THE MEASUREMENT
OF INTELLIGENCE
AN EXPLANATION OF AND A COMPLETE
GUIDE FOR THE USE OF THE STANFORD REVISION AND EXTENSION OF
The Binet-Simon Intelligence Scale
BY
LEWIS M. TERMAN
PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION
LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO
The Riverside Press Cambridge
COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY LEWIS M. TERMAN
ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED
The Riverside Press
CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS
PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
To the Memory
OF
ALFRED BINET
PATIENT RESEARCHER, CREATIVE THINKER, UNPRETENTIOUS SCHOLAR;
INSPIRING AND FRUITFUL DEVOTEE
OF
INDUCTIVE AND DYNAMIC
PSYCHOLOGY
EDITOR’S
INTRODUCTION
The present volume appeals to the editor of this series as one of the
most significant books, viewed from the standpoint of the future of our
educational theory and practice, that has been issued in years. Not only
does the volume set forth, in language so simple that the layman can easily
understand, the large importance for public education of a careful
measurement of the intelligence of children, but it also describes the tests
which are to be given and the entire procedure of giving them. In a clear
and easy style the author sets forth scientific facts of far-reaching
educational importance, facts which it has cost him, his students, and many
other scientific workers, years of painstaking labor to accumulate.
Only very recently, practically only within the past half-dozen years,
have scientific workers begun to appreciate fully the importance of
intelligence tests as a guide to educational procedure, and up to the
present we have been able to make but little use of such tests in our
schools. The conception in itself has been new, and the testing procedure
has been more or less unrefined and technical. The following somewhat
popular presentation of the idea and of the methods involved, itself based
on a scientific monograph which the author is publishing elsewhere, serves
for the first time to set forth in simple language the technical details of
giving such intelligence tests.
The educational significance of the results to be obtained from careful
measurements of the intelligence of children can hardly be overestimated.
Questions relating to the choice of studies, vocational guidance, schoolroom
procedure, the grading
of pupils, promotional schemes, the study of the retardation of children in
the schools, juvenile delinquency, and the proper handling of subnormals on
the one hand and gifted children on the other,—all alike acquire new meaning
and significance when viewed in the light of the measurement of intelligence
as outlined in this volume. As a guide to the interpretation of the results
of other forms of investigation relating to the work, progress, and needs of
children, intelligence tests form a very valuable aid. More than all other
forms of data combined, such tests give the necessary information from which
a pupil’s possibilities of future mental growth can be foretold, and upon
which his further education can be most profitably directed.
The publication of this revision and extension of the original Binet-Simon
scale for measuring intelligence, with the closer adaptation of it to
American conditions and needs, should mark a distinct step in advance in our
educational procedure. It means the perfection of another and a very
important measuring stick for evaluating educational practices, and in
particular for diagnosing individual possibilities and needs. Just now the
method is new, and its use somewhat limited, but it is the confident
prediction of many students of the subject that, before long, intelligence
tests will become as much a matter of necessary routine in schoolroom
procedure as a blood-count now is in physical diagnosis. That our schoolroom
methods will in turn become much more intelligent, and that all classes of
children, but especially the gifted and the slow, will profit by such
intellectual diagnosis, there can be but little question.
That any parent or teacher, without training, can give these tests, the
author in no way contends. However, the observations of Dr. Kohs, cited in
Chapter VII, as well as the experience of the
author and others who have given courses in intelligence testing to
teachers, alike indicate that
sufficient skill to enable teachers and school principals to give such tests
intelligently is not especially difficult to acquire. This being the case it
may be hoped that the requisite training to enable them to handle these
tests may be included, very soon, as a part of the necessary pedagogical
equipment of those who aspire to administrative positions in our public and
private schools.
Besides being of special importance to school officers and to students of
education in colleges and normal schools, this volume can confidently be
recommended to physicians and social workers, and to teachers and parents
interested in intelligence measurements, as at once the simplest and the
best explanation of the newly-evolved intelligence tests, which has so far
appeared in print.
Ellwood P.
Cubberley.
PREFACE
The constant and growing use of the Binet-Simon intelligence scale in
public schools, institutions for defectives, reform schools, juvenile
courts, and police courts is sufficient evidence of the intrinsic worth of
the method. It is generally recognized, however, that the serviceableness of
the scale has hitherto been seriously limited, both by the lack of a
sufficiently detailed guide and by a number of recognized imperfections in
the scale itself. The Stanford revision and extension has been worked out
for the purpose of correcting as many as possible of these imperfections,
and it is here presented with a rather minute description of the method as a
whole and of the individual tests.
The aim has been to present the explanations and instructions so clearly
and in such an untechnical form as to make the book of use, not only to the
psychologist, but also to the rank and file of teachers, physicians, and
social workers. More particularly, it is designed as a text for use in
normal schools, colleges, and teachers’ reading-circles.
While the use of the intelligence scale for research purposes and for
accurate diagnosis will of necessity always be restricted to those who have
had extensive training in experimental psychology, the author believes that
the time has come when its wider use for more general purposes should be
encouraged.
However, it cannot be too strongly emphasized that no one, whatever his
previous training may have been, can make proper use of the scale unless he
is willing to learn the method of procedure and scoring down to the minutest
detail. A general acquaintance with the nature of the individual tests is by
no means sufficient.
Perhaps the best way
to learn the method will be to begin by studying the book through, in order
to gain a general acquaintance with the tests; then, if possible, to observe
a few examinations; and finally to take up the procedure for detailed study
in connection with practice testing. Twenty or thirty tests, made with
constant reference to the procedure as described in Part II, should be
sufficient to prepare the teacher or physician to make profitable use of the
scale.
The Stanford revision of the scale is the result of a number of
investigations, made possible by the coöperation of the author’s graduate
students. Grateful acknowledgment is especially due to Professor H. G.
