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Jensen, Arthur R. – 1973
A large battery of various tests of intelligence, scholastic achievement, and short-term memory was administered to some 2,000 white, black, and Mexican American pupils in grades 4, 5, and 6 in a largely agricultural school district in the central valley of California; the 3 grades were used as separate replications. Factor analysis with oblique…
Descriptors: Black Students, Elementary Education, Intelligence Quotient, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reed, T. Edward; Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 1993
Data are presented on body weight and cranial capacity for 211 young adult male Caucasians (postsecondary students). The data do not support Rushton's claim for a greater weight-adjusted cranial capacity of Mongoloid males. Speed and efficiency of cortical information processing may be more important for intelligence than brain size. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Body Weight, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1973
The culture loaded Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT) and the culture reduced Raven's Progressive Matrices (Colored and Standard forms) were examined and compared for large samples of white, black, and Chicano school children, K-8, in three California school districts. On both the PPVT and the Raven's the three ethnic groups show large mean…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences, Culture Fair Tests
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 2003
Results from a battery of 17 diverse tests completed by 877 white and 855 black students in grades 3 through 8 support Spearman's hypothesis that the white-black difference in test performance is predominantly a general intelligence ("g") difference rather than a unitary developmental difference affecting all factors in test performance.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Black Students, Cognitive Tests, Elementary Education
Jensen, Arthur R.; Inouye, Arlene R. – 1979
In a study in which Asian-American, white, and black children in grades 2-6 in a California school district were given a battery of tests including measures of IQ, scholastic achievement, and short-term memory, factor analysis of the tests yielded two main factors identified as Level I (memory) and Level II (general intelligence) in Jensen's…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Academic Achievement, Asian Americans, Black Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reynolds, Cecil R.; Jensen, Arthur R. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Groups of 270 Black and 270 White children drawn from the national stratified random sample used in the standardization of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R) were matched on age, sex, and WISC-R Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient to facilitate investigation of the patterns of specific cognitive abilities. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Behavior Patterns, Black Students, Cognitive Ability
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1976
The cumulative deficit hypothesis with respect to age decrement in IQ was investigated in large samples of white and black school children in rural Georgia between the ages of 5 and 18. The cumulative deficits hypothesis suggests that the increasing decrement in mental test scores, relative to population norms, is a function of age in groups…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Conceptual Schemes
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1973
The two-level theory of mental abilities posits two broad classes of ability: level I (learning and memory) and level II (the "g" factor of intelligence tests, reasoning, abstraction, and problem solving). Levels I and II are hypothesized to interact with SES and/or race such that: (l) SES differences are greater for level II than for I,…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Black Students, Cognitive Development, Intelligence Tests
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1973
Cumulative deficit is an hypothesis concerning the cause of lower mental test scores of groups considered environmentally deprived. It presupposes a progressive decrement in test scores, relative to population norms, as a function of age. Clarification of the theoretical issues and the methodological problems involved in establishing the…
Descriptors: Black Students, Educationally Disadvantaged, Elementary School Students, Intellectual Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 1985
Borkowski and Krause (1983) concluded that the locus of black-white intelligence differences lies in metaprocesses not elementary cognitive processes. However, some variables were difference scores with unacceptably low reliability. Magnitude comparisons of racial differences give a different picture of results; comparable differences in measures…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Correlation
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1973
An entire elementary school system with 60 percent white and 40 percent black children was given several ability tests administered by 12 white and eight black examiners. The tests measured verbal and nonverbal IQ, perceptual-motor cognitive development, "speed and persistence" under neutral and motivating instructions, listening attention, and…
Descriptors: Ability, Black Students, Blacks, Cognitive Tests
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 1993
Two studies with 658 white and 353 African-American elementary school children performing reaction time tasks are offered in support of Spearman's hypothesis about the relative size of the mean African-American-white differences on mental tests as a function of the tests' loadings on psychometric "g." (SLD)
Descriptors: Black Students, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, Comparative Testing
Jensen, Arthur R.; Osborne, R. Travis – 1979
Longitudinal data on the auditory forward and backward digit span (FDS and BDS) subtests of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) were obtained at five age levels (between 6 and 13), in samples of white and black children. Factor analysis and analysis of variance of the data were conducted to test 5 hypotheses, related to Jensen's…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Black Students, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes