Gould (1982) Flashcards
(Gould) What did Yerkes do regarding the study?
Carried out the research into intelligence testing.
(Gould) What did Gould do regarding the study?
Reviewed the research done by Yerkes.
(Gould) Describe the background to Yerkes’ study.
Bint-Simon test (1905) - first intelligence test designed to identify school children who would not benefit from regular schooling because of their inferior intelligence and should be placed into ‘special schools’.
(Gould) Define the term ‘intelligence’ regarding this study.
An inferred characteristic of an individual, usually defined as the ability to profit from experience, acquire knowledge, think abstractly, or adapt to changes in the environment.
(Gould) Define the term ‘psychometric tests’ regarding this study.
Tools that seek to provide numerical measures of human personality traits, attitudes and abilities.
(Gould) Define the term ‘eugenics’ regarding this study.
The belief that it is possible to breed a superior group of people by encouraging those deemed superior to reproduce while inhibiting the growth of those groups deemed inferior.
(Gould) Define the term ‘hereditarianism’ regarding this study.
The belief that genetic inheritance is more important than environmental factors in determining intelligence and behaviour.
(Gould) What were Yerkes’ 2 aims?
- To produce a reliable and valid measure of intelligence.
- To prove that psychology (intelligence testing) could be as objective and quantifiable as the other scientific disciplines.
(Gould) Describe the research method used in this study.
Yerkes’ research has been described as a quasi experiment as the IV is ethnic origin (which is naturally occuring) and the DV being intelligence/average mental age.
(Gould) Describe the data collection used in this study.
Yerkes obtained his data through self report as recruits would answer questions during the intelligence tests to get their average mental age.
(Gould) Describe the sample used in this study.
- 1.75 million men within the US military
- White Americans, ‘Negroes’ and European immigrants
- Varying education levels
(Gould) What were the 3 different tests?
Alpha, beta and spoken exam.
(Gould) Describe the alpha test.
- A written examination for literate recruits.
- 8 parts and took less than 1 hour.
- Its tasks included number sequences, unscrambling sentences and analogies.
(Gould) Describe the army beta test.
- A series of tests designed for illiterate recruits and those that failed the Alpha.
- E.g. maze running, cube counting and translating numbers into symbols, picture completion.
- Instructions were written in English and in 3/7 parts the answers had to be given in writing.
(Gould) How should the army alpha test have been administered?
Should have been taken by literate recruits.
(Gould) How should the army beta test have been administered?
Should have been taken by illiterate recruits and those who failed the alpha.
(Gould) How should the spoken exam have been administered?
Should have been taken by those who failed the beta.
(Gould) Explain the 3 findings from this study.
- Average mental age of a white American adult is 13, was just above that of a moron (standard score = 16)
- Darker people of southern Europe and the Slavs on eastern Europe were less intelligent than the fair people of western and northern Europe (e.g. Russians = 11.34, Poles = 10.74)
- Black recruits scores lowest, with a mental age of 10.41. Some camps separated black individuals into 3 groups based on intensity of skin colour, light individuals scored higher.
(Gould) What was interpreted from these findings?
That these ‘facts’ were used to provide a genetic explanation for the differences.