Intelligence Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning.

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Intelligence Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning

Defining Intelligence w The ability to perform varying tasks well w The ability to perform tasks associated with academic success very well

History of Intelligence Testing w Galton Believed that intelligence was related to visual acuity and reaction time w Binet Commissioned by the French government to create a test that would identify students in grade school that would have difficulties performing in the classroom proposed the concept of “mental age”-a score obtained by comparing an individual’s performance on an intelligence test with the average score obtained by children of the same age

History of Intelligence Testing w Terman (Stanford-Binet Scale) revised the Binet scale created the measure we now know of as the IQ “IQ” is determined by taking the mental age obtained on an intelligence test and dividing it by the chronological age of the individual taking the test Extended the test to also assess IQ in adults The normal distribution of intelligence scores

History of Intelligence Testing w Wechsler Developed a more accurate test for adults Examples of some of the test developed by Wechsler include Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC)

Characteristics of Tests w Validity-the ability of the test to measure what you say it will measure w Reliability-the ability of the test to measure a construct with consistency w Standardization-the use of reference scores for interpreting an individual’s performance

Extremes of Intelligence w Mental Retardation mild (IQ scores of 50-70) These individuals can obtain about a sixth grade education They usually live in a supervised community Of the mentally retarded population, about 85% of the population fall into this category moderate- (IQ scores of 35-50) These individuals can obtain about a second grade education They are capable of jobs with simple skills but must always be supervised About 10% of the mentally retarded population fall into this category severe (IQ 20-35) These individuals will always require regular supervision and will demonstrate poor motor and communication skills About 4% of the mentally retarded population fall into this category profound (IQ below 20) This group makes up about 1% of the total mentally retarded population These individuals have very little sensorimotor capability and will always require supervision

Extremes of Intelligence w Mentally Gifted Refers to individuals with well above average IQ scores May also be used to identify people who have demonstrated impressive performance on specific skills (ex: someone who performs extraordinarily well on memory tests for numbers but who has an average IQ score)

Kinds of Intelligence w Spearman - “g” and “s” He believed that intelligence was broken down into two types “g”-represented a general intelligence “s”-represented excellent performance on specific abilities

Kinds of Intelligence w Sternberg - Triarchic Theory He believed that intelligence could be broken down into three categories creative intelligence-ability to solve problems with novel solutions practical intelligence-”common sense” analytical intelligence-ability to analyze a problem into its integral components

Kinds of Intelligence w Gardner - Theory of Multiple Intelligences He believed that intelligence could be broken down into seven categories: LinguisticLogical-mathematical MusicalMovement InterpersonalIntrapersonal Spatial Reasoning

Biological Contributions to Intelligence w Hereditary Estimates place the heritability of intelligence at 50-60% Concordance rates for identical twins is about 70%

Environmental Contributions to Intelligence w Enriched Environments Ex: providing things to touch and to look at w Prenatal Teratogen Exposure Ex: lead poisoning