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Kennedy, Stephen P.; Suzuki, Nancy S. – American Educational Research Journal, 1977
Noun-pair learning in twelfth graders was assessed as a function of ethnicity, I.Q., and instructional conditions. Learners instructed to generate sentences performed better than control group learners. The relationship between instructional conditions and I.Q. was significant, but ethnicity was not. Spontaneous elaboration is discussed as a…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Ethnic Groups, High Schools, Intelligence Differences
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Cohen, Ronald L.; Sandberg, Tor – Cognitive Psychology, 1977
Intelligence and short-term memory correlations in children were measured using probed serial recall of supraspan digit lists. Results showed the predictive power of intelligence to range from a maximum in the case of recall for recency items to practically zero in the case of primacy items. (Author/MV)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient, Junior High Schools
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Vining, Daniel R., Jr. – Intelligence, 1985
It has been suggested that IQ's of gifted children resemble parents less than do people in general. This finding may have been an artifact of the particular estimator of the regression coefficient used. An unbiased estimator is introduced and shows that gifted children resemble parents more than persons in general. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Family Influence, Gifted, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient
Brill, Richard G. – Journal of the Rehabilitation of the Deaf, 1970
Reprinted from The California Palms, (December 1969). (JJ)
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Hearing Impairments, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient
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Grossman, Fred M. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1983
Data on the magnitude of significant Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised Verbal-Performance Intelligence Quotient (IQ) discrepancies (specifically the nondirectional aspect of significant frequencies) within the normal population are often misunderstood by clinicians. Suggestions for remedying inaccuracies in reporting discrepancies…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient
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Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 1981
The Ramey and Haskins intervention experiment is examined. Narrow transfer of training from cognitive intervention techniques to IQ test performance in early childhood, rather than enhancement of the g factor itself, is hypothesized as a cause of the typical fadeout of early IQ gains in later childhood. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Correlation, Early Experience, Educationally Disadvantaged, Heredity
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Hall, Eleanor G. – Roeper Review, 1980
Findings showed an almost even percentage of boys and girls, that more girls had fathers with doctorate degrees, that girls' arithmetic and spatial abilities were not significantly different from boys', that girls increased or decreased in IQ more than boys in high school, and that boys' IQs and grade point averages were significantly correlated…
Descriptors: Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Females
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Siegel, Linda S. – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1995
Responds to "The Bell Curve" by arguing that IQ is merely a statistical fiction, an artificial construct not corresponding to any real entity. Discusses the "seductive statistical trap of factor analysis" as it relates to IQ tests, multiple intelligences, content and bias of IQ tests, lack of validity of IQ tests for individual…
Descriptors: Educational Diagnosis, Factor Analysis, Individual Differences, Intelligence
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McDonald, Geraldine – Oxford Review of Education, 1998
Discusses the reasons for the rise in IQ scores over time. Demonstrates the effect of the decrease in age at levels of schooling on the rise in IQ scores utilizing the data from the 1936 and 1968 standardization of the Otis Intermediate Test of Mental Ability, Form A, in New Zealand. (CMK)
Descriptors: Age Grade Placement, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Educational Change
Wahlstrom, Ralph – 1996
This paper takes the position that the main premise of "The Bell Curve" (by Richard Murray and Charles Herrnstein) is that significant advantages exist for possessing an IQ toward the top of the range--advantages that pertain to school success, career, and income. The premise is that people with high IQs have naturally acquired scholarly…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Principles, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
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Cherkes, Miriam G. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1975
Examined were the effects of chronological age and mental age on the understanding of logical rules by four subject groups (10- to 14-years-old): 10 average IQ Ss, 10 learning disabled Ss, 10 older educable retarded Ss and 10 younger educable retarded Ss. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Exceptional Child Research, Handicapped Children
Meeker, Mary – 1985
Educators, as applied scientists, must work in partnership with investigative scientists who are researching brain functions in order to reach a better understanding of gifted students and students who are intelligent but do not learn. Improper understanding of brain functions can cause gross errors in educational placement. Until recently, the…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Brain, Cognitive Tests, Educational Research
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Petty, Nancy E.; Harrell, Ernest H. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1977
Programmed textbooks were used to condition verbal repetoires relevant to motivation, test anxiety, and test wiseness in 118 sixth grade students. There was a significant effect on raw scores on an IQ post test. Students of lower intelligence made greater raw score gains than students with a higher IQ. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Improvement Programs, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Quotient
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Kandel, Elizabeth; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1988
Compared four groups of men from a Danish birth cohort: those at high risk for serious criminal involvement (with severely criminal fathers) who avoided and who evidenced serious criminal behavior, and those at low risk (with noncriminal fathers) who evidenced or did not evidence criminal behavior. Found the mean intelligence quotient score of the…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Criminals, Foreign Countries, High Risk Persons
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Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 1985
Borkowski and Krause (1983) concluded that the locus of black-white intelligence differences lies in metaprocesses not elementary cognitive processes. However, some variables were difference scores with unacceptably low reliability. Magnitude comparisons of racial differences give a different picture of results; comparable differences in measures…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Correlation
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