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The Intelligence Debate

The Intelligence Debate. Some of the issues related to the Intelligence debate (psychological, social, economic, political) What is intelligence??! What do intelligence measures really tell us? Success (validity)? How applicable is intelligence to life? (e.g. street smarts)?

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The Intelligence Debate

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  1. The Intelligence Debate • Some of the issues related to the Intelligence debate (psychological, social, economic, political) • What is intelligence??! • What do intelligence measures really tell us? Success (validity)? • How applicable is intelligence to life? (e.g. street smarts)? • Does one view of intelligence demean (or underestimate) other types of intelligence? • What about Intelligence tests? Bias/problems in intelligence testing? • Nature v. nurture? What are the relative contributions of each? • Can intelligence be improved or is it stable? • How might we close gaps between groups? • Gifted education and private testing? How did I get here? • Ads/disads of segregating on the basis of intelligence? • What is the role of intelligence in esteem?

  2. One Definition • Intelligence A mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations • What about Achievement? Knowledge?

  3. Early Theories of Intelligence • Spearman’s general intelligence (g)A single factor that Spearman and others believe(d) underlies specific mental abilities

  4. Early Theories of Intelligence • L.L.Thurstoneidentified seven distinct Primary mental abilities (spatial, perceptual speed, numerical ability, verbal meaning, memory, word fluency and reasoning) taken together = general intelligence • Influences intelligence testing/field of psychometrics. Emphasized Factor analysis • First to suggest multiple intelligence

  5. Cattell’s Crystallized and FluidIntelligence • Fluid intelligence the ability to find meaning in confusion and solve new problems; to draw inferences and understand the relationships of various concepts; independent of acquired knowledge • Crystallized intelligence the ability to use skills, knowledge, and experience. Not equated with memory or knowledge, but it does rely on accessing information from long-term memory • CI is not the "crystallized" form of Fluid. They are believed to be separate neural and mental systems. Most intelligence tests attempt to measure both (WAIS)

  6. Measuring Intelligence • Origins of Intelligence Testing • Binet-Simon. Original purposes • The term "IQ” was devised by the German psychologist William Stern in 1912 as a proposed method of scoring children's intelligence (MA/CA x 100 = I.Q.) • Lewis Terman (Stanford-Binet I.Q. Test) – adapted Binet for American uses – Assessed mental aptitudes and compared them to others. Father of gifted education (and …)

  7. Measuring Intelligence Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV)and theWechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV) • Most widely used intelligence test • Comprised of 15 multiple subtests (10 indexes, 5 supplemental) • Role of factor analysis (clusters of aptitudes) • Verbal and performance (nonverbal) scales • Verbal Comprehension Index (VCI) • Perceptual Reasoning Index (PRI) • Working Memory Index (WMI) • Processing Speed Index (PSI)

  8. Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)

  9. WISC-IV and WAIS-IV • The most current WISC-IV was produced in 2003. Updated versions are re-normed to compensate for the Flynn effect. Questions are refined and made less biased against minorities and females • Adults (16+) are tested using the WAIS-IV updated in 2008

  10. Psychometrics – Measuring Intelligence • Aptitude TestA test designed to predict a person’s future performance. Aptitude is the capacity to learn • Achievement TestA test designed to assess what a person has learned • Standardization and Norms Defining meaningful scores by comparison with the performance of a pre-tested “standardization group”. Re-norming • Normal Curve The symmetrical bell-shaped curve that describes the distribution of many physical and psychological attributes

  11. The Normal Curve

  12. The Normal Curve

  13. Psychometrics - Measuring Intelligence • Reliability The extent to which a tests yields consistent results. Test-retest, split half and equivalent form methods • ValidityThe extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to measure. content validity predictive validity

  14. Bias in testing • Concerns over gender and cultural (language and race) bias in testing persist • Ways to account for bias • Performance scales/items • Culture-fair tests - Raven's • More culture fair items • Stereotype threat or bias (self-fulfilling prophecy) Resource: Discovering Psychology

  15. The Flynn Effect

  16. Sources of intelligence Nature v. Nurture *To what extent is intelligence inherited from parents? * Evidence from quantitative genetics research (twin and adoption studies) points to a genetic component for intelligence * Specific criticisms of this research/Counter-research

  17. Genetic Influences (Review) • Heritability • The proportion (%) of variation among individuals that we can attribute to genes • We can not say that genes are responsible for such and such a % of an individual’s intelligence • Variability depends on range of populations and environments studied

  18. Environmental Influences (Review) EnvironmentWhat is environment and how can the one in which a person is raised affect intelligence? • The role of proper nutrition, access to quality education and enriched environment (issues of developmental plasticity) • Nurture enables nature (gene expression) and epigenetics • Nature v. nurture is a false dichotomy

  19. Environmental Influences • The Schooling Effect (Not stable when young)

  20. Multiple Intelligences • Daniel Goleman’s Emotional Intelligence has five components • Knowing one’s own emotions • Managing one’s own emotions • Using emotions to motivate oneself • Recognizing the emotions of other people • Managing relationships • EI Test

  21. Multiple Intelligences – Other Factors • Related research on emotional intelligence • Executive function The set of cognitive abilities that control and regulate other abilities and behaviors. They include the ability to initiate and stop actions, monitor and change behavior as needed, and to plan future behavior when faced with novel tasks and situations • Executive function • Mischel’sdelayed gratification longitudinal study

  22. Multiple Intelligences • Sternberg’s Triarchic theory - Properly defined and measured intelligence MUST translate into real-life success • Analytical intelligence (Componential) ability to learn how to do things, solve problems, and acquire new knowledge • Creative intelligence (Experiental) ability to adjust to new tasks, use new concepts, and respond well in new situations • Practical intelligence (Contextual) ability to select contexts in which you can excel and solve practical problems

  23. Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory • "I define [intelligence] as your skill in achieving whatever it is you want to attain in your life within your sociocultural context by capitalizing on your strengths and compensating for, or correcting, your weaknesses.” • Sternberg Defines Intelligence • According to Sternberg conventional intelligence tests tell us little about performance in everyday life. He suggests a number of reasons why “intelligent” people fail • lack of motivation • lack of impulse control • lack of perseverance • fear of failure • procrastination • inability to delay gratification • too little/too much self-confidence

  24. Multiple Intelligences Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences - What are they? Research? Value? Criticisms? Gardner Powerpoint An Intelligent Haiku A spear man has just One point but a young gardner Has many sharp tools.

  25. IQ Myth and Reality • Intelligence is plural, not singular • Breast feeding affects IQ + • Correlations with head size • Despite recent claims IQ unrelated to birth order (genetically) • School attendance correlates with IQ • IQ scores are predictive of success • Gender differences in IQ • Maccoby studies detect difference. Subsequent research sees as statistically insignificant, though spatial tasks still slightly favor boys and memory for objects, girls • Boys are on extremes of curve • Some gender bias is assumed to remain

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