Unit 6: Testing & Individual Differences

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Advertisements

Mental Abilities Intelligence (PS) Information processing approach 1. Psychometric approach 3. Triarchal approach 5. Ecological approach Intelligence.
Intelligence and Testing Introduction to Psychology Spring 2012 Mr. Knoblauch/ Silimperi.
Theories of Intelligence Is intelligence a single, general ability or is it a cluster of different mental abilities? Do current IQ tests measure it or.
 What is cognition?  How do we solve problems?  What makes people creative?  What is intelligence?  Is intelligence genetic?
INTELLIGENCE THEORIES
Slide 1 © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT 8 A Topical Approach to John W. Santrock Intelligence.
Intelligence Definitions: –Terman (1921): ability to carry on abstract thought –Binet (1905): collection of faculties: judgment, practical sense, initiative,
INTELLIGENCE Chapter 9. What is Intelligence? Intelligence—the abilities to acquire new abilities and new behavior and adapt to new situations. 4 Different.
Intelligence. Discuss What is intelligence? Definition? Why is this difficult to define? What makes someone intelligent? Unintelligent? Are there different.
Theories of Intelligence
INTELLIGENCE Unit 8. What is intelligence ◦ Intelligence: ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations.
Theories of Intelligence Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School.
Unit 11 – Intelligence and Personality Part I – Testing and Individual Differences.
Intelligence What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent.
Unit 11. * intelligence: * aggregate or global capacity * to act purposefully * to think rationally * to deal effectively with the environment * fluid.
Intelligence What is intelligence?. The Big Question: Do each of us have an inborn general mental capacity, and can we quantify this capacity as a meaningful.
AP Psychology Unit 10 (Chapters 10 & 11)
Intelligence Test Review. Robert Sternberg’s three types of intelligence?
Intelligence What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent.
Intelligence. Definitions Intelligence - Mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt.
1 PSYCHOLOGY, Ninth Edition in Modules David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2010.
What is Intelligence? Chapter 10, Lecture 2 “…there are a variety of mental gifts and…the recipe for high achievement in any field blends talent and grit.”
AP Psychology Chapter 11 p Definition- the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations. General.
Intelligence and Mental Abilities You have to do the best with what God gave you.
Module 29 & 30 Intelligence gp(8)1. 2 Psychometric Approach: Measurement (metric) of Individual differences in behaviors and abilities.
Intelligence AP Psychology 2012 Chamberlain Mod 31.
Intelligence Lecture 11 Chapter What is Intelligence?
INTELLIGENCE: IQ & TESTING.
Intelligence  Is intelligence a thing or a concept?  When we think of intelligence as a fixed thing, we are making a reasoning error called reification.
Intelligence – Theories RG 11a. Intelligence Do we have an inborn general mental capacity (intelligence) and can we quantify this capacity as a meaningful.
Module 30 Introduction to Intelligence Worth Publishers.
Unit 11: Intelligence (Cognition)
We are here IQ Tests Theories Psychometrics Special Topics Intelligence Mental Retardation Giftedness Savants Multiple Intelligences Triarchic Theory General.
Do Now: Define intelligence 1.  Characteristics of intelligence 1. Ability to learn from experience 2. Solve problem 3. Use knowledge to adapt to new.
1) What is the difference between street smart and book smart? 2) Which is more important 3) Does having one correlate to having the other?
What makes us intelligent?. The ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations. Is socially constructed.
AP PSYCH UNIT 11: INTRODUCTION TO INTELLIGENCE Module 60.
How should intelligence be defined? Describe someone who is intelligent. Describe someone who is unintelligent. What is the difference between the.
Intelligence What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent.
Warm Up Finish this statement An intelligent person is someone who can………………………….
Theories of Intelligence
+ Intelligence 1. + Intelligence What is Intelligence?  Is Intelligence One General Ability or Several Specific Abilities?  Emotional Intelligence 
Intelligence What is intelligence?. What is Intelligence?  Intelligence is a socially constructed concept  Cultures deem “intelligent” whatever attributes.
Intelligence Intelligence, the ability to think, to learn from experience, to solve problems, and to adapt to new situations Intelligence is important.
Theories of Intelligence
What does it mean to be Intelligent?
Gardner & Sternberg U11 – Testing and Individual Differences
Unit 11: Testing and Individual Differences
Intelligence.
OA 1 What is Intelligence? (you can provide examples for your answer)
Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
Unit 6: Testing & Individual Differences
What is Intelligence? Intelligence
Do Now How would you define intelligence?.
Introduction to Intelligence
Intelligence Intro Who is the most intelligent person that you know (alive, dead, historical, etc)? Identify some characteristics of people that you consider.
Intelligence 9.1: What is Intelligence?.
Chapter 11 pt. 1: Measuring “Intelligence”
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Ch.9 Sect.1: What is Intelligence?
Early Theories of Intelligence
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
UNIT-IV BA- II SEM By: Dr DIVYA MONGA
UNIT 11 – TESTING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Intelligence UNIT 8.
Introduction to Intelligence
Psychology Chapter 9:Inelligence Section 1: What is Intelligence
Presentation transcript:

