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8. A Topical Approach to. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT. Intelligence. John W. Santrock. The Concept of Intelligence. What Is Intelligence?. Difficult to define because it is a complex concept that includes many different aspects Common definitions: Thinking skills
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8 A Topical Approach to LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT Intelligence John W. Santrock
The Concept of Intelligence What Is Intelligence? • Difficult to define because it is a complex concept that includes many different aspects • Common definitions: • Thinking skills • Ability to adapt to and learn from everyday experiences
The Concept of Intelligence The Binet Tests • Mental age (MA)—individual’s level of mental development relative to others • Intelligence quotient (IQ)—person’s mental age divided by chronological age, multiplied by 100 • Normal distribution—symmetrical distribution of scores around a mean
The Concept of Intelligence The Normal Curve and Stanford-Binet IQ Scales
The Concept of Intelligence Common IQ Tests • The Stanford-Binet • Overall IQ, plus verbal comprehension, nonverbal reasoning and memory factors • One version for all ages • The Wechsler Scales • Overall IQ, verbal IQ, performance IQ • Three versions for different age groups
The Concept of Intelligence The Use and Misuse of Intelligence Tests • Intelligence tests are: • substantially correlated with school performance • moderately correlated with work performance • IQ tests can easily lead to false expectations about individual • Other factors also affect success
The Concept of Intelligence Factor Approaches to Intelligence Two-factortheory Spearman’s theory that individuals have both general intelligence, g, and specific intelligences, s, Multiple-factortheory Thurstone’s theory that intelligence consists of seven primary mental abilities: verbal comprehension, number ability, word fluency, spatial visualization, associative memory, reasoning, perceptual speed
The Concept of Intelligence Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences • Verbal • Mathematical • Spatial • Bodily-Kinesthetic • Musical Skills • Interpersonal • Intrapersonal • Naturalist
The Concept of Intelligence Sternberg’s Triarchic Theoryof Intelligence • Three main types of intelligence • Analytical (problem-solving) • Creative (unique, insightful) • Practical (social skills, street smarts)
The Concept of Intelligence Triarchic Theory in the Classroom • Analytic ability favored in conventional schools • Creative students may be reprimanded or marked down for nonconformist answers • Practical students may do better outside school
The Concept of Intelligence Emotional Intelligence • Perceive and express emotions accurately and adaptively • Understand emotion and emotional knowledge • Use feelings to facilitate thought • Manage emotions in oneself and others
The Concept of Intelligence The Influence of Heredity and Environment • Genetic Influences • Heritability—fraction of variance in IQ in a population that is attributed to genetics • Environmental Influences • Modifications in environment can change IQ scores considerably • Parent communication • Schooling
The Concept of Intelligence Culture and Intelligence • Cross-cultural comparisons problematic • Different cultures define intelligence differently • Cultural bias in testing • Culture-fair tests contain items that all individuals have an equal chance of doing well on
Ethnicity and Intelligence Comparisons • As a group, African Americans students average lower intelligence test scores than White students • Individual scores vary considerably • Socioeconomic status may have more effect than ethnicity • Stereotype threat - fear of confirming negative stereotypes can raise anxiety during testing
The Development of Intelligence Other Aspects of Intelligence (John Horn) • Crystallized intelligence • Accumulated information and verbal skills, which increase with age • Fluid intelligence • Ability to reason abstractly, which steadily declines from middle adulthood on
The Development of Intelligence Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence and Age
The Development of Intelligence The Seattle Longitudinal Study • Since 1956, studied: • Vocabulary • Verbal memory • Number computations • Spatial orientation • Inductive reasoning • Perceptual speed
The Development of Intelligence Longitudinal Changes in Six Intellectual Abilities
The Development of Intelligence Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Comparisons of Intellectual Change
The Development of Intelligence Wisdom • Expert knowledge about practical aspects of life that permits excellent judgment about important matters • High levels of wisdom are rare • Emerges late adolescence and early adulthood • Factors other than age are critical • Personality-related factors better predictors of wisdom
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity Mental Retardation • Condition of limited mental ability • Low IQ on traditional test of intelligence • Difficulty adapting to everyday life. • Onset of characteristics by age 18
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity Giftedness • Above-average intelligence (IQ of 130 or higher) or superior talent for something • Precocity • March to their own drummer • Passion to master • Greater maturity and fewer emotional problems
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity Creative Thinking • Ability to think in novel and unusual ways • Come up with unique solutions to problems
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity Characteristics of Creative Thinkers • Flexibility and playful thinking • Inner motivation • Willingness to risk • Objective evaluation of work
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity Changes in Creativity During Adulthood • Individuals’ most creative products were generated in their thirties • 80% of most important creative contributions completed by age 50 • Researchers found creativity often peaks in forties before declining