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Silverman, Linda Kreger – Roeper Review, 1986
The interview with Elizabeth Hagen, the co-creator of the Cognitive Abilities Test and a revisor of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test, deals with such issues in gifted education as general intelligence vs. specific abilities, validity of test scores at the preschool level, and misconceptions about retesting gifted students. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests
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Hawk, John – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1986
Asserts that Spearman's g is a real phenomenon with great impact on economic and social life. Discusses key areas of personnel selection, vocational counseling, education, labor market functioning, and equal employment opportunity. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Ability, Career Counseling, Economic Opportunities, Education
Sternberg, Robert J. – Learning, 1989
Standardized tests which measure a narrow span of intelligence unfairly penalize students whose strengths don't fall within that range. Three kinds of intelligence (analytical, creative, practical) are discussed. Sternberg's Triarchic Abilities Test, currently being test-piloted, assesses all three aspects of intelligence in contrast to current…
Descriptors: Accountability, Cognitive Processes, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education
Alston, Reginald J.; Mngadi, Simphiwe – 1990
An examination of the continuing debate among human service professionals about a precise definition of aptitude, with special attention devoted to the relationship of interests and intelligence to aptitude, is provided in this monograph. An historical look at aptitude test development is provided with a discussion of how individuals and events…
Descriptors: Aptitude Tests, Career Counseling, Counseling Techniques, Disabilities
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Siegel, Linda S. – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1995
Responds to "The Bell Curve" by arguing that IQ is merely a statistical fiction, an artificial construct not corresponding to any real entity. Discusses the "seductive statistical trap of factor analysis" as it relates to IQ tests, multiple intelligences, content and bias of IQ tests, lack of validity of IQ tests for individual…
Descriptors: Educational Diagnosis, Factor Analysis, Individual Differences, Intelligence
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Deese, James – Intelligence, 1993
The history of the concept of intelligence is reviewed, and the construction and uses of psychological tests are explored. Skills consist of a large number of abilities. It is argued that the psychological entity, intelligence, is determined by particular contexts, contexts often induced by social demands. (SLD)
Descriptors: Ability, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Context Effect
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 1996
Ten myths and countermyths about intelligence are explored. It is argued that the desire for simplicity and publicity has led psychologists and others writing about intelligence to take positions that cannot be justified by current theory or recent data. However defined, intelligence is but one aspect of being human. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Environmental Influences, Ethnicity, Genetics
Zappardino, Pamela – 1995
Stephen Jay Gould points out in "The Mismeasure of Man" (1981), "Science, since people must do it, is a socially embedded activity. It progresses by hunch, vision, and intuition." The legacy of the traditional construct of intelligence and its measurement through intelligence quotient (IQ) tests has not been educational improvement. Its legacy in…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Costs, Educational Assessment, Educational Policy
Venable, B. – 1994
Whether the aim has been to understand the nature of creativity or to determine its development, researchers have formulated a number of measures of creativity. A glut of results and conclusions actually hinders an educational understanding of the term creativity. The most widely known tests of creativity incorporate divergent-thinking, as opposed…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Convergent Thinking, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Sternberg, Robert J. – 1995
Although British psychologist Francis Galton lost the battle for the definition of intelligence in his own time, his views live on in the work of Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray. They argue that the Intelligence Quotient (IQ) is an adequate measure of intelligence, and that IQ is highly heritable. They contend that there are racial and…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Educational Testing, Ethnic Groups, Genetics
Hunt, Earl – 1985
The scientific concept of intelligence has been heavily influenced by the technology of measurement. The variables which can be measured have been made the operational definition of intelligence. This approach differs from a deductive approach, in which a theory of cognition in general is used to derive the sorts of measurements that must be taken…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, Individual Differences