Childs, Miss Grace Lyman, Dr. George Ordahl, Dr. Louise Ellison Ordahl, Miss
Neva Galbreath, Mr. Wilford Talbert, Mr. J. Harold Williams, and Mr. Herbert
E. Knollin. Without their assistance this book could not have been written.
Stanford University,
April, 1916.
CONTENTS
PART I. PROBLEMS AND RESULTS
CHAPTER I
The Uses of Intelligence Tests
3
CHAPTER II
Sources of Error in Judging Intelligence
22
CHAPTER III
Description of the Binet-Simon Method
36
CHAPTER IV
Nature of the Stanford Revision and Extension
51
CHAPTER V
Analysis of one Thousand Intelligence Quotients
65
CHAPTER VI
The Significance of Various Intelligence
Quotients 78
CHAPTER VII
Reliability of the Binet-Simon Method
105
PART II
GUIDE FOR THE USE OF THE STANFORD
REVISION AND EXTENSION
CHAPTER VIII
General Instructions
121
CHAPTER IX
Instructions for Year III
-
Pointing to parts of the body
142
- Naming
familiar objects 143
-
Enumeration of objects in pictures
145
- Giving
sex 146
- Giving
the family name 147
-
Repeating six to seven syllables
149
- Alternative test: Repeating three
digits 150
CHAPTER X
Instructions for Year IV
-
Comparison of lines 151
-
Discrimination of forms 152
-
Counting four pennies 154
- Copying
a square 155
-
Comprehension, first degree
157
-
Repeating four digits 159
- Alternative test: Repeating twelve to
thirteen syllables 160
CHAPTER XI
Instructions for Year V
-
Comparison of weights 161
- Naming
colors 163
- Æsthetic
comparison 165
- Giving
definitions in terms of use
167
- The game
of patience 169
- Three
commissions 172
- Alternative test: Giving age
173
CHAPTER XII
Instructions for Year VI
-
Distinguishing right and left
175
- Finding
omissions in pictures 178
-
Counting thirteen pennies
180
-
Comprehension, second degree
181
-
Naming four coins
184
-
Repeating sixteen to eighteen syllables
185
- Alternative test: Forenoon and
afternoon 187
CHAPTER XIII
Instructions for Year VII
- Giving
the number of fingers 189
-
Description of pictures 190
-
Repeating five digits 193
- Tying
a bow-knot 196
- Giving
differences from memory 199
-
Copying a diamond 204
- Alternative test 1: Naming the days
of the week 205
- Alternative test 2: Repeating three
digits reversed 207
CHAPTER XIV
Instructions for Year VIII
- The
ball-and-field test 210
-
Counting backwards from 20 to 1
213
-
Comprehension, third degree
215
-
Giving similarities, two things
217
-
Giving definitions superior to use
221
-
Vocabulary (20 definitions, 3600 words)
224
- Alternative test 1: Naming six
coins 231
- Alternative test 2: Writing from
dictation 231
CHAPTER XV
Instructions for Year IX
- Giving
the date 234
-
Arranging five weights 236
- Making
change 240
-
Repeating four digits reversed
242
- Using
three words in a sentence
242
- Finding
rhymes 248
- Alternative test 1: Naming the months
251
- Alternative test 2: Counting the
value of stamps 252
CHAPTER XVI
Instructions for Year X
-
Vocabulary (30 definitions, 5400 words)
255
-
Detecting absurdities 255
-
Drawing designs from memory
260
- Reading
for eight memories 262
-
Comprehension, fourth degree
268
- Naming
sixty words 272
- Alternative test 1: Repeating six
digits 277
- Alternative test 2: Repeating twenty
to twenty-two syllables 277
- Alternative test 3: Healy’s
Construction Puzzle A 278
CHAPTER XVII
Instructions for Year XII
-
Vocabulary (40 definitions, 7200 words)
281
-
Defining abstract words 281
- The
ball-and-field test (superior plan)
286
-
Dissected sentences 286
-
Interpretation of fables (score 4)
290
-
Repeating five digits reversed
301
-
Interpretation of pictures
302
- Giving
similarities, three things
306
CHAPTER XVIII
Instructions for Year XIV
-
Vocabulary (50 definitions, 9000 words)
310
-
Induction test: finding a rule
310
- Giving
differences between a president and a king
313
-
Problem questions 315
-
Arithmetical reasoning 319
-
Reversing hands of a clock
321
- Alternative test: Repeating seven
digits 322
CHAPTER XIX
Instructions for “Average Adult”
-
Vocabulary (65 definitions, 11,700 words)
324
-
Interpretation of fables (score 8)
324
-
Differences between abstract terms
324
-
Problem of the enclosed boxes
327
-
Repeating six digits reversed
329
-
Using a code
330
- Alternative test 1:
Repeating twenty-eight syllables
332
- Alternative test 2:
Comprehension of physical relations
333
CHAPTER XX
Instructions for “Superior Adult”
-
Vocabulary (75 definitions, 13,500 words)
338
-
Binet’s paper-cutting test
338
-
Repeating eight digits
340
-
Repeating thought of passage
340
-
Repeating seven digits reversed
345
-
Ingenuity test
345
SELECTED REFERENCES
349
INDEX 359
FIGURES AND
DIAGRAMS
-
Distribution of Mental Ages of 62 Normal Adults
55
-
Distribution of I Q’s of 905 Unselected Children, 5–14 Years of Age
66
- Median
I Q of 457 Boys and 448 Girls, for the Ages 5–14 Years
69
-
Diamond drawn by R. W.; Age 13-10; Mental Age 7-6
82
-
Writing from Dictation. R. M., Age 15; Mental Age 9
83
- Ball
and Field Test. I. M., Age 14-2; Mental Age 9
84
-
Diamond drawn by A. W. 85
-
Drawing Designs from Memory. H. S., Age 11; Mental Age 8-3
86
- Ball
and Field Test. S. F., Age 17; Mental Age 11-6
88
-
Writing from Dictation. C. P., Age 10-2; Mental Age 7-11
90
- Ball
and Field Test. M. P., Age 14; Mental Age 10-8
91
- Ball
and Field Test. R. G., Age 13-5; Mental Age 10-6
93
- Ball
and Field Test. E. B., Age 7-9; I Q 130
98
- Ball
and Field Test. F. McA., Age 10-3; Mental Age 14-6
100
-
Drawing Designs from Memory. E. M., Age 6-11; Mental Age 10, I Q 145
101
- Ball
and Field Test. B. F., Age 7-8; Mental Age 12-4; I Q 160
102
-
Healy and Fernald Construction Puzzle
279
THE MEASUREMENT OF
INTELLIGENCE
PART I
PROBLEMS AND RESULTS
THE MEASUREMENT OF
INTELLIGENCE
CHAPTER I
THE USES OF INTELLIGENCE TESTS
Intelligence tests of retarded school children.
