History of Intelligence testing The French government passed laws requiring that all French children attend school in the early 1900s French government.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AS level Psychology The Core studies. S J Gould (1982) n A Nation Of Morons? n The misuse of IQ tests.
Advertisements

Intelligence Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D. 1. Intelligence Why do we want to measure intelligence? What are some of the reasons we measure intelligence?
Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
Intelligence tests Wechsler Tests Info on David Wechsler.
Thinking, Language and Intelligence. Cognition Mental Activities Acquiring, retaining and using knowledge THINKING!
INTELLIGENCE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING. KEY CONCEPTS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING Psychological test: a standardized measure of a sample of a person’s behavior.
Intelligence.
Intelligence.
History of Intelligence Tests AP Psychology. Intelligence The capacity to think and reason clearly, act purposefully and effectively in adapting to the.
Assessing Intelligence
Assessing Intelligence. Origins of Testing Early 20 th Century France requires all children attend school How to determine who would benefit? Were they.
Intelligence.
Origins & Modern Intelligence Tests
Intelligence What is it? How do we measure it? Are those tests valid?
AP Unit 11 Testing and Individual Differences pt. 1
Lily Wang. Early Life born July 8, 1857 in Nice born as Alfredo Binetti father is a physician mother is an artist parents divorced when he was young and.
 What makes a good intelligence test?  Do Intelligence Tests actually measure intelligence?
Intelligence & Intelligence Testing. Psychometrics is a very sophisticated field which uses applied mathematics to measure psychological and behavioral.
MEASURING INTELLIGENCE Chapter 11: Pages
Intelligence theory and testing Lecture overview
Unit 6: Testing and Individual Differences
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution Introductory Psychology Concepts Assessing Intelligence.
Intelligence & Intelligence Testing Module 24. Intelligence  the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to a new.
Intelligence. Intelligence and Intelligence Testing Module 28.
Comparing the Multiple Intelligence Theories
History of Intelligence Tests Psychology. Intelligence The capacity to think and reason clearly, act purposefully and effectively in adapting to the environment.
Intelligence and Intelligence Testing Definitions of intelligence: Terman: the ability to carry on abstract thinking. Wechsler: The capacity of an individual.
None of the Above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude
Unit 11 – Intelligence and Personality Assessing Intelligence and Test Construction.
Assessing Intelligence Chapter 10, Lecture 3 “As heirs to Plato’s individualism, people in Western societies have pondered how and why individuals differ.
Assessing Intelligence
Assessing Intelligence. Why was intelligence tests created? Is it better to separate students into ability groups or to have mainstreamed classes? Why?
Unit 11 – Testing and Individual Differences ASSESSING INTELLIGENCE.
 Intelligence is a concept not a “thing”. We refer to peoples IQ as a trait like Height. That error of reasoning is called reification. Psychologist.
Brief History of Intelligence Testing Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School.
Psychological Testing in Flowers for Algernon.  IQ stands for Intelligence Quotient and is a score derived from one of several standardized tests designed.
I CAN: Explain how intelligence is measured Differentiate the Stanford-Binet from the Wechsler IQ tests Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007.
Unit 11 Key Figures. Charles Spearman ( ) Believed we have ONE general intelligence – g Had helped develop factor analysis, statistical procedure.
Intelligence Radwan Banimustafa Jordan university.
Intelligence and Mental Abilities You have to do the best with what God gave you.
Intelligence Chapter 7. Intelligence  The global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment.  Not necessarily,
Nation of Morons By Will and Abbie. Theory The Exposed fundamental problems involved in the attempts to measure intelligence. Due to race?
Administering an Intelligence Test: World War 1
Origins of Intelligence Testing  Intelligence Test  a method of assessing an individual’s mental aptitudes and comparing them to those of others, using.
Intelligence – Part 2. Write EVERYTHING in BLUE You Do NOT need to write what is in BLACK.
Ch Intelligence. What is intelligence? Varies by culture  Western cultures focus on cognitive tasks.
Intelligence. What is intelligence? Varies by culture  Western cultures focus on cognitive tasks.
Assessing Intelligence
Psychology MCQs ~Intelligence~. 1. According to Binet's mental-age scale, a retarded girl's mental age would be ________ her chronological age. a. equal.
MEASUREMENTS OF INTELLIGENCE. STANFORD-BINET SCALE Alfred Binet: devised first modern intelligence test 1916: revised by Louis Terman of Stanford University.
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
Intelligence does moderately correlate with brain size Remember: experience alters the brain Rats in stimulating environments develop thicker.
Myers PSYCHOLOGY Seventh Edition in Modules Module 31 Assessing Intelligence James A. McCubbin, Ph.D. Clemson University Worth Publishers.
 Who owns the fish?  Work on EQ Factor Questions if you do not complete (you will have 10 minutes next class- NO MORE)  Start working on Study Guide-
Chapter 11 Intelligence “Just Think Mr. Thompson”.
Measuring Intelligence Intelligence tests try to measure general mental abilities not “book smarts” or knowledge in a specific area.
Intelligence.
History of Intelligence testing
Unit 11: Testing and Individual Differences
Chapter 10: Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
AP Unit 11 Testing and Individual Differences pt. 1
INTELLIGENCE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING
Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
What is IQ? Does it Change Over Time?
Brief History of Intelligence Testing
Assessing Intelligence
Intelligence.
61.1 – Discuss the history of intelligence testing.
AREA OF STUDY 2: INTELLIGENCE & PERSONALITY
Intelligence Chapter 11 Notes 11-3 (obj.6-10)
Presentation transcript:

History of Intelligence testing The French government passed laws requiring that all French children attend school in the early 1900s French government asked psychologist Alfred Binet to help decide which students were mostly likely to experience difficulty in schools. Alfred Binet

The goal was to find a way to identify children who would need specialized assistance. Binet and his colleague, Theodore Simon began developing a number of questions that focused on things that had not been taught in school such as attention, memory and problem-solving skillsproblem-solving skills

Binet determined which types of questions served as the best predictors of school success some children able to answer more advanced questions that older children were generally able to answer, while other children of the same age were only able to answer questions that younger children could typically answer

Based on this observation, Binet suggested the concept of a mental age, or a measure of intelligence based on the average abilities of children of a certain age group.

This first intelligence test, referred to today as the Binet-Simon Scale, became the basis for the intelligence tests still in use today.

However, Binet himself did not believe that his psychometric instruments could be used to measure a single, permanent and inborn level of intelligence (Kamin, 1995).

Binet stressed the limitations of the test, suggesting that intelligence is far too broad a concept to quantify with a single number.

Instead, he insisted that intelligence is influenced by a number of factors, changes over time and can only be compared among children with similar backgrounds (Siegler, 1992).

Binet’s Warnings About Possible Misuse of Intelligence Testing 1) Do not and should not be used to measure innate intelligences. 2) Intelligence testing should not be used to label individuals.

The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test Binet-Simon Scale was brought to the United States, where it generated considerable interest. Stanford University psychologist Lewis Terman took Binet's original test and standardized it using a sample of American participants.

This adapted test, 1916, was called the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale became the standard intelligence test used in the U.S.

The Stanford-Binet intelligence test used a single number, known as the intelligence quotient (or IQ), to represent an individual's score on the test.

This score was calculated by dividing the test taker's mental age by their chronological age, and then multiplying this number by 100. For example, a child with a mental age of 12 and a chronological age of 10 would have an IQ of 120 (12 /10 x 100).

The Stanford-Binet remains a popular assessment tool today, despite going through a number of revisions over the years since its inception.

Intelligence Testing During World War I At the outset of World War I, U.S. Army officials were faced with the monumental task of screening an enormous number of army recruits

In 1917, psychologist Robert Yerkes developed two tests known as the Army Alpha and Beta tests.Robert Yerkes The Army Alpha was designed as a written test, the Army Beta was administered orally in cases where recruits were unable to read.

. The tests were administered to over two million soldiers in an effort to help the army determine which men were well suited to specific positions and leadership roles (McGuire, 1994).

At the end of WWI, the tests remained in use in a wide variety of situations outside of the military with individuals of all ages, backgrounds and nationalities.

Yerkes et al concluded 1) average mental age of White American adults was a meager 13 years, slightly above term of “moron”. (Explained this “the unconstrained breeding of the poor and feebleminded and the spread of Negro blood through interracial breeding”)

2) Europeans immigrants could be ranked on their intelligence by country of origin. (Fair people of western and northern Europe (Nordics) were most intelligent, darker people of southern Europe (Mediterranean and Slavs) of eastern Europe were less intelligent

3) Negroes were at bottom of the racial scale in intelligence

The results of these mental tests were inappropriately used to make sweeping and inaccurate generalizations about entire populations, which led some intelligence "experts" to exhort Congress to enact immigration restrictions (Kamin, 1995). For example, IQ tests were used to screen new immigrants as they entered the United States at Ellis Island.

The Wechsler Intelligence Scales The next development in the history of intelligence testing was the creation of a new measurement instrument by American psychologist David Wechsler.

Much like Binet, Wechsler believed that intelligence involved a number of different mental abilities, describing intelligence as, "the global capacity of a person to act purposefully, to think rationally, and to deal effectively with his environment" (1939).

Dissatisfied with the limitations of the Stanford-Binet, he published his new intelligence test known as the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) in 1955.

. The adult version of the test has been revised since its original publication and is now known as the WAIS-IV

Wechsler also developed two different tests specifically for use with children: the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) and the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI).

The WAIS-IV contains 10 subtests along with 5 supplemental tests. The test provides scores in four major areas of intelligence: a Verbal Comprehension Index, a Perceptual Reasoning Index, a Working Memory Index, and a Processing Speed Index.

The test also provides two broad scores that can be used as a summary of overall intelligence: a Full Scale IQ score that combines performance on all four index scores and a General Ability Index based on six subtest scores.

Subtest scores on the WAIS-IV can be useful in identifying learning disabilities, such as cases where a low score on some areas combined with a high score in other areas may indicate that the individual has a specific learning difficulty (Kaufman, 1990).

Rather than score the test based on chronological age and mental age, as was the case with the original Stanford-Binet, the WAIS is scored by comparing the test taker's score to the scores of others in the same age group.

The average score is fixed at 100, with two-thirds of scores lying in the normal range between 85 and 115. This scoring method has become the standard technique in intelligence testing and is also used in the modern revision of the Stanford- Binet test