksheet: Intellectual Identity

Source: https://advising.stanford.edu/current-students/advising-resource-toolkit/intellectual-identity Parent: https://advising.stanford.edu/current-students/advising-resource-toolkit

Intellectual Identity may be defined as that element of your “self” through which you interpret and understand the world around you. Intellectual Identity guides the manner in which you relate to your surroundings. It is that which you find compelling and meaningful—intellectual “personhood”.

Intellectual Identity may have its foundation in artistic or aesthetic perceptions, culture and conduct, historical perspectives, human behavior, language and literature, scientific principles, or any other scheme or system through which people make meaning and find relevance in their environments.

Educators from Academic Advising, along with those from the Stanford Center for Innovations in Learning proposed that Intellectual Identity is the result of “reflective thinking”—a process involving dialogue with others, self-reflection, and personal discovery. Reflective thinking requires you to be curious and inquisitive, but also receptive to challenge. The proposed stages of this development are: Impression, Importance, and Intellectual Identity.1

The development of Intellectual Identity begins with your personal interests but culminates with a discovery of why those personal interests are relevant to your life, the lives of others, and the world at large. Conversation and dialogue are essential in realizing your Intellectual Identity. Talking with others, particularly faculty, helps examine and challenge your ideas. Other ways to do this include:

1 Mazow, C., Voigt, D., and Williams, R. (2002, June). Learning Portfolios: A Tool for Collaborative Formative Assessment of a Learning Career. American Association of Higher Education (AAHE) Assessment Conference. Boston, MA.

Download our Interactive Worksheet

Academic Advising is a planning process that helps students to approach their education in an organized and meaningful way…

—National Academic Advising Association

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