Numerous studies of the age-grade progress of school children have
afforded convincing evidence of the magnitude and seriousness of the
retardation problem. Statistics collected in hundreds of cities in the
United States show that between a third and a half of the school children
fail to progress through the grades at the expected rate; that from
10 to 15 per cent are retarded two years or more; and that from
5 to 8 per cent are retarded at least three years. More than 10 per cent of
the $400,000,000 annually expended in the United States for school
instruction is devoted to re-teaching children what they have already been
taught but have failed to learn.
The first efforts at reform which resulted from these findings were based
on the supposition that the evils which had been discovered could be
remedied by the individualizing of instruction, by improved methods of
promotion, by increased attention to children’s health, and by other reforms
in school administration. Although reforms along these lines have been
productive of much good, they have nevertheless been in a measure
disappointing. The trouble was, they were too often based upon the
assumption that under the right conditions all children would be
equally, or almost equally, capable of making satisfactory school progress.
Psychological studies of school children by means of standardized
intelligence tests have shown that this supposition is not in accord with
the facts. It has been found that children do not fall into two well-defined
groups, the “feeble-minded” and the “normal.” Instead, there are many grades
of intelligence, ranging from idiocy on the one hand to genius on the other.
Among those classed as normal, vast individual differences have been found
to exist in original mental endowment, differences which affect profoundly
the capacity to profit from school instruction.
We are beginning to realize that the school must take into account, more
seriously than it has yet done, the existence and significance of these
differences in endowment. Instead of wasting energy in the vain attempt to
hold mentally slow and defective children up to a level of progress which is
normal to the average child, it will be wiser to take account of the
inequalities of children in original endowment and to differentiate the
course of study in such a way that each child will be allowed to progress at
the rate which is normal to him, whether that rate be rapid or slow.
While we cannot hold all children to the same standard of school
progress, we can at least prevent the kind of retardation which involves
failure and the repetition of a school grade. It is well enough recognized
that children do not enter with very much zest upon school work in which
they have once failed. Failure crushes self-confidence and destroys the
spirit of work. It is a sad fact that a large proportion of children in the
schools are acquiring the habit of failure. The remedy, of course, is to
measure out the work for each child in proportion to his mental ability.
Before an engineer constructs a railroad bridge or trestle,
he studies the materials
to be used, and learns by means of tests exactly the amount of strain per
unit of size his materials will be able to withstand. He does not work
empirically, and count upon patching up the mistakes which may later appear
under the stress of actual use. The educational engineer should emulate this
example. Tests and forethought must take the place of failure and patchwork.
Our efforts have been too long directed by “trial and error.” It is time to
leave off guessing and to acquire a scientific knowledge of the material
with which we have to deal. When instruction must be repeated, it means that
the school, as well as the pupil, has failed.
Every child who fails in his school work or is in danger of failing
should be given a mental examination. The examination takes less than one
hour, and the result will contribute more to a real understanding of the
case than anything else that could be done. It is necessary to determine
whether a given child is unsuccessful in school because of poor native
ability, or because of poor instruction, lack of interest, or some other
removable cause.
It is not sufficient to establish any number of special classes, if they
are to be made the dumping-ground for all kinds of troublesome cases—the
feeble-minded, the physically defective, the merely backward, the truants,
the incorrigibles, etc. Without scientific diagnosis and classification of
these children the educational work of the special class must blunder along
in the dark. In such diagnosis and classification our main reliance must
always be in mental tests, properly used and properly interpreted.
Intelligence tests of the feeble-minded.
Thus far intelligence tests have found their chief application in the
identification and grading of the feeble-minded. Their value for this
purpose is twofold. In the first place, it is necessary to ascertain the
degree of defect before it is possible to decide
intelligently upon either
the content or the method of instruction suited to the training of the
backward child. In the second place, intelligence tests are rapidly
extending our conception of “feeble-mindedness” to include milder degrees of
defect than have generally been associated with this term. The earlier
methods of diagnosis caused a majority of the higher grade defectives to be
overlooked. Previous to the development of psychological methods the
low-grade moron was about as high a type of defective as most physicians or
even psychologists were able to identify as feeble-minded.
Wherever intelligence tests have been made in any considerable number in
the schools, they have shown that not far from 2 per cent of the children
enrolled have a grade of intelligence which, however long they live, will
never develop beyond the level which is normal to the average child of
11 or 12 years. The large majority of these belong to the moron grade; that
is, their mental development will stop somewhere between the 7-year and
12-year level of intelligence, more often between 9 and 12.
The more we learn about such children, the clearer it becomes that they
must be looked upon as real defectives. They may be able to drag along to
the fourth, fifth, or sixth grades, but even by the age of 16 or 18 years
they are never able to cope successfully with the more abstract and
difficult parts of the common-school course of study. They may master a
certain amount of rote learning, such as that involved in reading and in the
manipulation of number combinations but they cannot be taught to meet new
conditions effectively or to think, reason, and judge as normal persons do.
