Week 3 - Intelligence Flashcards

1
Q

How is intelligence measured?

A

Stanford Binet Test

The Stanford-Binet test
Binet and Simon devised the first effective intelligence tests. Binet developed the concept of ‘mental age’

IQ = mental age x 100
chronological age

(Not applicable to adults)

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2
Q

Who created General Intelligence?

A

Charles Spearman

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3
Q

What is General Intelligence (Charles Spearman)

A

Charles Spearman saw intelligence as a general mental capacity or ‘g’ or the g factor.

  • He noted considerable variability in the way individuals perform on different types of items in intelligence tests.
  • He attempted to examine and identify clusters of related abilities. In his studies, Spearman predicted the g factor could predict performance outcomes in many different academic areas.

Spearman’s ideas are sometimes described as a ‘two-factor theory of intelligence’

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4
Q

Provide an explanation of Spearman’s view on intelligence

A

Single g-factor which represents an individual’s general intelligence across multiple abilities, and that a second factor, s, refers to an individual’s specific ability in one particular area.

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5
Q

Explain the difference between fluid and crystallised intelligence

A

Fluid intelligence involves our current ability to reason and deal with complex information around us. Crystallised intelligence involves learning, knowledge, and skills.

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6
Q

Who created Fluid and Crystallised intelligence?

A

Cattell and Horn (1963; 1998)

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7
Q

Explain Fluid and Crystallised Intelligence

A

Crystalised: is the ability to use learned knowledge and experience.

- Can increase throughout the lifespan
- Learned skills and knowledge 

Fluid: is the ability to solve new problems, use logic and identify patterns.
- E.g. giving your students a hypothesis and learning how to solve it/work it out
○ To think and act quickly
○ Solve novel problems
○ Reason abstractly
Store short-term memories

For example:
- Younger people experience more fluid intelligence because they can easily solve new problems and learn new ideas faster than those older than them.

  • Older people tend to experience more crystallised intelligence because this idea is based around learning through prior knowledge and experience, which older people tend to have more of
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8
Q

Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

A

Gardner’s theory of multiple intelligences suggests that there are 9 kinds of human abilities.
- An individual might have strengths or weaknesses in one or several areas.
Create outcomes that are valued by culture, eg; verbal and maths intelligences are important in technological cultures

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9
Q

According to Gardner, there are roughly 8 intelligences. List and describe these.

A

Linguistic - finding the right words to express meaning

Logical/Mathematical - quantifying things, hypotheses, and proving them

Spatial - visualising in 3D

Bodily-Kinesthetic - co-ordinating mind and body

Musical - sounds: tone, pitch, rhythm

Interpersonal - sensing people’s feelings and motives

Intrapersonal - understanding yourself

Naturalist - understanding living things.

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10
Q

Sternberg’s Triarchic Model of Intelligence

3 types of intelligence

A

Practical, creative and analytical

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11
Q

Sternberg’s Triarchic Model of Intelligence

A

Where Gardner was primarily interested in the content of different intelligences, Sternberg was interested in the application.
Individuals seen as more intelligent tend to:
- display their abilities through their ability to learn and process information very rapidly
- respond appropriately in novel situations, and adapt to demands of everyday life by modifying needs and goals

analytic – mental aspects of cognitive activity (metacognition, information-processing skills etc.)

creative – the ability to respond to events in light of previous experience

practical – coping with everyday environments; adapting existing skills

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12
Q

Emotional Intelligence

A

Emotional intelligence is defined as the “ability to reason about emotions and the capacity to use emotions and emotional knowledge to enhance thought” (Mayer, Roberts, & Barsade, 2008).
Palmer and Stough..Genos model

Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman

- "Recognise, understand and manage our own emotions"
- "Recognise, understand and influence the emotions of others"
- "In pratical terms, this means being aware that emotions can drive our behaviour and impact people (positively and negatively) and learning how to manage those emotions -both our own and others - especially when we are under pressure"
Emotional intelligence involves skills such as: 
	• empathy
	• delayed gratification 
	• implies control 
	• persistence    

Impacts our:

  • Relationships
  • Decision making
  • Identify opportunities
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13
Q

What is ADHD? Provide one strategy to support students with ADHD in a classroom setting:

A

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

Strategy: setting clear rules and using visual aids

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14
Q

What is the main difference between an intellectual disability and giftedness?

SD

A

-Standard deviation of an IQ test is about 15, -2% of people score above an IQ of 130 - threshold for giftedness, -2% score below an IQ of 70 - threshold for an intellectual disability.

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