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Section
1: Introduction
Section
2: Memory and Forgetting
Section
3: Intelligence
Section
4: Relaxation and Hypnosis
Intelligence
The
assessment of human abilities dates back nearly 4000 years when China used
written tests to rate applicants for civil service. Two-thousand years
later, during the Hans Dynasty, civil service type exams were used in the
areas of law, military, agriculture, and geography. In the early 1800s
British diplomats observed the Chinese assessments and modified them for use
in Britain and eventually the United States for use in civil service
placement.
Sir
Francis Galton is a key figure in modern intelligence testing. As the
first cousin of Charles Darwin, he attempted to apply Darwin's evolutionary
theory to the study of human abilities. He postulate that intelligence
was quantifiable and normally distributed. In other words, he believed
that we could assign a score to intelligence where the majority of people
fall in the average range and the percentage of the population decreases the
farther from the middle their score gets.
The
first workable intelligence test was developed by French psychologist Alfred
Binet. He and his partner, Theodore Simon, were commissioned by the
French government to improve the teaching methods for developmentally
disabled children. They believed that intelligence was the key to
effective teaching, and developed a strategy whereby a mental age (MA) was
determined and divided by the child's chronological age (CA). This
formula, stated as "MA/CA
X 100."
Another theorist, Raymond Cattell, described intelligence
as having two distinct factors. The first
he called Crystallized
Intelligence, representing acquired knowledge,
and second, Fluid
Intelligence, or our ability to use this
knowledge.
Sternberg
(1988) argued that there are a number of ways to demonstrate intelligence or
adaptive functioning. He proposed a model of intelligence referred to
as the triarchic theory. According to this model there are three types
of intelligence: (1) analytical, or the ability to solve a problem by
looking at its components; (2) creative, the ability o use new or ingenious
ways to solve problems; and (3) practical, referring to street smarts or
common sense. While most IQ tests measure only analytical
intelligence, they fail to include practical intelligence which is the most
understandable to most of us (Sternberg et al., 1995)
Intelligence
is not something we can see or hear, or taste. We can see the results
of intelligence...sometimes. Many argue that quantifying intelligence
correctly is impossible and all that modern IQ tests do is test our
knowledge and abilities. While it is true that a person can learn to
improve his or her score, this can only occur if correct responses are
taught to the person, which is highly unethical. We have also found
that our individual IQ score remains quite consistent as we get older.
Some argue, however, that modern IQ tests are prejudiced against certain
ethnicities and cultures and tend to result in higher scores for others.
Where this leaves us, however, is uncertain. As of today, these IQ
tests are the best we have in our attempt to quantify the construct known as
intelligence.
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