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Intelligence

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It's an idea developed by German psychologist William Stern. IQ = ___mental age_ X 100 ... Howard Gardner. intelligence comes in different 'packages' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intelligence


1
Intelligence
  • Module 22

2
Intelligence
  • Includes
  • capacity to learn from experience
  • ability to solve problems
  • capacity to reason clearly
  • Robert Sternberg, 1997, intelligence is...the
    mental abilities needed to select, adapt to, and
    shape environments.

3
Alfred Binet
  • commissioned in 1904, by the French government to
    study the problem of determining childrens
    intelligence.
  • collaborated with Theodore Simon
  • set out to measure mental age, a chronological
    age typical of a childs performance at a certain
    level
  • was successful in creating a series of questions
    to discern intellect

4
Lewis Terman of Stanford University
  • revised Binets intelligence test
  • adapted some of the original and added others
  • established new age norms
  • extended the upper range from teenagers to
    superior adults
  • called it the Stanford-Binet

5
What is an IQ?
  • Its an idea developed by German psychologist
    William Stern
  • IQ ___mental age_____ X 100
  • chronological age
  • Average IQ score 100
  • Thus, if a 8 year old child tests with a mental
    age of 10, her I Q would be 125.

6
Factor Analysis
  • This is a way of identifying clusters of test
    items that measure a common ability.
  • Examples verbal, spatial, reasoning, social,
    leadership ability

7
Robert Sternberg -Three aspects of Intelligence
  • Analytical academic problem-solving, a single
    right answer
  • Creative novel ideas, reacting to novel
    situations
  • Practical required for everyday tasks, need
    multiple solutions

8
Creativity - Sternberg
  • The ability to produce ideas that are both novel
    and valuable.
  • Five components of creativity
  • Expertise base of knowledge
  • Imaginative thinking skills ability to see
    things in a new way.
  • Venturesome personality tolerance for ambiguity
    and risk
  • Intrinsic motivation internally motivated
  • Creative environment - support

9
Howard Gardner
  • intelligence comes in different packages
  • accounts for the savant syndrome (low score on IQ
    tests, high ability, even brilliance, in one
    area).
  • we have multiple intelligences

10
Mental Retardation
11
Test Construction
  • Terminology
  • Standardization comparing scores to a
    pretested, representative group
  • Reliability test-retest constancy
  • Validity the test must measure what it says it
    will measure
  • Content validity measuring the specific
    pertinent behavior

12
Emotional Intelligence - Gardner
  • The ability to perceive, understand, and manage
    emotions.
  • Self awareness empathy
  • Delay gratification handle others
  • Self-control

13
Assessing Intelligence
  • WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
  • WISC Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
  • Created by David Wechsler
  • Gives a Verbal and Performance score, great
    differences between the two may indicate a
    learning disability or other problem/

14
Test Construction
  • Criterion what the test is designed to predict
  • Predictive validity - the tests ability to
    predict future achievement (also called
    criterion-related validity)

15
How well do aptitude tests predict success?
  • They are highly predictive in the early grades,
    but not as we get older.
  • The best predictor of future grades is past
    grades!!
  • The best predictor of future behavior is past
    behavior.

16
Genetics and Environment
17
Genetic Influences on IQ
  • Identical twins have almost identical IQ scores -
    raised apart or together.
  • The gene on chromosome 6, is found in about 2/3
    of children with very high IQ scores.
  • Smarter mice have been produced by injecting an
    extra gene into fertilized eggs.
  • Adopted children resemble their adopted parents
    less and less with age.

18
Environmental Influences on IQ
  • Fraternal twins score more alike than other
    siblings.
  • Genes and environment interact to shape the
    brain.
  • Severe disadvantage deeply harms children.
  • Programs like Head-Start have immediate positive
    effects that are reduced over time.

19
Education
  • Education and intelligence enhance each other.
  • It pays off in increased earnings later in life.
  • IQ scores rise during the school year and fall
    during the summer.

20
Ethnic Similarities and Differences
  • In the U.S. there is a gap in average IQ scores
    between whites, blacks, and Hispanics.
  • Other countries also have IQ score differences
    among different ethnic populations.
  • Differences may be due to the environment.

21
Gender Similarities and Differences
  • No overall difference in gender IQ scores
  • Girls are better spellers.
  • Girls are more verbally fluent.
  • Boys are more often in special education.
  • Boys talk later, stutter more, have difficulty
    with reading more often.
  • In high school, boys underachieve more often then
    girls by a 21 ratio.

22
What about math?
  • In math grades the typical girl equals or
    surpasses the average boy.
  • Females have the edge in computation.
  • Males have the edge in problem solving.
  • Males can quickly rotate 3D objects in their
    minds.
  • More western males score at the top, but females
    score equally in the east.
  • Exposure to male hormones increases spatial
    ability.

23
What about emotion?
  • Women are better emotion detectors than men
  • Myers speculates that because women need to read
    the emotions of their infants and would-be
    lovers, they have developed more empathy.

24
Bias
  • IQ tests are biased in the sense that they detect
    genetic differences and cultural, environmental
    factors.
  • Gender and racial bias are also factors in
    teaching and testing.
  • Sometimes IQ tests are wrongly used to
    discriminate.
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