It is safe to predict that in the near future intelligence tests will
bring tens of thousands of these high-grade defectives under the
surveillance and protection of society.
This will ultimately
result in curtailing the reproduction of feeble-mindedness and in the
elimination of an enormous amount of crime, pauperism, and industrial
inefficiency. It is hardly necessary to emphasize that the high-grade cases,
of the type now so frequently overlooked, are precisely the ones whose
guardianship it is most important for the State to assume.
Intelligence tests of delinquents.
One of the most important facts brought to light by the use of
intelligence tests is the frequent association of delinquency and mental
deficiency. Although it has long been recognized that the proportion of
feeble-mindedness among offenders is rather large, the real amount has,
until recently, been underestimated even by the most competent students of
criminology.
The criminologists have been accustomed to give more attention to the
physical than to the mental correlates of crime. Thus, Lombroso and his
followers subjected thousands of criminals to observation and measurement
with regard to such physical traits as size and shape of the skull,
bilateral asymmetries, anomalies of the ear, eye, nose, palate, teeth,
hands, fingers, hair, dermal sensitivity, etc. The search was for physical
“stigmata” characteristic of the “criminal type.”
Although such studies performed an important service in creating a
scientific interest in criminology, the theories of Lombroso have been
wholly discredited by the results of intelligence tests. Such tests have
demonstrated, beyond any possibility of doubt, that the most important trait
of at least 25 per cent of our criminals is mental weakness. The physical
abnormalities which have been found so common among prisoners are not the
stigmata of criminality, but the physical accompaniments of
feeble-mindedness. They have no diagnostic significance except in so far as
they are indications of mental deficiency. Without
exception, every study
which has been made of the intelligence level of delinquents has furnished
convincing testimony as to the close relation existing between mental
weakness and moral abnormality. Some of these findings are as follows:—
Miss Renz tested 100 girls of the Ohio State Reformatory and reported
36 per cent as certainly feeble-minded. In every one of these cases the
commitment papers had given the pronouncement “intellect sound.”
Under the direction of Dr. Goddard the Binet tests were given to 100
juvenile court cases, chosen at random, in Newark, New Jersey. Nearly half
were classified as feeble-minded. One boy 17 years old had 9-year
intelligence; another of 15½ had 8-year intelligence.
Of 56 delinquent girls 14 to 20 years of age tested by Hill and
Goddard, almost half belonged either to the 9- or the 10-year level of
intelligence.
Dr. G. G. Fernald’s tests of 100 prisoners at the Massachusetts State
Reformatory showed that at least 25 per cent were feeble-minded.
Of 1186 girls tested by Miss Dewson at the State Industrial School for
Girls at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 28 per cent were found to have subnormal
intelligence.
Dr. Katherine Bement Davis’s report on 1000 cases entered in the
Bedford Home for Women, New York, stated that there was no doubt but that
at least 157 were feeble-minded. Recently there has been established at
this institution one of the most important research laboratories of the
kind in the United States, with a trained psychologist, Dr. Mabel Fernald,
in charge.
Of 564 prostitutes investigated by Dr. Anna Dwyer in connection with
the Municipal Court of Chicago, only 3 per cent had gone beyond the fifth
grade in school. Mental tests were not made, but from the data given it is
reasonably certain that half or more were feeble-minded.
Tests, by Dr. George Ordahl and Dr. Louise Ellison Ordahl, of cases in
the Geneva School for Girls, Geneva, Illinois, showed that, on a
conservative basis of classification, at least 18 per cent were
feeble-minded. At the Joliet Prison, Illinois, the same authors found
50 per cent of the female prisoners feeble-minded,
and 26 per cent of the
male prisoners. At the St. Charles School for Boys 26 per cent were
feeble-minded.
Tests, by Dr. J. Harold Williams, of 150 delinquents in the Whittier
State School for Boys, Whittier, California, gave 28 per cent
feeble-minded and 25 per cent at or near the border-line. About 300 other
juvenile delinquents tested by Mr. Williams gave approximately the same
figures. As a result of these findings a research laboratory has been
established at the Whittier School, with Dr. Williams in charge. In the
girls’ division of the Whittier School, Dr. Grace Fernald collected a
large amount of psychological data on more than 100 delinquent girls. The
findings of this investigation agree closely with those of Dr. Williams
for the boys.
At the State Reformatory, Jeffersonville, Indiana, Dr. von Klein-Schmid,
in an unusually thorough psychological study of 1000 young adult
prisoners, finds the proportion of feeble-mindedness not far from
50 per cent.
But it is needless to multiply statistics. Those given are but samples.
Tests are at present being made in most of the progressive prisons, reform
schools, and juvenile courts throughout the country, and while there are
minor discrepancies in regard to the actual percentage who are
feeble-minded, there is no investigator who denies the fearful rôle played
by mental deficiency in the production of vice, crime, and delinquency.[1]
Heredity studies of “degenerate” families have confirmed, in a striking
way, the testimony secured by intelligence tests. Among the best known of
such families are the “Kallikaks,” the “Jukes,” the “Hill Folk,” the “Nams,”
the “Zeros,” and the “Ishmaelites.”
The Kallikak family. Martin
Kallikak was a youthful soldier in the Revolutionary War. At a tavern
frequented by the militia he met a feeble-minded girl, by whom he became
the father of a feeble-minded son. In 1912 there were 480 known direct
descendants of this temporary union. It is known that 36 of these were
illegitimates, that 33
were sexually immoral, that 24 were confirmed alcoholics, and that 8 kept
houses of ill-fame. The explanation of so much immorality will be obvious
when it is stated that of the 480 descendants, 143 were known to be
feeble-minded, and that many of the others were of questionable mentality.
