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9Intelligence

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Title: 9Intelligence


1
9Intelligence
  • The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Development of Intelligence
  • The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Summary

2
The Concept of Intelligence
  • What Is Intelligence?
  • Intelligence
  • The ability to solve problems and to adapt to and
    learn from experiences.
  • It can only be evaluated indirectly.

3
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Tests
  • Individual Tests
  • Sir Frances Galton, the father of mental tests,
    believed that sensory, perceptual, and motor
    processes were the key dimensions of
    intelligence.

4
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Tests (continued)
  • Binet tests Devised by Alfred Binet at the
    request of the French Ministry of Education to
    determine which students would not profit from
    typical school instruction.
  • Mental Age (MA) An individuals level of mental
    development relative to others.
  • Intelligent Quotient (IQ) A term coined by
    William Stern (1912) to derive a score from an
    individuals mental age divided by chronological
    age multiplied by 100 (IQ MA/CA x 100).

5
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Tests (continued)
  • The Stanford-Binet Tests
  • Revised at Stanford University for use in the
    United States to analyze individual responses in
    verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning,
    abstract/visual reasoning, and short-term memory.
  • Scores approximate a normal distribution A
    symmetrical, bell-shaped curve appears, with a
    majority of the cases falling in the middle of
    the possible range of scores and few scores
    appearing toward the extremes of the range.

6
The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Normal Curve and Stanford-Binet IQ Scores

7
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Tests (continued)
  • The Wechsler Scales
  • The Wechsler scales not only provide an overall
    IQ score, but also yield scores on six verbal and
    five nonverbal measures, allowing examiners to
    see areas in which the individual is below
    average, average, or above average.
  • Group Tests of Intelligence
  • Though more economical and convenient than
    individual tests, group tests have some
    significant disadvantages.

8
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Sample Subscales of the Weschler Intelligence
    Scale for Children (WISC-III)

9
The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Use and Misuse of Intelligence Tests
  • The effectiveness of psychological tests depends
    on the knowledge, skill, and integrity of the
    user.
  • Real-world applications Predict school and job
    success.
  • Periodic assessment is required because they only
    measure current academic performance.
  • They are moderately correlated with work
    performance, but correlations decrease the longer
    people work at a job, and tests ignore
    motivation, physical and mental health, and
    social skills.

10
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Multiple Intelligences
  • Factor Approaches
  • Two-factor theory Spearmans theory that
    individuals have both general intelligence (g)
    and a number of specific abilities (s).
  • Factor analysis A statistical procedure that
    correlates test scores to identify underlying
    clusters (factors) used by Spearman to show that
    general intelligence and specific abilities
    account for a persons performance on an
    intelligence test.

11
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Factor Approaches (continued)
  • Multiple-factor theory Thurstones theory that
    intelligence consists of seven primary mental
    abilities verbal comprehension, number ability,
    word fluency, spatial visualization, associative
    memory, reasoning, and perceptual speed.

12
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Multiple Intelligences (continued)
  • Gardners Theory of Multiple Intelligences (IQ
    tests only measure a few of these)
  • Verbal skills
  • Mathematical skills
  • Spatial skills
  • Bodily-kinesthetic skills
  • Musical skills
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Intrapersonal skills
  • Naturalist skills

13
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Gardners Theory of Multiple Intelligences
    (continued)
  • Everyone has varying degrees of all eight
    intelligences.
  • There is considerable interest in applying
    Gardners theory of multiple intelligences to
    childrens education to help them discover and
    explore their domains of natural curiosity and
    talent.
  • Each day every student is exposed to materials
    that are designed to stimulate a whole range of
    human abilities.

14
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Multiple Intelligences (continued)
  • Sternbergs Triarchic Theory
  • There are three main types of intelligence
  • Analytical Traditional concept of intelligence
    as analytical thinking and abstract reasoning.
  • Creative Unique thinking that might not conform
    to teachers expectations.
  • Practical Social skills and common sense.
  • Most tasks require a combination of all three
    intelligences.

15
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Multiple Intelligences (continued)
  • Emotional Intelligence
  • The ability to perceive and express emotion
    accurately and adaptively, to understand emotion
    and emotional knowledge, to use feelings to
    facilitate thought, and to manage emotions in
    oneself and others.

