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Peer reviewedMcGrew, Kevin S.; Bruininks, Robert H. – School Psychology Review, 1990
Investigated relationship between adaptive and maladaptive behavior and other constructs in context of model of personal competence. Used latent variable structural equation modeling methods to evaluate alternative models of personal competence in three age-differentiated contemporary national samples. Results provide support for model of personal…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Intelligence, Interpersonal Competence, Models
Peer reviewedNaglieri, Jack A.; And Others – School Psychology Review, 1990
Discusses intelligence tests in relation to theory of cognitive processing which can serve as model for reconceptualizing cognitive functioning. Analyzes what is measured using Wechsler, Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, Stanford-Binet IV, and McCarthy scales, and reflects on effectiveness. Suggests that Planning, Attention, Simultaneous,…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence Tests, Models
Peer reviewedPetrill, Stephen A.; Ball, David; Eley, Thalia; Hill, Linzy; Plomin, Robert; McClearn, Gerald E.; Smith, Deborah L.; Chorney, Karen; Chorney, Michael; Hershz, Milton S.; Detterman, Douglas K.; Thompson, Lee A.; Benbow, Camilla; Lubinski, David; Daniels, Johanna; Owen, Michael J.; McGuffin, Peter – Intelligence, 1998
This study was an attempt to replicate a previously reported quantitative trait loci association between general cognitive ability and a marker identified as EST00083 (P. Skuder et al., 1995). The association remained significant for 51 high and 51 average IQ child subjects but not for 40 extremely high and 50 average IQ subjects. Implications are…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Ability, Data Interpretation, DNA
Peer reviewedMinnaert, Alexander; Janssen, Piet J. – Learning and Instruction, 1999
Analyses of variance of cognitive test results of about 500 college freshmen reveal significant main effects of verbal and numerical (crystallized) intelligence and of cognitive regulatory activities on academic performance. The effect of diagrammatic (fluid) intelligence is just short of significant. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Tests, College Freshmen, Higher Education
Peer reviewedDaniel, Mark H. – American Psychologist, 1997
Describes the developmental status of three categories of intelligence tests: psychometric abilities, neuropsychological models, and dynamic assessments, and applies them in the educational setting. Notes trends in basic and applied research, and their influence on the further evolution of intelligence testing. (MMU)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Diagnosis, Intelligence Tests, Neuropsychology
Peer reviewedDiLalla, Lisabeth F. – Journal of School Psychology, 2000
Explores the development of intelligence from different perspectives, each of which is relevant for researchers and practitioners interested in children's school performance. Provides information from basic research to better inform prevention and intervention efforts for improving children's school grades and behaviors. (Author/MKA)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior, Children, Intellectual Development
Peer reviewedCarlstedt, Berit; Gustafsson, Jan-Eric; Ullstadius, Eva – Intelligence, 2000
Studied whether a change of test item sequencing, intended to increase test complexity, would cause increased involvement of general intelligence using a sample of Swedish military recruits who received heterogeneous (n=1,778) or homogeneous (n=363) tests. Items presented homogeneously showed higher general intelligence ("G") loadings.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intelligence, Military Personnel, Test Construction
Peer reviewedJones, Gwen E.; Ree, Malcolm James – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1998
This study tested the specificity-generality hypothesis regarding moderation of aptitude test validity by job ability requirement differences using 24,482 Air Force enlistees in 37 jobs. Moderating effects due to job differences were not found, and job ability differences did not moderate the relationship between the amount of "g"…
Descriptors: Ability, Aptitude Tests, Employment, Intelligence
Peer reviewedVanderploeg, Rodney D.; Schinka, John A.; Baum, Kym M.; Tremont, Geoffrey; Mittenberg, Wiley – Psychological Assessment, 1998
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children--Third Edition (D. Wechsler, 1991) (WISC-III) standardization data for 2200 children and WISC-III data for 33 brain-injured and 66 comparisons were used to explore premorbid prediction strategies for use with children. Results support the utility of approaches based on best WISC-III performance and on…
Descriptors: Children, Demography, Diagnostic Tests, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewedCanivez, Gary L.; Watkins, Marley W. – Psychological Assessment, 1998
The long-term stability of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Third Edition (WISC-III) (D. Wechsler, 1991) was studied with 667 children twice evaluated for special education consideration. Test-retest reliability coefficients are reported, providing the highest estimates of WISC-III stability yet reported. (SLD)
Descriptors: Children, Intelligence Tests, Longitudinal Studies, Special Education
Peer reviewedHorton, Dawn M. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 2001
This article reviews the history of the bell curve and its application to gifted education and suggests rejection of this paradigm in favor of a focus on criteria rather than norms and a better understanding of the distribution and structure of intelligence. (Contains references.) (DB)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Peer reviewedKwate, Naa Oyo A. – Journal of Black Psychology, 2001
Examines the Eurocentric basis of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children--Third Edition (WISC-III) and reveals its antagonistic and incompatible relationship to an Africentric conception of intellectual and mental health. Suggests that the WISC-III provides a measure of misorientation quotient rather than intelligence quotient, and notes…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Black Youth, Intelligence Tests, Racial Bias
Stamps, David – Training, 1996
Employers place less emphasis on experience and much more on adaptability. They want people who can learn. However, at the lowest stratum of the service sector, jobs are being dumbed down so that a worker has only to obey commands of smart machines ("Touch french fry icon now"). (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Employment Qualifications, Intelligence, Job Skills, Service Occupations
Peer reviewedAxelrod, Bradley N.; And Others – Psychological Assessment, 1996
Equations for prorating the Wechsler Memory Scale--Revised General Memory (GM) and Delayed Recall (DR) index scores were confirmed in a clinical sample of 258 patients. These prediction equations for the GM and DR summary scores have validity for patient samples similar to those of the present study. (SLD)
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Intelligence Tests, Memory, Patients
Peer reviewedArdelt, Monika – Educational Gerontology, 2000
Intellectual knowledge and wisdom-related knowledge differ in goals, approach, range, method of acquisition, and effects on the knower. Intellectual knowledge tends to decrease with age. The relationship between wisdom and aging is potentially positive if not impeded by cognitive deterioration. (Contains 68 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence, Knowledge Level