A few years after returning from the war this same Martin Kallikak
married a respectable girl of good family. From this union 496 individuals
have been traced in direct descent, and in this branch of the family there
were no illegitimate children, no immoral women, and only one man who was
sexually loose. There were no criminals, no keepers of houses of ill-fame,
and only two confirmed alcoholics. Again the explanation is clear when it
is stated that this branch of the family did not contain a single
feeble-minded individual. It was made up of doctors, lawyers, judges,
educators, traders, and landholders.[2]
The Hill Folk. The Hill Folk are a
New England family of which 709 persons have been traced. Of the married
women, 24 per cent had given birth to illegitimate offspring, and
10 per cent were prostitutes. Criminal tendencies were clearly shown in
24 members of the family, while alcoholism was still more common. The
proportion of feeble-minded was 48 per cent. It was estimated that the
Hill Folk have in the last sixty years cost the State of Massachusetts, in
charitable relief, care of feeble-minded, epileptic, and insane,
conviction and punishment for crime, prostitution pauperism, etc., at
least $500,000.[3]
The Nam family and the Jukes give equally dark pictures as regards
criminality, licentiousness, and alcoholism, and although
feeble-mindedness was not as fully investigated in these families as in
the Kallikaks and the Hill Folk, the evidence is strong that it was a
leading trait. The 784 Nams who were traced included 187 alcoholics,
232 women and 199 men known to be licentious, and 40 who became prisoners.
It is estimated that the Nams have already cost the State nearly
$1,500,000.[4]
Of 540 Jukes, practically one fifth were born out of wedlock, 37 were
known to be syphilitic, 53 had been in the poorhouse, 76
had been sentenced to
prison, and of 229 women of marriageable age 128 were prostitutes. The
economic damage inflicted upon the State of New York by the Jukes in
seventy-five years was estimated at more than $1,300,000, to say nothing
of diseases and other evil influences which they helped to spread.[5]
But why do the feeble-minded tend so strongly to become delinquent? The
answer may be stated in simple terms. Morality depends upon two things: (a)
the ability to foresee and to weigh the possible consequences for self and
others of different kinds of behavior; and (b)
upon the willingness and capacity to exercise self-restraint. That there are
many intelligent criminals is due to the fact that (a)
may exist without (b). On the other
hand, (b) presupposes (a).
In other words, not all criminals are feeble-minded, but all feeble-minded
are at least potential criminals. That every feeble-minded woman is a
potential prostitute would hardly be disputed by any one. Moral judgment,
like business judgment, social judgment, or any other kind of higher thought
process, is a function of intelligence. Morality cannot flower and fruit if
intelligence remains infantile.
All of us in early childhood lacked moral responsibility. We were as rank
egoists as any criminal. Respect for the feelings, the property rights, or
any other kind of rights, of others had to be laboriously acquired under the
whip of discipline. But by degrees we learned that only when instincts are
curbed, and conduct is made to conform to principles established formally or
accepted tacitly by our neighbors, does this become a livable world for any
of us. Without the intelligence to generalize the particular, to foresee
distant consequences of present acts, to weigh these foreseen consequences
in the nice balance of imagination,
morality cannot be learned. When the adult body, with its adult instincts,
is coupled with the undeveloped intelligence and weak inhibitory powers of a
10-year-old child, the only possible outcome, except in those cases where
constant guardianship is exercised by relatives or friends, is some form of
delinquency.
Considering the tremendous cost of vice and crime, which in all
probability amounts to not less than $500,000,000 per year in the United
States alone, it is evident that psychological testing has found here one of
its richest applications. Before offenders can be subjected to rational
treatment a mental diagnosis is necessary, and while intelligence tests do
not constitute a complete psychological diagnosis, they are, nevertheless,
its most indispensable part.
Intelligence tests of superior children.
The number of children with very superior ability is approximately as
great as the number of feeble-minded. The future welfare of the country
hinges, in no small degree, upon the right education of these superior
children. Whether civilization moves on and up depends most on the advances
made by creative thinkers and leaders in science, politics, art, morality,
and religion. Moderate ability can follow, or imitate, but genius must show
the way.
Through the leveling influences of the educational lockstep such children
at present are often lost in the masses. It is a rare child who is able to
break this lockstep by extra promotions. Taking the country over, the ratio
of “accelerates” to “retardates” in the school is approximately 1 to 10.
Through the handicapping influences of poverty, social neglect, physical
defects, or educational maladjustments, many potential leaders in science,
art, government, and industry are denied the opportunity of a normal
development. The use we have made of exceptional ability reminds one of the
primitive methods of surface mining.
It is necessary to
explore the nation’s hidden resources of intelligence. The common saying
that “genius will out” is one of those dangerous half-truths with which too
many people rest content.
Psychological tests show that children of superior ability are very
likely to be misunderstood in school. The writer has tested more than a
hundred children who were as much above average intelligence as moron
defectives are below. The large majority of these were found located below
the school grade warranted by their intellectual level. One third had failed
to reap any advantage whatever, in terms of promotion, from their very
superior intelligence. Even genius languishes when kept over-long at tasks
that are too easy.
Our data show that teachers sometimes fail entirely to recognize
exceptional superiority in a pupil, and that the degree of such superiority
is rarely estimated with anything like the accuracy which is possible to the
psychologist after a one-hour examination.
B. F., for example, was a little over 7½ years old when tested. He was
in the third grade, and was therefore thought by his teacher to be
accelerated in school. This boy’s intelligence, however, was found to be
above the 12-year level. There is no doubt that his mental ability would
have enabled him, with a few months of individual instruction, to carry
fifth or even sixth-grade work as easily as third, and without injury to
body or mind. Nevertheless, the teacher and both the parents of this child
had found nothing remarkable about him. In reality he belongs to a grade of
genius not found oftener than once in several thousand cases.