16
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Multiple Intelligences (continued)
  • Do Children Have One Intelligence or Many
    Intelligences?
  • Although controversy exists over whether
    intelligence is a general ability, specific
    abilities, or both, multiple intelligence
    theories have stimulated us to think more broadly
    about what makes up peoples intelligence and
    competence.
  • Multiple intelligence theories have also
    motivated educators to develop programs that
    instruct students in different domains.

17
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Comparison of Gardners, Sternbergs, and
    Salovey/Mayer/Golemans Views of Intelligence

18
The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Influence of Heredity and Environment
  • Genetic Influences
  • Arthur Jensen (1969) argued that intelligence is
    primarily inherited and environment plays a
    minimal role.
  • Adoption studies suggest that though the
    educational levels of biological parents are
    better predictors of children's IQ scores than
    are the IQs of adoptive parents, environments
    nonetheless play an important role.

19
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Genetic Influences (continued)
  • Heritability The fraction of the variance in a
    population that is attributed to genetics.
  • Heritability refers to groups (populations), not
    to individuals (Okagaki, 2000).
  • Researchers have found that the heritability of
    intelligence increases from childhood to
    adulthood (McGue et al., 1993).

20
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Correlation between Intelligence Test Scores and
    Twin Status

21
The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Influence of Heredity and Environment
    (continued)
  • Environmental Influences
  • For most people, modifications in environment can
    change their IQ scores considerably.
  • Among the environmental factors that influence
    intelligence are socioeconomic status, parental
    communication with and support of children,
    quality of neighborhoods, and quality of schools.
  • The rapid increase in IQ scores around the world
    suggest the effects of education rather than
    heredity.

22
The Concept of Intelligence
  • The Increase in IQ Scores from 1932 to 1997

23
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Group Comparisons
  • Cross-Cultural Comparisons
  • Cultures vary in the way they define
    intelligence.
  • Western cultures view intelligence in terms of
    reasoning and thinking skills, Eastern cultures
    see intelligence as a way for members of a
    community to engage in social roles successfully.

24
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Group Comparisons (continued)
  • Cultural Bias in Testing
  • Early intelligence tests favored people from
    urban rather than rural environments,
    middle-socioeconomic status rather than
    low-socioeconomic status, and whites rather than
    African Americans.
  • Culture-fair tests Intelligence tests that are
    intended not to be culturally biased however,
    people with more education still score higher
    than those with less education because tests
    reflect what the dominant culture thinks is
    important.

25
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Sample Item from the Ravens Progressive Matrices
    Test

26
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Group Comparisons (continued)
  • Ethnic Comparisons
  • In the U.S., children from African American and
    Latino families score below children from white
    families on standardized intelligence tests.
  • As African Americans have gained social,
    economic, and educational opportunities, the gap
    between African Americans and whites on
    standardized intelligence tests has begun to
    narrow.
  • Stereotype threat The anxiety that ones
    behavior might confirm a negative stereotype
    about ones group.

27
The Concept of Intelligence
  • Group Comparisons (continued)
  • Gender Comparisons
  • The average scores of males and females do not
    differ on intelligence tests, but variability in
    their scores does differ (Brody, 2000), with
    males showing greater extremes in range.
  • Although there is extensive overlap in scores,
    gender differences exist in some intellectual
    areas
  • Males score better on spatial reasoning tasks.
  • Females score better in some verbal areas.

28
Learn and ReflectLearning Goal 1
  • Explain the nature of intelligence

29
Learn and ReflectLearning Goal 1
  • Review
  • What is intelligence?
  • What are the main individual tests of
    intelligence? What are some issues in the use of
    group tests of intelligence?
  • What theories of multiple intelligences have been
    developed? Do people have one intelligence or
    many intelligences?
  • What evidence indicates that heredity influences
    IQ scores? What evidence indicates that
    environment influences IQ scores?
  • What is known about the intelligence of people
    from different cultures and ethnic groups? To
    what extent are there differences in the
    intelligence of females and males?

30
Learn and ReflectLearning Goal 1
  • Reflect
  • A CD-ROM is being sold to parents for testing
    their childs IQ. What are some potential
    problems with parents giving their child an IQ
    test and interpreting the results?

