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Intelligence

Intelligence. Radwan Banimustafa Jordan university. Definition. Difficult to define . The capacity to learn… The ability to carry abstract thinking.. Problem solving skills The capacity to act purposefully ,think rationally ,and deal effectively with the environment .

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Intelligence

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  1. Intelligence RadwanBanimustafa Jordan university

  2. Definition • Difficult to define . • The capacity to learn… • The ability to carry abstract thinking.. • Problem solving skills • The capacity to act purposefully ,think rationally ,and deal effectively with the environment . • The ability to undertake activities ,characterized by: difficulty,complexity,absractness,economy, adaptivness to a goal, social values, and emergence of originals . • All definitions refer to capacity and ability of the person and not to what a person does .

  3. The most commonly agreed upon aspects • Verbal ability as reflected by verbal skills . • Problem solving skills as reflected by the search of scientists to find cure for cancer . • The ability to learn from and adapt to every day life, as reflected in adaptation of handicapped child to his / her inability to walk .

  4. Assessment of intelligence • Began in 1904 by Alfred Binet . • Devised scales of what an average 2,3,4,5,..years old Can do and named it mental age . Which can be different from chronological age . • These two ages were combined in one index of brightness ,the intelligence quotient (I.Q.) • I.Q. = ma divided on ca multiplied by 100

  5. The Stanford- Binet Test • Used in schools and health settings • Has array of intellectual tasks • Age-related changes in learning built in • Devised mental age IQ = CA / MA x 100 • If a 10-year-old child has a mental age of the average 12-year-old, his IQ is 12/10 * 100 = 120.If a 10-year-old child has a mental age of the average 8-year-old, his IQ is 8/10 8 100 = 80.

  6. Group differences in intelligence • Sex , few differences between sexes , inferior problem solving by women ,have more difficulty in shifting set . • Socioeconomic status , rural children attain lower average IQ than city children , high socioeconomic class children get higher scores in IQ tests than low soc. • There is no real IQ difference between races , more difference is inter-racial . • IQ is fairly stable over time .

  7. Wechsler adult intelligence scale (WAIS) • A individual test administered by specially trained tester ,widely used . • Has 6 verbal ( informtion,arithmetic, similarities digit span ,comprehension,vocabulary ) and 5 performance scales (picture arrangement ,picture completion,block design,object assembly, digit symbol ) • The validity and reliability of WAIS are high . • Most people(70%) score between 90 and 110 .

  8. The Traditional Approach: Testing Intelligence • Other IQ tests: • The Wechsler Scales • Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI) • Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) • Separate verbal and performance scores

  9. Constructing Measures of Intelligence • Validity and Reliability • Validity: THE ACCURACY WITH WHICH A MEASURING INSTRUMENT ASSESSES THE ATTRIBUTE THAT IT IS DESIGNED TO MEASURECORRELATED WITH MEASURES OF SCHOOL PERFORMANCE: • TEACHERS' EVALUATIONS, GRADES; • the correlations typically are moderate: 0.5 - 0.7; • GOTTFREDSON ARTICLE: THERE ARE A LOT OF OTHER REAL-WORLD CORRELATES OF IQ. • Reliability:THE CONSISTENCY OR REPEATABILITY OF AMEASURING INSTRUMENT

  10. Flynn Effect • FLYNN EFFECT: IQ has been increasing—about 15 points between 1932 and 1978. • Not clear why this is: Better nutrition is a strong possibility. (Recall the cohort effects on age of menarche in Chapter 6.) • The textbook comments that "Whether gains were larger in certain groups, such as those with lower ability levels, and whether they can be observed in different generations of the same families, remains unknown."

  11. Genetic and environmental influence • The closer the genetic relationship the more similar the tested intelligence . • The average correlation between parents IQ and their children is 50 ,adopted children 25 , MZ twins 90 DZ twins 55 . • Environment does make a difference in intelligence (nutrition ,health ,quality of stimulation ,emotional climate ,and feedback elicited by behavior . • Head start programs (2 – 5 years old from poor homes ) . • Participants scored 10 points higher on WISC than those who didn’t participate .

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