Another illustration is that of a boy of 10½ years who tested at the
“average adult” level. He was doing superior work in the sixth grade, but
according to the testimony of the teacher had “no unusual ability.” It was
ascertained from the
parents that this boy, at an age when most children are reading fairy
stories, had a passion for standard medical literature and textbooks in
physical science. Yet, after more than a year of daily contact with this
young genius (who is a relative of Meyerbeer, the composer), the teacher had
discovered no symptoms of unusual ability.[6]
Teachers should be better trained in detecting the signs of superior
ability. Every child who consistently gets high marks in his school work
with apparent ease should be given a mental examination, and if his
intelligence level warrants it he should either be given extra promotions,
or placed in a special class for superior children where faster progress can
be made. The latter is the better plan, because it obviates the necessity of
skipping grades; it permits rapid but continuous progress.
The usual reluctance of teachers to give extra promotions probably rests
upon three factors: (1) mere inertia; (2) a natural unwillingness to part
with exceptionally satisfactory pupils; and (3) the traditional belief that
precocious children should be held back for fear of dire physical or mental
consequences.
In order to throw light on the question whether exceptionally bright
children are specially likely to be one-sided, nervous, delicate, morally
abnormal, socially unadaptable, or otherwise peculiar, the writer has
secured rather extensive information regarding 31 children whose mental age
was found by intelligence tests to be 25 per cent above the actual age. This
degree of intelligence is possessed by about 2 children out of 100, and is
nearly as far above average intelligence as high-grade feeble-mindedness is
below. The supplementary information, which was furnished in most cases by
the teachers, may be summarized as follows:—
-
Ability special or general. In the
case of 20 out of 31 the ability is decidedly general, and with 2 it is
mainly general. The talents of 5 are described as more or less special,
but only in one case is it remarkably so. Doubtful 4.
-
Health. 15 are said to be perfectly
healthy; 13 have one or more physical defects; 4 of the 13 are described
as delicate; 4 have adenoids; 4 have eye-defects; 1 lisps; and 1 stutters.
These figures are about the same as one finds in any group of ordinary
children.
-
Studiousness. “Extremely studious,”
15; “usually studious” or “fairly studious,” 11; “not particularly
studious,” 5; “lazy,” 0.
-
Moral traits. Favorable traits only,
19; one or more unfavorable traits, 8; no answer, 4. The eight with
unfavorable moral traits are described as follows: 2 are “very
self-willed”; 1 “needs close watching”; 1 is “cruel to animals”; 1 is
“untruthful”; 1 is “unreliable”; 1 is “a bluffer”; 1 is “sexually
abnormal,” “perverted,” and “vicious.”
It will be noted that with the exception of the last child, the moral
irregularities mentioned can hardly be regarded, from the psychological
point of view, as essentially abnormal. It is perhaps a good rather than a
bad sign for a child to be self-willed; most children “need close
watching”; and a certain amount of untruthfulness in children is the rule
and not the exception.
-
Social adaptability. Socially
adaptable, 25; not adaptable, 2; doubtful, 4.
-
Attitude of other children.
“Favorable,” “friendly,” “liked by everybody,” “much admired,” “popular,”
etc., 26; “not liked,” 1; “inspires repugnance,” 1; no answer, 1.
-
Is child a leader? “Yes,” 14; “no,” or
“not particularly,” 12; doubtful, 5.
-
Is play life normal? “Yes,” 26; “no,”
1; “hardly,” 1; doubtful, 3.
-
Is child spoiled or vain? “No,” 22;
“yes,” 5; “somewhat,” 2; no answer, 2.
According to the above data, exceptionally intelligent children are fully
as likely to be healthy as ordinary children; their ability is far more
often general than special, they
are studious above the average, really serious faults are not common among
them, they are nearly always socially adaptable, are sought after as
playmates and companions, their play life is usually normal, they are
leaders far oftener than other children, and notwithstanding their many
really superior qualities they are seldom vain or spoiled.
It would be greatly to the advantage of such children if their superior
ability were more promptly and fully recognized, and if (under proper
medical supervision, of course) they were promoted as rapidly as their
mental development would warrant. Unless they are given the grade of work
which calls forth their best efforts, they run the risk of falling into
lifelong habits of submaximum efficiency. The danger in the case of such
children is not over-pressure, but under-pressure.
Intelligence tests as a basis for grading.
Not only in the case of retarded or exceptionally bright children, but
with many others also, intelligence tests can aid in correctly placing the
child in school.
The pupil who enters one school system from another is a case in point.
Such a pupil nearly always suffers a loss of time. The indefensible custom
is to grade the newcomer down a little, because, forsooth, the textbooks he
has studied may have differed somewhat from those he is about to take up, or
because the school system from which he comes may be looked upon as
inferior. Teachers are too often suspicious of all other educational methods
besides their own. The present treatment accorded such children, which so
often does them injustice and injury, should be replaced by an intelligence
test. The hour of time required for the test is a small matter in comparison
with the loss of a school term by the pupils.
Indeed, it would be desirable to make all promotions on
the basis chiefly of
intellectual ability. Hitherto the school has had to rely on tests of
information because reliable tests of intelligence have not until recently
been available. As trained Binet examiners become more plentiful, the
information standard will have to give way to the criterion which asks
merely that the child shall be able to do the work of the next higher grade.
The brief intelligence test is not only more enlightening than the
examination; it is also more hygienic. The school examination is often for
the child a source of worry and anxiety; the mental test is an interesting
and pleasant experience.
Intelligence tests for vocational fitness.
The time is probably not far distant when intelligence tests will become
a recognized and widely used instrument for determining vocational fitness.
Of course, it is not claimed that tests are available which will tell us
unerringly exactly what one of a thousand or more occupations a given
individual is best fitted to pursue. But when thousands of children who have
been tested by the Binet scale have been followed out into the industrial
world, and their success in various occupations noted, we shall know fairly
definitely the vocational significance of any given degree of mental
inferiority or superiority. Researches of this kind will ultimately
determine the minimum “intelligence quotient” necessary for success in each
leading occupation.