31
The Development of Intelligence
  • Tests of Infant Intelligence
  • Arnold Gesell (1934) developed a measure that
    served as a clinical tool to help sort out
    potentially normal babies from abnormal ones.
  • Developmental quotient (DQ) An overall
    developmental score that combines subscores in
    the motor, language, adaptive, and
    personal-social domains of the Gesell assessment
    of infants.

32
The Development of Intelligence
  • Tests of Infant Intelligence (continued)
  • Bayley Scales of Infant Development
  • Widely used scales for assessing infants from 1
    to 42 months of age to diagnose developmental
    delays and plan intervention strategies.
  • The scale has three main components a Mental
    Scale, a Motor Scale, and the Infant Behavior
    Profile.
  • Scores on the Gesell Bayley scales do not
    correlate highly with IQ scores obtained later in
    childhood.

33
The Development of Intelligence
  • Tests of Infant Intelligence (continued)
  • The Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence
  • Focuses on the infants ability to process
    information.
  • Elicits similar performances from infants in
    different cultures.
  • Correlates with measures of intelligence in older
    children.
  • Measures of habituation and dishabituation
    predict later intelligence.

34
The Development of Intelligence
  • Stability and Change in Intelligence through
    Adolescence
  • There is a strong relation between IQ scores
    obtained at the ages of 6, 8, and 9 and IQ scores
    obtained at the age of 10.
  • However, intelligence test scores can fluctuate
    dramatically across the childhood years
    intelligence is not as stable as the original
    intelligence theorists envisioned.

35
Review and ReflectLearning Goal 2
  • Discuss the development of intelligence
  • Review
  • How is intelligence assessed during infancy?
  • How much does intelligence change through
    childhood and adolescence?
  • Reflect
  • As a parent, would you want your infants
    intelligence tested? Why or why not?

36
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Mental Retardation
  • A condition of limited mental ability in which
    the individual has a low IQ, usually below 70,
    has difficulty adapting to everyday life, and
    first exhibits these characteristics by age 18.
  • There are several ways to classify degrees of
    mental retardation the one adopted by most
    school systems uses IQ scores to categorize
    retardation as mild, moderate, severe, or
    profound.
  • Mental retardation may have an organic cause, or
    it may be social and cultural in origin.

37
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Classification of Mental Retardation Based on IQ

38
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Classification of Mental Retardation Based on
    Levels of Support Needed

39
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Giftedness
  • People who are gifted
  • Have a high IQ (130 or higher) or a superior
    talent in a certain area.
  • Although many gifted people throughout history
    experienced emotional distress, they are the
    exception, not the rule.
  • Recent studies conclude that gifted people tend
    to be more mature and have fewer emotional
    problems than others.

40
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Giftedness (continued)
  • Characteristics of children who are gifted
  • Precocity
  • Marching to their own drummer
  • A passion to master
  • Life course of the gifted Early on they have
    innate ability, strong family support, and years
    of training and practice.
  • Deliberate practice Appropriate level of
    difficulty, corrective feedback, opportunities
    for repetition.
  • The gifted become experts, but not major creators.

41
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Creativity
  • The ability to think about something in novel and
    unusual ways and come up with unique solutions to
    problems.
  • Creativity and intelligence are not the same
    thingthough most creative people are
    intelligent, not all intelligent people are
    creative.

42
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Creativity (continued)
  • Creativity requires divergent thinking
  • Divergent thinking Thinking that produces many
    answers to the same question characteristic of
    creativity.
  • Convergent thinking Thinking that produces one
    correct answer characteristic of the type of
    thinking required on traditional intelligence
    tests.

43
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Creativity (continued)
  • Guiding Childrens Creativity
  • Have children engage in brainstorminga technique
    in which children are encouraged to come up with
    creative ideas in a group, play off each others
    ideas, and say practically whatever comes to
    mindand come up with as many ideas as possible.
  • However, some children are more creative when
    they work alone.

44
The Extremes of Intelligence and Creativity
  • Guiding Childrens Creativity (continued)
  • Provide children with environments that stimulate
    creativity.
  • Dont overcontrol.
  • Encourage internal motivation.
  • Introduce children to creative people.

45
Review and ReflectLearning Goal 3
  • Describe the characteristics of mental
    retardation, giftedness, and creativity
  • Review
  • What is mental retardation and what are its
    causes?
  • What makes children gifted?
  • What makes people creative?

46
Review and ReflectLearning Goal 3
  • Reflect
  • If you were an elementary school teacher, what
    would you do to encourage students creativity?

47
Summary
  • Intelligence consists of the ability to solve
    problems and to adapt and learn from everyday
    experiences.
  • Sir Frances Galton is the father of mental tests.
    Alfred Binet developed the first intelligence
    test and created the concept of mental age.
    William Stern developed the concept of IQ for use
    with the Binet test.

48
Summary
  • When used by a judicious examiner, tests can be
    valuable tools for determining individual
    differences in intelligence.
  • Factor analysis is a statistical procedure that
    compares various items or measures and identifies
    factors that are correlated with each other.
  • Spearman (two-factor theory of g and s) and
    Thurstone (multiple-factor theory) used factor
    analysis in developing their views of
    intelligence.

49
Summary
  • Gardner believes there are eight types of
    intelligence verbal skills, mathematical skills,
    spatial skills, bodily-kinesthetic skills,
    musical skills, interpersonal skills,
    intrapersonal skills, and naturalist skills.

50
Summary
  • Sternbergs triarchic theory states that there
    are three main types of intelligence analytical,
    creative, and practical.
  • Emotional intelligence is the ability to perceive
    and express emotion accurately and adaptively, to
    understand emotion and emotional knowledge, to
    use feelings to facilitate thought, and to manage
    emotions in oneself and others.

51
Summary
  • The multiple-intelligences approaches have
    broadened the definition of intelligence and
    motivated educators to develop programs that
    instruct students in different domains.
  • Critics of multiple intelligences maintain that
    factors such as musical skills and creativity are
    not part of intelligence, and there is
    insufficient research to support the concept.

52
Summary
  • Genetic similarity might explain why identical
    twins show stronger correlations on intelligence
    tests than fraternal twins do.
  • IQs of adopted children are more similar to IQs
    of their biological parents than their adoptive
    parents.
  • Environmental influences on intelligence have
    also been demonstrated for example, how much
    parents talk with their children is correlated
    with childrens IQs educational child care has a
    positive influence on intelligence.

53
Summary
  • Cultures vary in the way they define
    intelligence.
  • Early intelligence tests favored white,
    middle-socioeconomic status, urban individuals.
  • Sources of bias in tests include lack of
    familiarity with a standard form of English, the
    content tested, or the testing situation, plus
    the fact that tests reflect the values and
    experience of the dominant culture.

54
Summary
  • In the United States, children from African
    American and Latino families score below children
    from white families on standardized intelligence
    tests.
  • Males are more likely than females to have
    extreme scores (high or low).
  • There are gender differences in specific
    intellectual abilities.

55
Summary
  • Gesell was an important early contributor to
    developmental testing of infants.
  • Tests designed to assess infant intelligence
    include the widely used Bayley scales.
  • The Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence, which
    assesses how effectively infants process
    information, is increasingly being used.
  • Habituation and dishabituation are related to
    standardized scores of intelligence in children.
  • Scores on intelligence tests fluctuate
    considerably.

56
Summary
  • Mental retardation is a condition of limited
    mental ability in which the individual has low
    IQ, usually below 70, has difficulty adapting to
    everyday life, and has an onset of these
    characteristics by age 18.
  • Most affected individuals have an IQ in the 5570
    range (mild retardation).
  • Retardation can have an organic cause or be
    social and cultural in origin.

57
Summary
  • People who are gifted have high intelligence (an
    IQ of 130 or higher) or superior talent in a
    certain area.
  • Three characteristics of gifted children are
    precocity, marching to their own drummer, and a
    passion to master their domain.
  • Giftedness is likely a consequence of both
    heredity and environment.

58
Summary
  • Creativity is the ability to think about
    something in novel and unusual ways and come up
    with unique solutions to problems.
  • Most creative people are intelligent, but not
    everyone with a high IQ is creative.
  • Creative people tend to be divergent thinkers
    traditional intelligence measures convergent
    thinking.
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