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1. Intelligence Prepared by Michael J. Renner, Ph.D.
These slides 2001 Prentice Hall Psychology Publishing.
Prepared by Michael J. Renner, Ph.D.
These slides 2001 Prentice Hall Psychology Publishing.
2. Intelligence & Testing: Outline Intelligence Tests
The Nature of Intelligence
The Great Debates
Education Chapter OutlineChapter Outline
3. Thoughts About Intelligence Its easier to administer tests than to give everybody a try at being a medical student or a Supreme Court judge.
Sandra Scarr
Intelligence is purposeful invention of new procedures, or applications of old procedures, in a new context to solve a problem.
Jean Piaget
Its one of the laws of nature that half of the people have got to be below average.
Common sense, isnt.
4. Intelligence Tests The Stanford-Binet
The Wechsler Scales
Group Aptitude Tests
Are Intelligence Tests Accurate?
Are Intelligence Tests Biased? Section outlineSection outline
5. The Stanford-Binet A new type of test, developed by Alfred Binet in 1904 to screen French school children for problems
Translated into English and adapted for the U.S. by Lewis Terman of Stanford University
Mental Age: The average age of children who achieve a certain level of performance
6. Intelligence Quotient Stern (1914) devised the Intelligence Quotient (IQ)
Shifts the focus to the rate of development
Allows children of different ages to be compared
This ratio no longer used in its literal form
7. Group Aptitude Tests Stanford-Binet, Wechsler, and other scales test one person at a time
This is not practical for quick, large-scale assessment
During World War I, the U.S. Army developed two tests that could be group-administered
Alpha for those who could read English
Beta for all other recruits
Group tests are now common
Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)
American College Test (ACT)
Graduate Record Examination (GRE)
8. Distribution of SAT Scores Figure 12.5b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Figure 12.5b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
9. Are Intelligence Tests Accurate?Criteria for Psychological Tests Standardization: The procedure by which existing norms are used to interpret an individuals test score
Reliability: The extent to which a test yields consistent results over time or using alternate forms
Validity: The extent to which a test measures what its supposed to measure
10. Standardization Establishing situation and procedure for testing
Determining typical scores
Sampling from appropriate population
Determining average score and characteristics of distribution of scores
11. Reliability A reliable test measures something consistently
Reliability doesnt address what is being measured
Forms of reliability
Test-Retest: Producing similar results on different occasions
Split half: The degree to which alternate forms of a test produce similar results
12. Validity A valid test measures what is claims to measure
Validity without reliability is impossible
Assessing validity
Content validity
Criterion-related validity
a.k.a., predictive
13. Raven's Culture-Fair Test Visual complete the series problems
Increasing difficulty, i.e., progressive
Designed to be free of cultural bias
It is less influenced by sociocultural factors than other IQ tests
It is not culture-free Figure 12.6 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Raven, J. C. , Court, J. H., & Raven, J. (1985). A manual for Ravens progressive matrices and vocabulary scales. London: H. K. Lewis.
Figure 12.6 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Raven, J. C. , Court, J. H., & Raven, J. (1985). A manual for Ravens progressive matrices and vocabulary scales. London: H. K. Lewis.
14. The Nature of Intelligence General Intelligence
Gardners Frames of Mind
Sternbergs Triarchic Theory Section outlineSection outline
15. General Intelligence Factor Analysis
Infant Measures and IQ
Neural Speed and Efficiency
Multifactor Models
16. Spearmans Theory of Intelligence Spearman theorized that individuals differ in general ability (g)
To explain why correlations among tests are not perfect, he theorized that each test score is also affected by the specific ability being tested Figure 12.7 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Figure 12.7 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
17. Spearmans g Factor Spearman proposed a General Intelligence (g)
All-purpose ability
Underlies all mental ability
Specific Abilities (s)
Abilities particularly relevant to this task or some part of it
g and one or more ss contribute to performing any particular task
18. Neural Speed and Intelligence Recorded time required for brain to react to visual stimuli
Ordered subjects from slowest (1) to fastest (5)
Subjects with higher conduction speed also had higher scores on an intelligence test Figure 12.8 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Reed, T. E., & Jensen, A. R. (1992). Conduction velocity in a brain nerve pathway of normal adults correlates with intelligence level. Intelligence, 16, 259-272.Figure 12.8 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Reed, T. E., & Jensen, A. R. (1992). Conduction velocity in a brain nerve pathway of normal adults correlates with intelligence level. Intelligence, 16, 259-272.
