Date post: | 20-Jan-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | bethanie-lucas |
View: | 226 times |
Download: | 2 times |
Intelligence Testing
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test
30 tests of increasing difficulty Given to children to measure relative intelligenceCompares Chronological (actual age) and Mental Age
The Stanford-Binet has been changed 4 times
To update the terms and word usageTo replace questions biased toward gender or location in the country1972 To restandarize scores to include non-whites1985 To make it less gender and culturally biased and identify specific learning disabilities
What does it do?
Goal: devise impartial test to assess children’s intellectual progress in schoolStrategy: Systematically develop sets of questions and problems to assess what children of different ages should know and be able to do
What does it Mean?
Chronological age (CA): actual ageMental age (MA): assumed to reflect an orderly process of intellectual growth common in all children
If MA=CA Average intelligenceIf MA>CA Above average/GiftedIf MA<CA Below average/Retarded
The birth of IQ: 1916
Lewis Terman of Stanford University adapts Binet’s test and coins the term Intelligence Quotient (IQ)Establishes a numerical score of 100 as averageTo get your IQ, MA
CA X 100
Group Tests, Examples & Problems
Definition: -One examiner administers it to many people
Examples: SAT, ACT, GRE Goals: Helps with time and expense of
individual tests and examiner biasProblems:
-Test Anxiety -Intimidation -Generalization
Problems with IQ Tests (continued)
Content: measures narrow set of skills ex. Verbal understanding, common sense scholastic aptitudeMeasures ability to take testsDiscriminates against minorities (not culture-fair tests)Use of scores as labels
What do you think?
If anyone knows what it is like to participate in a group test…it is you! What were some of the comments you formed or experiences you had regarding the SATs? PSSAs?
What makes a good test?
Reliability
Ability of a test to produce consistent and stable results.
If I gave you a test on Memory today and you score a 80% and I gave you a similar test (measuring same skills) tomorrow, would you get about 80%?
How do you know if a test is reliable?
Give the test. Then, after a short period of time, give the test again to the same people. If the scores are within points, it’s reliable.
Are there serious problems determining test reliability?
If you give the same test twice, people might simply remember the answers.To fix this: design two different tests, testing the same skills/abilities and use them interchangeably.
Validity
Ability of a test to measure what it has been designed to measure. There are two types…
Two types of validity…Content Validity: whether the test contains an adequate sample of the skills/knowledge that it is supposed to be measuring. Criterion Validity: Refers to the relationship between test scores and independent measures of whatever the test is designed to measure. Example: students who do well academically should also do well on SAT.