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Peer reviewedRader, John R. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1975
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Conservation (Concept), Exceptional Child Research, Gifted
Peer reviewedSchwartz, Judah L. – National Elementary Principal, 1975
By analyzing analogy questions, supports the notion that ability tests can predict school achievement because the two types of testing are very similar. (DW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education, Intellectual Development, Intelligence
Peer reviewedPurvin, George – National Elementary Principal, 1975
Cites cultural reasons for abandoning use of intelligence testing. (DW)
Descriptors: Culture Fair Tests, Elementary Secondary Education, Intelligence, Intelligence Quotient
Scarr, Sandra – 1986
Research has shown that differences among ordinary people in intelligence and personality depend equally on individual genetic variability and on differences in the environments that siblings experience within the same family, not differences in the neighborhood, school, and community environments. As of yet, there are no adequate theories to…
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Family Environment, Family Relationship, Heredity
PDF pending restorationClancey, William J. – 1986
Artificial Intelligence researchers and cognitive scientists commonly believe that thinking involves manipulating representations. Thinking involves search, inference, and making choices. This is how we model reasoning and what goes on in the brain is similar. Winograd and Flores present a radically different view, claiming that our knowledge is…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Behavior Theories, Book Reviews, Cognitive Processes
Lutkemeier, David M.; Wade, James P. – 1984
The study examined the intellectual performance of 248 school age students 157 of whom were taken from public school settings. Of these, 93 were emotionally handicapped (EH) students and 64 were regular education students. The remaining subjects came from a residential school for EH children and youth (n=15) and from a summer program for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Disturbances, Intelligence Differences
Edmonds, Ed M.; Smith, Lyle R. – 1984
To clarify the effects of noise, sex, and intelligence on student performance, 289 sixth-grade students were randomly assigned either the Standard Progressive Matrices (SPM) or the STEP Reading Test Form 3 (STEP III) to be taken under high- or low-noise classroom conditions, with gender and intelligence as variables. Students who took the SPM…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classrooms, Elementary Education, Grade 6
Peer reviewedKugelmass, Sol; And Others – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1974
Two samples of Israeli Arab village children were tested on an Arabic translation of the Wechsler Preschool Primary Scale of Intelligence; the subtest profiles of these samples were compared to a relevant subsample of the Israeli Jewish normative national sample. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Arabs, Cross Cultural Studies, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewedKelly, M. E.; McConnochie, K. R. – Australian Journal of Education, 1974
It is the particular concern of the present paper to examine some important features of the cognitive deficit model, and in particular, to look closely at the assumptions on which compensatory education is based. (Author)
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Compensatory Education, Diagrams, Environmental Influences
Migliorino, Giuseppe – Les Carnets de l'enfance, 1974
Intelligence tests were administered to a stratified sample of 4058 school children from Palermo, Sicily. I.Q. scores were found to be positively correlated with socioeconomic status and negatively related to family size. As birth order increased, mental development decreased. Implications for future research were discussed. (EH)
Descriptors: Birth Order, Family Characteristics, Genetics, Heredity
Peer reviewedDeMyer, Marian K.; And Others – Journal of Autism and Childhood Schizophrenia, 1974
Descriptors: Autism, Emotional Disturbances, Exceptional Child Research, Intelligence
Peer reviewedLayzer, David – Science, 1974
Examines limitations of the heritability concept and heritability analysis, and discusses a conventional application of heritability analysis, IQ scores as measurements of a phenotypic character, the heritability of IQ, and the relationship of IQ and race. (JR)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biology, Genetics, Heredity
Wachs, Theodore D. – Child Develop, 1969
Research supported by grant MH-12627 from the National Institute of Mental Health, and based on a PhD dissertation submitted to George Peabody College.
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient
Jensen, Arthur R. – 1981
The specificity doctrine, holds that psychometric tests measure nothing other than the specific bits of knowledge and learned skills reflected in the item content of the tests. This prevailing doctrine has influenced the interpretation of test scores and the conceptualization of test validity, as well as the practical use of tests in educational…
Descriptors: Cognitive Tests, Correlation, Court Litigation, Intelligence Differences
Goldberger, Arthur S. – 1975
The estimation of genetic models reported by J. L. Jinks and L. J. Eaves in a recent review are critically examined. A number of errors in procedure and interpretation are found. It is concluded that the evidence, provided by kinship correlations, for the proposition that intelligence is highly heritable, is not persuasive. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Correlation, Environmental Influences, Genetics


