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22 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
The capacity to learn from experience, to think rationally, and to do deal effectively with the environment.
Intelligence
The knowledge and skills gained from experience.
Achievement
The psychologist who suggested that intelligence consists of general intelligence and specific intelligence.
Charles Spearman
The psychologist who identified nine mental abilities that make up intelligence.
Howard Gardner
The psychologist who identified seven different and separate kinds of intelligence.
Louis Thurstone
The psychologists who proposed a three-level model of intelligence consisting of analytic, creative, and practical parts.
Robert Sternberg
The psychologist who proposed the idea of emotional intelligence, which he considered important to job success.
Daniel Goleman
The intellectual level, in years, at which a child is function.
Mental Age
A number that reflects the relationship between a child's mental age and his or her chronological age.
Intelligence Quotient
The first modern intelligence test, which provides an intelligence quotient (IQ).
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
The intelligence test that includes several subtests and measures both verbal and nonverbal abilities.
Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale
The testing criterion that results in a test yielding highly similar scores for the same person every time it is used.
Reliability
The testing criterion that results in a test measuring what is supposed to measure.
Validity
A characteristic of a test that gives an advantage to a particular group, reflecting a problem with the test.
Culturally Biased
The condition of having an IQ score ranging from 35 to 49.
Moderate Retardation
The condition of having an IQ score ranging from 50 to 70.
Mild Retardation
The condition of having an IQ score of above 130.
Gifted
The ability to invent new solutions to problems.
Creativity
Type of study that examines genetic influence on intelligence by studying IQ scores of related people.
Kinship Study
The extent to which variations in a trait from person to person can be explained by genetic factors.
Heritability
Type of study that examines genetic influence on intelligence by studying the IQ scores of adopted children and those of their biological parents.
Adoptee Study
A program designed to provide young children with enriched early experiences, thereby developing intelligence.
Head Start