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Christiansen, Ted; Livermore, Gary – J Soc Psychol, 1970
In addition to ethnic origin, the subjects were further grouped by social class, middle and lower only. Social Class was a more important factor than ethnic origin in WISC differences; and, nonverbal ability differences (Cohen factors) were found to relate only to S's membership in a particular social class." (DB)
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Tests, Nonverbal Ability
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Panicker, Anuja S.; Hirisave, Uma; Subbakrishna, D. K. – Journal of Indian Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 2006
The aim of the current study was to compare the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Third Edition, UK adaptation (WISC-III[superscript uk]) scores of Indian primary school children when Indian and UK norms are used. The sample consisted of 300 primary school children, within the age range of 6 years to 10 years and 11 months. The children…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Learning Disabilities, Intelligence Tests, Measures (Individuals)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Yee, Leland Y.; Laforge, Rolfe – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1974
No relationship was found between social class and 12 Wechsler Intelligence Scale (WISC) for children subtests, the WISC Overall total, the WISC Verbal Subtests, the WISC Verbal total, or the WISC Performance total. A relationship was found between social class and the six WISC Performance subtests. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Chinese Americans, Elementary Education, English (Second Language)
Jordan, Thomas E. – 1973
This paper reports on a longitudinal study of significant influences on the cognitive readiness of a group of children, aged 60 to 66 months. All measures were obtained by prospective study, which began with Apgar scores calculated in the delivery room. Subsequent measures were gathered by individual case studies in homes, with children and…
Descriptors: Infants, Longitudinal Studies, Mothers, Parent Influence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wilgosh, L.; And Others – Canadian Journal of Special Education, 1986
The article addresses minority assessment issues, describes a Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-- Revised (WISC-R) re-norming (for Inuit children) project, examines usefulness of the re-normed WISC-R and reports results of a study comparing gifted and average Inuit children on the WISC-R, Bender Visual Motor Gestalt Test, and the Goodenough…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Cultural Differences, Elementary Education, Eskimos
Samuel, William; And Others – 1974
While debates over the heritability of IQ and the potential for culture bias in measuring instruments have generated much research and public comment, it is also possible to investigate the significance of interracial differences in mean IQ by ignoring both the foregoing issues and instead examining the social psychology of the test situation…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Individual Characteristics, Individual Differences, Intelligence Differences
OSLER, SONIA F. – 1967
SEVERAL EXPERIMENTS ON THE CONCEPTUAL BEHAVIOR OF LOWER AND MIDDLE CLASS CHILDREN ARE DESCRIBED IN AN EFFORT TO CLARIFY AN APPARENT DISCREPANCY BETWEEN PREVIOUS LABORATORY FINDINGS AND OBSERVED CLASSROOM PERFORMANCE. IN THE FIRST EXPERIMENT, INDUCTIVE CONCEPT LEARNING WAS INVESTIGATED AS A FUNCTION OF SOCIAL CLASS MEMBERSHIP AND PRIOR EXPERIENCE.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Measurement, Cultural Context