Children Above 180 IQ Stanford-Binet: Origin and Development

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World Book Company, Jan 6, 2015 - 192 pages

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This study is founded upon the work of Francis Galton, on the one hand, and of Albert Binet, on the other. It goes back to Galton's Hereditary Genius, read as a prescribed reference in the courses of Professor Edward L. Thorndike, in 1912; and to the publication in 1916 of Professor Lewis M. Terman's Stanford Revision of the Binet-Simon Scale for Measuring Intelligence. It comprises observations, measurements, and conversations covering a period of twenty-three years, during which acquaintanceships and friendships, every one of them delightful, have been formed and maintained with the twelve individuals who form the basis of the study.


It was in November, 1916, shortly after taking appointment as instructor in educational psychology at Teachers College, Columbia University, that I saw for the first time a child testing above 180 IQ (S-B). I was teaching a course in the psychology of mentally deficient children, and it seemed to me that my class should if possible observe under test conditions one bright child for the sake of contrast. Accordingly, I asked whether any teacher present could nominate a very intelligent pupil for demonstration.


Miss Charlotte G. Garrison and Miss Agnes Burke, teachers in the Horace Mann School, Teachers College, New York City, thereupon nominated the child who is called E in this monograph. E was presented at the next meeting of the class. It required two full classroom periods to test this child to the limits of the Stanford-Binet Scale, which had just then been published. E exhausted the scale without being fully measured by it, achieving an IQ of at least 187. He was on that date 8 years 4 months old.


This IQ of at least 187 placed E in Galton's Class X of able persons; i.e., more than six "grades" removed from mediocrity. Taking 1 PE#dis# as one "grade," it placed him at least plus 11 PE from the norm; for 1 PE (Probable Error) equals 8 IQ, according to Terman's original distribution of 905 school children. This appeared as sufficiently striking to warrant permanent recording, since it would rate E as one in a million for statistical frequency, assuming "zeal and power of working" to be also abundantly present.


I did not at that time have any expert knowledge of highly intelligent children. I had been working for some years in the hospitals of New York City with persons presented for commitment to reformatories, prisons, and institutions for mental defectives. I had tested thousands of incompetent persons, a majority of them children, with Goddard's Revision of the Binet-Simon Scale, scarcely ever finding anyone with an IQ rating as high as 100. This thoroughgoing experience of the negative aspects of intelligence rendered the performance of E even more impressive to me than it would otherwise have been. I perceived the clear and flawless working of his mind against a contrasting background of thousands of dull and foolish minds. It was an unforgettable observation.


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Contents

ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT PREFACE
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT PART I ORIENTATION
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER ONE THE CONCEPT OF INTELLECTUAL GENIUS
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TWO EARLY SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF EMINENT ADULTS 1
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER THREE PUBLISHED REPORTS ON TESTED CHILDREN
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT PART II TWELVE CASES NEW TO LITERATURE CONCERNING TESTED CHILDREN
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER FOUR CHILD A
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER FIVE CHILD B
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER ELEVEN CHILD H
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TWELVE CHILD I
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER THIRTEEN CHILD J
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER FOURTEEN CHILD K
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER FIFTEEN CHILD L
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER SIXTEEN SUMMARIES OF HEREDITY AND EARLY BEHAVIOR
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER SEVENTEEN SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT AND CREATIVE ACTIVITY
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT PART III GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND IMPLICATIONS

ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER SIX CHILD C
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER SEVEN CHILD D
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER EIGHT CHILD E
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER NINE CHILD F
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TEN CHILD G
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER EIGHTEEN ADULT STATUS AND PERSONALITY RATINGS
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER NINETEEN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALITY IN HIGHLY INTELLIGENT CHILDREN 1
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TWENTY
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TWENTYONE THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOLING OF VERY BRIGHT CHILDREN
ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER TWENTYTWO PROBLEMS OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY S...

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