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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Intelligence, 2019
Intelligence typically is defined as consisting of "adaptation to the environment" or in related terms. Yet, it is not clear that "general intelligence" or g, traditionally conceptualized in terms of a general factor in a psychometrically-based hierarchical model of intelligence, provides an optimal way of defining intelligence…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Psychometrics, Adjustment (to Environment), Definitions
Sternberg, Robert J. – Educational Researcher, 2007
In the United States as well as in much of the developed world, many of us tend to take for granted that children who do well on teacher-made and standardized tests are intelligent. But different cultures have different views of intelligence, so which children are considered intelligent may vary from one culture to another. Moreover, the acts that…
Descriptors: Multiple Intelligences, Standardized Tests, Cultural Context, Intelligence
Sternberg, Robert J. – Comparative Education, 2007
Instruction and assessment need to be understood and thought about within the cultural context in which they occur. Educators and educational researchers may make assumptions that apply in their home culture but not elsewhere. And even different subcultures within an overall mainstream culture may have different views on instruction and…
Descriptors: Subcultures, Cultural Context, Educational Researchers, Cultural Influences
Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2007
Different cultures have different conceptions of what it means to be gifted. But in identifying children as gifted, we often use only our own conception, ignoring the cultural context in which the children grew up. Such identification is inadequate and fails to do justice to the richness of the world's cultures. It also misses children who are…
Descriptors: Gifted, Cultural Context, Academically Gifted, Concept Formation
Sternberg, Robert J. – American Psychologist, 2004
Intelligence cannot be fully or even meaningfully understood outside its cultural context. Work that seeks to study intelligence acontextually risks the imposition of an investigator's view of the world on the rest of the world. Moreover, work on intelligence within a single culture may fail to do justice to the range of skills and knowledge that…
Descriptors: Cultural Relevance, Research Methodology, Intelligence, Cultural Context
Sternberg, Robert J.; Grigorenko, Elena L. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Cultural context should be taken into account in our research so that we characterize how people behave in their everyday lives, not just a sterile laboratory environment. Much developmental research treats children as though they group in a sociocultural vacuum. Such research misses important points about development. The article illustrates the…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Context Effect, Cultural Differences, Sociocultural Patterns