Industrial concerns doubtless suffer enormous losses from the employment
of persons whose mental ability is not equal to the tasks they are expected
to perform. The present methods of trying out new employees, transferring
them to simpler and simpler jobs as their inefficiency becomes apparent, is
wasteful and to a great extent unnecessary. A cheaper and more satisfactory
method would be to employ a psychologist to examine applicants for positions
and to weed out the unfit. Any business employing as many
as five hundred or a
thousand workers, as, for example, a large department store, could save in
this way several times the salary of a well-trained psychologist.
That the industrially inefficient are often of subnormal intelligence has
already been demonstrated in a number of psychological investigations. Of
150 “hoboes” tested under the direction of the writer by Mr. Knollin, at
least 15 per cent belonged to the moron grade of mental deficiency, and
almost as many more were border-line cases. To be sure, a large proportion
were found perfectly normal, and a few even decidedly superior in mental
ability, but the ratio of mental deficiency was ten or fifteen times as high
as that holding for the general population. Several had as low as 9- or
10-year intelligence, and one had a mental level of 7 years. The industrial
history of such subjects, as given by themselves, was always about what the
mental level would lead us to expect—unskilled work, lack of interest in
accomplishment, frequent discharge from jobs, discouragement, and finally
the “road.”
The above findings have been fully paralleled by Mr. Glenn Johnson and
Professor Eleanor Rowland, of Reed College, who tested 108 unemployed
charity cases in Portland, Oregon. Both of these investigators made use of
the Stanford revision of the Binet scale, which is especially serviceable in
distinguishing the upper-grade defectives from normals.
It hardly needs to be emphasized that when charity organizations help the
feeble-minded to float along in the social and industrial world, and to
produce and rear children after their kind, a doubtful service is rendered.
A little psychological research would aid the united charities of any city
to direct their expenditures into more profitable channels than would
otherwise be possible.
Other uses of intelligence tests.
Another important use
of intelligence tests is in the study of the factors which influence mental
development. It is desirable that we should be able to guard the child
against influences which affect mental development unfavorably; but as long
as these influences have not been sifted, weighed, and measured, we have
nothing but conjecture on which to base our efforts in this direction.
When we search the literature of child hygiene for reliable evidence as
to the injurious effects upon mental ability of malnutrition, decayed teeth,
obstructed breathing, reduced sleep, bad ventilation, insufficient exercise,
etc., we are met by endless assertion painfully unsupported by demonstrated
fact. We have, indeed, very little exact knowledge regarding the mental
effects of any of the factors just mentioned. When standardized mental tests
have come into more general use, such influences will be easy to detect
wherever they are really present.
Again, the most important question of heredity is that regarding the
inheritance of intelligence; but this is a problem which cannot be attacked
at all without some accurate means of identifying the thing which is the
object of study. Without the use of scales for measuring intelligence we can
give no better answer as to the essential difference between a genius and a
fool than is to be found in legend and fiction.
Applying this to school children, it means that without such tests we
cannot know to what extent a child’s mental performances are determined by
environment and to what extent by heredity. Is the place of the so-called
lower classes in the social and industrial scale the result of their
inferior native endowment, or is their apparent inferiority merely a result
of their inferior home and school training? Is genius more common among
children of the educated classes than among the children of the ignorant and
poor? Are the inferior
races really inferior, or are they merely unfortunate in their lack of
opportunity to learn?
Only intelligence tests can answer these questions and grade the raw
material with which education works. Without them we can never distinguish
the results of our educational efforts with a given child from the influence
of the child’s original endowment. Such tests would have told us, for
example, whether the much-discussed “wonder children,” such as the Sidis and
Wiener boys and the Stoner girl, owe their precocious intellectual prowess
to superior training (as their parents believe) or to superior native
ability. The supposed effects upon mental development of new methods of mind
training, which are exploited so confidently from time to time (e.g., the
Montessori method and the various systems of sensory and motor training for
the feeble-minded), will have to be checked up by the same kind of
scientific measurement.
In all these fields intelligence tests are certain to play an
ever-increasing rôle. With the exception of moral character there is nothing
as significant for a child’s future as his grade of intelligence. Even
health itself is likely to have less influence in determining success in
life. Although strength and swiftness have always had great survival value
among the lower animals, these characteristics have long since lost their
supremacy in man’s struggle for existence. For us the rule of brawn has been
broken, and intelligence has become the decisive factor in success. Schools,
railroads, factories, and the largest commercial concerns may be
successfully managed by persons who are physically weak or even sickly. One
who has intelligence constantly measures opportunities against his own
strength or weakness and adjusts himself to conditions by following those
leads which promise most toward the realization of his individual
possibilities.
All classes of
intellects, the weakest as well as the strongest, will profit by the
application of their talents to tasks which are consonant with their
ability. When we have learned the lessons which intelligence tests have to
teach, we shall no longer blame mentally defective workmen for their
industrial inefficiency, punish weak-minded children because of their
inability to learn, or imprison and hang mentally defective criminals
because they lacked the intelligence to appreciate the ordinary codes of
social conduct.
CHAPTER II
SOURCES OF ERROR IN JUDGING INTELLIGENCE
Are intelligence tests superfluous?
Binet tells us that he often encountered the criticism that intelligence
tests are superfluous, and that in going to so much trouble to devise his
measuring scale he was forcing an open door. Those who made this criticism
believed that the observant teacher or parent is able to make an offhand
estimate of a child’s intelligence which is accurate enough. “It is a stupid
teacher,” said one, “who needs a psychologist to tell her which pupils are
not intelligent.” Every one who uses intelligence tests meets this attitude
from time to time.
This should not be surprising or discouraging. It is only natural that
those who are unfamiliar with the methods of psychology should occasionally
question their validity or worth, just as there are many excellent people
who do not “believe in” vaccination against typhoid and small pox,
operations for appendicitis, etc.
