None of the Above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude

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

Chapter 9: Intelligence and Psychological Testing
Intelligence, IQ, and Crime 4 History of mental testing and IQ 4 The relationship between IQ and Crime 4 Issues of Spuriousness 4 Direct, or Indirect Effect.
Ch. 8 Intelligence and Mental Abililty Definition of Intelligence: A general term referring to the abilities involved in learning an adaptive behavior.
The Feebleminded Self: Measuring Intelligence, Race and Eugenics.
INTELLIGENCE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING. KEY CONCEPTS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING Psychological test: a standardized measure of a sample of a person’s behavior.
History of Intelligence Tests AP Psychology. Intelligence The capacity to think and reason clearly, act purposefully and effectively in adapting to the.
P S Y C H O L O G Y T h i r d E d i t i o n by Drew Westen John Wiley & Sons, Inc. PowerPoint  Presentation C h a p t e r 8 I N T E L L I G E N C E.
Assessing Intelligence
Intelligence.
Intelligence What is it? How do we measure it? Are those tests valid?
AP Unit 11 Testing and Individual Differences pt. 1
History of Intelligence testing The French government passed laws requiring that all French children attend school in the early 1900s French government.
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?
MEASURING INTELLIGENCE Chapter 11: Pages
Intelligence theory and testing Lecture overview
Unit 6: Testing and Individual Differences
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.
A nation of morons New Scientist (6 May 1982) pp349-52
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.
LEARNING GOAL 8.2: EVALUATE DIFFERENT THEORIES AND MEASURES OF INTELLIGENCE. Intelligence.
Assessing Intelligence
Assessing Intelligence. Why was intelligence tests created? Is it better to separate students into ability groups or to have mainstreamed classes? Why?
Introduction to Psychology
Intelligence.
Brief History of Intelligence Testing Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School.
Session 7 Standardized Assessment. Standardized Tests Assess students’ under uniform conditions: a) Structured directions for administration b) Procedures.
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.
1 Chapter 1 History of Testing and Assessment 2 Testing Vs. Assessment Assessment includes a broad array of evaluation procedures, such as: The Clinical.
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?
Intelligence CHAPTER 16 LESSONS 16.1 Measuring Intelligence
Intelligence – Part 2. Write EVERYTHING in BLUE You Do NOT need to write what is in BLACK.
Intelligence Testing.
4. Compare Gardner’s and Sternberg’s theories of intelligence.
Intelligence Chapter 11. History of Intelligence  Alfred Binet (1904)  Test of academic progress Mental age  Terman (1916) Intelligence Quotient (IQ)
Assessing Intelligence
UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOLOGY 10 TH EDITION By Robert Feldman Powerpoint slides by Kimberly Foreman Revised for 10th Ed by Cathleen Hunt 1 Copyright McGraw-Hill,
Assessment in Counseling Chapter 1 Levi Armstrong, Psy.D.
INTELLIGENCE. Intelligence Intelligence involves the application of cognitive skills and knowledge to: –Learn –Solve problems –Obtain ends valued by the.
MEASUREMENTS OF INTELLIGENCE. STANFORD-BINET SCALE Alfred Binet: devised first modern intelligence test 1916: revised by Louis Terman of Stanford University.
The Feebleminded Self: Measuring Intelligence, Race and Eugenics
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
Measuring Minds: Intelligence and Personality Testing.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 1 Chapter 9 INTELLIGENCE Section 1: What Is Intelligence? Section 2: Measurement of Intelligence.
IntelligenceIntelligence Chapter 11. What is intelligence? A mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use.
 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”.
Intelligence (Chapter 11) Lecture Outline : History of intelligence IQ and normal distributions Measurement.
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Intelligence.
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
History of Intelligence testing
Assessment in Counseling
Testing an Individual Differences
Chapter 10: Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
AP Unit 11 Testing and Individual Differences pt. 1
INTELLIGENCE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING
What is IQ? Does it Change Over Time?
Brief History of Intelligence Testing
Test Review Chapter 11.
INTELLIGENCE: IQ & TESTING.
Chapter 10: Intelligence & Testing
61.1 – Discuss the history of intelligence testing.
Unit 11: Testing and Individual Differences
Presentation transcript:

None of the Above: Behind the Myth of Scholastic Aptitude Ch. 9: The Cult of Mental Measurement

Objectives Think critically about the history and rationale of the first IQ tests, and Scholastic Aptitude Test. Become familiar with the background of the individuals who developed IQ testing and the SAT. Think critically about the meritocratic rationale infused in the testing movement. Become familiar with forms of test bias.

History of Intelligence Testing Head Circumference (Francis Galton 1880) – first attempts to measure intelligence Binet-Simon (Alfred Binet 1909) – first “intelligence test” comissioned by French gov to separate children into vocational vs academic schooling did not design test to measure ‘intelligence’ created concept of mental age (MA)

The History of IQ testing First IQ tests developed by Alfred Binet Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon 30 items of increasing difficulty - 1905 Revision 1908 – age specific versions These were developed to identify children who needed ‘special’ education - Binet believed that IQ could be increased by education

Henry Herbert Goddard (1866-1957) Major Contributions Translated the Binet-Simon intelligence scale into English (1908) Distributed 22,000 copies of the translated Binet scale and 88,000 answer blanks across the United States (1908-1915) Established the first laboratory for the psychological study of mentally retarded persons (1910) Helped to draft the first American law mandating special education (1911) Strongly argued the hereditarian position

Intelligence Testing • Alfred Binet • Introduction of Mental Age – 1916 L.M. Terman & Stanford Colleagues revise Binet’s test for use in the United States • Introduction of the term IQ – Mental Age / Chronological Age = IQ

Intelligence Testing Intelligence Testing World War I - Robert Yerkes – Need for large-scale group administered ability tests by the army – Army commissions Yerkes, then head of the American Psychological Association, to develop two structured tests of human abilities Army Alpha - required reading ability Army Beta - did not require reading ability Testing “frenzy” hits between World War I and the 1930s.

Question from the Army Beta test What’s missing from each picture? Robert Yerkes (1876 – 1956) Question from the Army Beta test What’s missing from each picture? 13

Administration of the Army Alpha and Beta tests, the first “group tests,” to be followed in due course by the SAT, LSAT, GRE, etc. 14

Carl Brigham Carl Brigham (Yerkes colleague) Explained the differences in terms of racial superiority “we notice the Einsteins of the world BECAUSE they are exceptional for their Jewish race” Brigham quite literally created the culture of standardized testing. He invented the 200-800 scale, the delta difficulty rating system, the practice of testing ne\v questions by burying them in actual tests, the equating of tests from one year to another, and the internally justified item-analysis method still used by ET'S. The theoretical foundations of the SAT

Questions: What types of bias does Owen note, in The Cult of Mental Measurement? How did WWI & WWII affect the testing movement? What are some of the problems with the test questions Owen details in this chapter? What role did The Cult of Mental Measurement envision for IQ tests and the SAT?

The SAT The point of the SAT was to extend the Alpha standard to what Brigham and the Board viewed as mainstream American culture. The SAT was to be the cornerstone of a new American social order - the aristocracy of aptitude, the meritocracy

The SAT (U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Current Population Survey) Mean verbal SAT score for children in households with incomes below $10,000: 427 Mean verbal SAT score for children in households with incomes above $100,000: 559

There is still no clear operational definition of intelligence Both race and IQ are political rather than biological facts (Socially constructed)

Heredity & Intelligence