Unit 6: Testing & Individual Differences Module 31: Introduction to Intelligence

What is Intelligence? IQ: Intelligence quotient Intelligence: mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations. Intelligence is a concept, not a thing Intelligence is whatever attributes enables success within a culture.

What is Intelligence? Reification: viewing an abstract concept as if it was a concrete thing To reify is to invent a concept, give it a name, and convince us that it exists. We treat IQ as a thing that someone has rather than a score someone attains on a test.

What is Intelligence? In the end, intelligence is whatever intelligence tests measure! Two controversies: 1. Is intelligence a single overall ability or several abilities? 2. Can we locate and measure intelligence within the brain?

What is Intelligence? Clusters: Groups of skills that comprise an intelligence factor. Ex. Verbal, mathematical, spatial… General Intelligence (g): a general intelligence factor that is in every specific mental ability. (Spearman) Spearman’s “g” was a single intelligence score!

What is Intelligence? Multiple abilities! Thurstone identified 7 clusters of primary mental abilities: Word fluency Verbal comprehension Spatial ability Perceptual speed Numerical ability Inductive reasoning Memory Multiple abilities!

What is Intelligence? Savant Syndrome: a person with one exceptional ability, but limited mental ability in the others. Found in some people living with autism. This led Howard Gardner to conclude that we do not have a single intelligence, but that we have multiple intelligences.

What is Intelligence? Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences: 1. Linguistic 2. Logical-mathematical 3. Musical 4. Spatial 5. Bodily-kinesthetic 6. Intrapersonal 7. Interpersonal 8. Naturalist

What is Intelligence? Robert Sternberg’s Three Aspects of Intelligence: Analytical: academic problem solving. Measured on IQ tests. Creative: generating new ideas Practical: “street smarts”, required for everyday tasks where multiple solutions exist. Agreed with Gardner, but a simplified version.

Theories on Intelligence Summary: Spearman – g (general intelligence). Thurstone – Primary mental abilities (7 factors/clusters). Gardner – 8 independent intelligences. Sternberg – 3 areas that predict success.

Emotional Intelligence Emotional Intelligence: the ability to perceive, understand, manage, and use emotions. Perceive: recognize emotions in faces, music, and stories. Understand: to predict them & how they change and blend. Manage: to express them in situations. Use: to enable them.

Emotional Intelligence Emotionally intelligent people enjoy better relationships with people of both sexes and avoid depression, anxiety, or anger. Often succeed in career, marriage, and parenting.

Intelligence Research says: Intelligence tests do predict both occupational status and job performance. Intelligence gets you the job, other things (emotional intelligence) helps you keep the job and be successful.

Creativity Creativity: The ability to produce novel (new) and valuable ideas. Ex. How many ways can you use a brick? People who do well on intelligence tests do well on creativity tests. Creativity led to technology: iPods, Post-it notes, etc.

Creativity Five Components of Creativity: Expertise: well-developed base of knowledge. Imaginative thinking skills: to see things in new ways. Venturesome personality: tolerates ambiguity and risk. Seeks new experiences rather than follow old. Intrinsic motivation: internally driven. Creative environment

Intelligence & the Brain Does brain size and intelligence correlate? Some geniuses had small brains, while some dumb criminals had large brains. There is, however, a +.4 correlation between brain size and intelligence. Learning produces bigger brains (mice in enriched environment).

Intelligence & the Brain Highly intelligent people differ in neural plasticity. Neural plasticity: ability during childhood to adapt and grow neural connections. Higher intelligence linked to more gray matter (neural bodies) in brains. Otherwise, slight correlation between size and intelligence.

Intelligence & the Brain Highly intelligent people perceive information more quickly. (Quick witted) They also have faster neurological speed. (Process it quicker.) So highly intelligent people see and process information quicker than others.