19. Gardner's Frames of Mind Seven independent modular systems:
Linguistic intelligence
Logical - mathematical intelligence
Spatial intelligence
Musical intelligence
Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence
Interpersonal intelligence
Intrapersonal intelligence
20. Sternberg's Triarchic Theory Analytic - a.k.a. Components
Comparing, analyzing, and evaluating.
This type of processes correlates best with IQ
Creative - a.k.a. Experiential
Inventing or designing solutions to new problems.
Practical - a.k.a. Contextual
Using (i.e., applying) the things you know in everyday contexts.
21. The Great Debates Nature and Nurture
The Racial Gap
Sex Differences Section outlineSection outline
22. Nature's Influence on IQ Scores The greater the genetic similarity between two individuals, the more similar are their IQ scores.
This suggests a genetic component to intelligence Figure 12.10a from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Bouchard, T. J., Jr., & McGue, M. (1981). Familial studies of intelligence. Science, 212, 1055-1059.
Figure 12.10a from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Bouchard, T. J., Jr., & McGue, M. (1981). Familial studies of intelligence. Science, 212, 1055-1059.
23. Nurture's Influence on IQ Scores All other things being equal, two individuals raised together will have more similar IQ scores than those raised apart.
This is evidence that the environment shapes intelligence in important ways. Figure 12.10b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Bouchard, T. J., Jr., & McGue, M. (1981). Familial studies of intelligence. Science, 212, 1055-1059.
Figure 12.10b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Bouchard, T. J., Jr., & McGue, M. (1981). Familial studies of intelligence. Science, 212, 1055-1059.
24. Effects of Schooling Children from comparable schools
One with 180-day year
One with 210-day year
Children began study performing similarly
At end of study, extended-year children performed better on math (shown) and reading Figure 12.11b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source: Frazier, J. A., & Morrison, F. J. (1998). The influence of extended-year schooling on the growth of achievement and perceived competence in early elementary school. Child Development, 69, 495-517.
Figure 12.11b from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source: Frazier, J. A., & Morrison, F. J. (1998). The influence of extended-year schooling on the growth of achievement and perceived competence in early elementary school. Child Development, 69, 495-517.
25. Scores of Future College Grads Cognitive test scores from grades 8 16
Future graduates only
Initial gap between black and white students was very much narrowed by the end of college
Education has a vital equalizing role
Letting each realize their potential
26. Explaining Group Differences Within a group with all treated exactly the same, differences may reflect genetics.
When one group differs from another, the differences may reflect environmental differences. Figure 12.12 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Figure 12.12 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
27. Culture and Achievement American students spend less time in school and studying than Taiwanese or Japanese students Figure 12.13 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Figure 12.13 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
28. Sex Differences in Intelligence Girls outscore boys on verbal abilities and reading
Girls are better at arithmetic in grade school, but boys surpass them by junior high school
Males outperform females on spatial tasks The correct answers are 1(a) and 2(b)
Figure 12.15 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
The correct answers are 1(a) and 2(b)
Figure 12.15 from:
Kassin, S. (1998). Psychology, second edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
29. Education Giftedness
Mental Retardation
The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy Section outlineSection outline
30. Extremes of Intelligence Mental Giftedness
Intelligence substantially above average
Different criteria are used in different settings
Mental Retardation
Organic vs. Cultural-familial retardation
Descriptive terms:
Mild (IQ between 50-70)
Moderate (IQ between 35-49)
Severe (IQ between 20 and 34)
Profound (IQ less than 20)
31. Self-Fulfilling Prophecy A persons expectation can lead to its own fulfillment
Teachers with low expectations may settle for less
If students are told a test is important, they may respond by performing either better or worse
African American students are aware of negative stereotypes
Vulnerability to stereotype undermines performance Figure 12.17 from:
Kassin, S. (2001). Psychology, third edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Steele, C. M. & Aronson, J. (1995). Stereotype threat and the intellectual test performance of African Americans. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 69, 797-811.Figure 12.17 from:
Kassin, S. (2001). Psychology, third edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Source:
Steele, C. M. & Aronson, J. (1995). Stereotype threat and the intellectual test performance of African Americans. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 69, 797-811.