There is an additional reason why the applications of psychology have to
overcome a good deal of conservatism and skepticism; namely, the fact that
every one, whether psychologically trained or not, acquires in the ordinary
experiences of life a certain degree of expertness in the observation and
interpretation of mental traits. The possession of this little fund of
practical working knowledge makes most people slow to admit any one’s claim
to greater expertness. When the astronomer tells us the distance to Jupiter,
we accept his statement, because we
recognize that our
ordinary experience affords no basis for judgment about such matters. But
every one acquires more or less facility in distinguishing the coarser
differences among people in intelligence, and this half-knowledge naturally
generates a certain amount of resistance to the more refined method of
tests.
It should be evident, however, that we need more than the ability merely
to distinguish a genius from a simpleton, just as a physician needs
something more than the ability to distinguish an athlete from a man dying
of consumption. It is necessary to have a definite and accurate diagnosis,
one which will differentiate more finely the many degrees and qualities of
intelligence. Just as in the case of physical illness, we need to know not
merely that the patient is sick, but also why he is sick, what organs are
involved, what course the illness will run, and what physical work the
patient can safely undertake, so in the case of a retarded child, we need to
know the exact degree of intellectual deficiency, what mental functions are
chiefly concerned in the defect, whether the deficiency is due to innate
endowment, to physical illness, or to faults of education, and what lines of
mental activity the child will be able to pursue with reasonable hope of
success. In the diagnosis of a case of malnutrition, the up-to-date
physician does not depend upon general symptoms, but instead makes a blood
test to determine the exact number of red corpuscles per cubic millimeter of
blood and the exact percentage of hæmoglobin. He has learned that external
appearances are often misleading. Similarly, every psychologist who is
experienced in the mental examination of school children knows that his own
or the teacher’s estimate of a child’s intelligence is subject to grave and
frequent error.
The necessity of standards.
In the first place, in order to judge an individual’s intelligence it is
necessary to have in mind
some standard as to what constitutes normal intelligence. This the ordinary
parent or teacher does not have. In the case of school children, for
example, each pupil is judged with reference to the average intelligence of
the class. But the teacher has no means of knowing whether the average for
her class is above, equal to, or below that for children in general. Her
standard may be too high, too low, vague, mechanical, or fragmentary. The
same, of course, holds in the case of parents or any one else attempting to
estimate intelligence on the basis of common observation.
The intelligence of retarded children usually
overestimated.
One of the most common errors made by the teacher is to overestimate the
intelligence of the over-age pupil. This is because she fails to take
account of age differences and estimates intelligence on the basis of the
child’s school performance in the grade where he happens to be located. She
tends to overlook the fact that quality of school work is no index of
intelligence unless age is taken into account. The question should be, not,
“Is this child doing his school work well?” but rather, “In what school
grade should a child of this age be able to do satisfactory work?” A
high-grade imbecile may do average work in the first grade, and a high-grade
moron average work in the third or fourth grade, provided only they are
sufficiently over-age for the grade in question.
Our experience in testing children for segregation in special classes has
time and again brought this fallacy of teachers to our attention. We have
often found one or more feeble-minded children in a class after the teacher
had confidently asserted that there was not a single exceptionally dull
child present. In every case where there has been opportunity to follow the
later school progress of such a child the validity of the intelligence test
has been fully confirmed.
The following are
typical examples of the neglect of teachers to take the age factor into
account when estimating the intelligence of the over-age child:—
A. R. Girl, age 11; in low second
grade. She was able to do the work of this grade, not well, but
passably. The teacher’s judgment as to this child’s intelligence was “dull
but not defective.” What the teacher overlooked was the fact that she had
judged the child by a 7-year standard, and that, instead of only being
able to do the work of the second grade indifferently, a child of this age
should have been equal to the work of the fifth grade. In reality, A. R.
is definitely feeble-minded. Although she is from a home of average
culture, is 11 years old, and has attended school five years, she has
barely the intelligence of the average child of six years.
D. C. Boy, age 17; in fifth grade.
His teacher knew that he was dull, but had not thought of him as belonging
to the class of feeble-minded. She had judged this boy by the 11-year
standard and had perhaps been further misled by his normal appearance and
exceptionally satisfactory behavior. The Binet test quickly showed that he
had a mental level of approximately 9 years. There is little probability
that his comprehension will ever surpass that of the average 10-year-old.
R. A. Boy, age 17; mental age 11; sixth
grade; school work “nearly average”; teacher’s estimate of intelligence
“average.” Test plainly shows this child to be a high-grade moron, or
border-liner at best. Had attended school regularly 11 years and had made
6 grades. Teacher had compared child with his 12-year-old classmates.
H. A. Boy, age 14; mental age 9-6; low
fourth grade; school work “inferior”; teacher’s estimate of intelligence
“average.” The teacher blamed the inferior quality of school work to
“bad home environment.” As a matter of fact, the boy’s father is
feeble-minded and the normality of the mother is questionable. An older
brother is in a reform school. We are perfectly safe in predicting that
this boy will not complete the eighth grade even if he attends school till
he is 21 years of age.
F. I. Boy, age 12-11; mental age 9-4;
third grade; school work “average”; teacher’s estimate of intelligence
“average”; social environment “average”; health good and attendance
regular. Intelligence and school success are what we should expect of
an average 9-year-old.
D. A.
Boy, age 12; mental age 9-2; third grade; school work “inferior”;
teacher’s estimate of intelligence “average.” Teacher imputes inferior
school work to “absence from school and lack of interest in books”; we
have yet to find a child with a mental age 25 per cent below chronological
age who was particularly interested in books or enthusiastic
about school.
C. U. Girl, age 10; mental age 7-8;
second grade; school work “average”; teacher’s estimate of intelligence
“average.” Teacher blames adenoids and bad teeth for retardation. No
doubt of child’s mental deficiency.
P. I. Girl, age 8-10; mental age 6-7;
has been in first grade 2½ years; school work “average”; teacher’s
estimate of intelligence “average.” The mother and one brother of this
girl are both feeble-minded.
H. O. Girl, age 7-10; mental age&nbs |