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Chapter 10: Intelligence & Testing
Cognitive Abilities Chapter 10: Intelligence & Testing
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Cognitive Ability The capacity to perform higher mental processes (such as reasoning & problem solving) Cognitive Ability Robert Sternberg’s Characteristics Possession of knowledge Efficiently use knowledge Employ reasoning in different environments Intelligence
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The History of Measuring Intelligence
French psychologist Identified & studied children performing poorly in schools. Alfred Binet Chronological Age compared w/ Mental Age Aged-Graded Test Items English Language Version of the Binet Exam Stanford-Binet Test
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History of IQ Tests Mental Age/Chronological Age x 100=IQ
Intelligence Quotient Rank individuals according to IQ. Pinpoint who did/did not have “sustainable” intelligence. Argument at this time was intelligence is inherited. Purpose & Intent Many argued intelligence is not simply inherited. Later theories suggested intelligence develops w/education & experience. Group tests proved to be culturally biased. Controversial
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History of IQ Tests Developed tests to improve upon earlier ones.
David Wechsler Included VERBAL & NON-VERBAL subtests Constructed so that success was less dependent having a on formal education Subtests were scored separately 3 Key Differences WAIS: Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale WISC: Wechlser Intelligence Scale for Children Special Versions
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Today’s Tests of Intelligence
Verbal Scale-7 Subsets Performance Scale-7 Subsets Raw score of individual is compared to the raw score of others in same age group Wechsler Tests Ten Subsets Include Fluid Reasoning & Knowledge Stanford-Binet (5th Edition) Points are added up for every correct answer Total score compared to others 100 is the average: Score (IQ) reflects relative standing w/in your age population IQ Scoring
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The Normal Distribution of IQ Scores
When the IQ scores in the overall population are plotted on a graph, a bell shaped curve appears. The average IQ score of any given age group is Half of the scores are higher than 100 and half are lower than Approximately 68% of the IQ scores of any age group fall between 84 and 116; about 16% fall below 84, and about 16 % fall above 116.
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Stevenson Mental Inventory Scale
17-20 (# correct) IQ: 13-16 IQ: 9-12 IQ: 8 or less IQ: 82 or less
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Types of Tests Measures a person’s capacity to learn certain things/perform certain tasks. ACT/GRE/SAT Aptitude Tests Measure what a person has accomplished or learned in a particular area. Classroom Tests Achievement Tests
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Measuring Quality of Tests
Procedure for observing behavior in a standard situation. Standardized Objective Norms Tests Degree to which a test can be repeated w/ same results Calculate correlation coefficient (b/w 2 sets of scores on same test by the same person) Test/Retest Reliability Method; Alternate Form Method; Split-Half Method Reliability Degree to which test scores are interpreted correctly & used appropriately Content validity; Criterion Validity; Predictive Validity; Construct Validity Validity
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