The Developing Child |
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Page 216
Helen L. Bee. Testing in the Schools These doctors undoubtedly have higher IQs than aver- age because. Two major functions are served by the use IQ tests or achievement tests in the schools : Diagnosis and sorting , and ac- countability ...
Helen L. Bee. Testing in the Schools These doctors undoubtedly have higher IQs than aver- age because. Two major functions are served by the use IQ tests or achievement tests in the schools : Diagnosis and sorting , and ac- countability ...
Page 219
... IQ tests are less stable than you probably think . First of all , as I pointed out earlier , scores on infant IQ tests like the Bay- ley are not strongly related to later IQs . The typical correlation between a Bay- ley mental test ...
... IQ tests are less stable than you probably think . First of all , as I pointed out earlier , scores on infant IQ tests like the Bay- ley are not strongly related to later IQs . The typical correlation between a Bay- ley mental test ...
Page 240
... IQ test is a spe- cialized tool , and like many such tools , it has a fairly narrow range of appro- priate use . I ... tests are the Stanford- Binet and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children ( WISC - R ) . 3. All current IQ tests ...
... IQ test is a spe- cialized tool , and like many such tools , it has a fairly narrow range of appro- priate use . I ... tests are the Stanford- Binet and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children ( WISC - R ) . 3. All current IQ tests ...
Contents
PART ONE INTRODUCTION | 10 |
THE DEVELOPMENT | 12 |
PART TWO THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE | 43 |
Copyright | |
26 other sections not shown
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ability adolescence adults aggressive attachment babies basic begin behavior boys cells changes Chapter chil Child Development childhood chromosomes classical conditioning cognitive development color constancy complex concept concrete operations constancy delivery describe Developmental Psychology dren early effects environment example experience fetus Figure formal operations gametes gender gene genetic girls growth hormones individual differences infants intelligence interaction IQ scores IQ tests kind language learning less longitudinal look maturation meiosis menarche ment mental months moral mother newborn normal objects observation occurs ovum parents particular pattern peers percent perceptual constancies perceptual skills period person Piaget play pregnancy prenatal prenatal development preschool problems programs puberty questions recessive gene reinforcement relationships retarded role sequence sex differences social sounds specific stage strategies talk tasks teenagers temperament teratogens theorists theory things tion typically understanding WNET women words X chromosome young