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Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales

The Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales (or more commonly the Stanford–Binet) is an individually administered intelligence test that was revised from the original Binet–Simon Scale by Alfred Binet and Théodore Simon. It is in its fifth edition (SB5), which was released in 2003.

Stanford–Binet Intelligence scales
ICD-9-CM94.01

It is a cognitive-ability and intelligence test that is used to diagnose developmental or intellectual deficiencies in young children, in contrast to the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS). The test measures five weighted factors and consists of both verbal and nonverbal subtests. The five factors being tested are knowledge, quantitative reasoning, visual-spatial processing, working memory, and fluid reasoning.

The development of the Stanford–Binet initiated the modern field of intelligence testing and was one of the first examples of an adaptive test. The test originated in France, then was revised in the United States. It was initially created by the French psychologist Alfred Binet, who, following the introduction of a law mandating universal education by the French government, began developing a method of identifying "slow" children, so that they could be placed in special education programs, instead of labelled sick and sent to the asylum.[1] As Binet indicated, case studies might be more detailed and helpful, but the time required to test many people would be excessive. In 1916, at Stanford University, the psychologist Lewis Terman released a revised examination that became known as the Stanford–Binet test.

Development edit

As discussed by Fancher & Rutherford in 2012, the Stanford–Binet is a modified version of the Binet–Simon Intelligence scale. The Binet–Simon scale was created by the French psychologist Alfred Binet and his student Theodore Simon. Due to changing education laws of the time, Binet had been requested by a government commission to come up with a way to detect children who were falling behind developmentally and in need of help. Binet believed that intelligence is malleable and that intelligence tests would help target children in need of extra attention to advance their intelligence.[2]

To create their test, Binet and Simon first created a baseline of intelligence. A wide range of children were tested on a broad spectrum of measures in an effort to discover a clear indicator of intelligence. Failing to find a single identifier of intelligence, Binet and Simon instead compared children in each category by age. The children's highest levels of achievement were sorted by age and common levels of achievement considered the normal level for that age. Because this testing method merely compares a person's ability to the common ability level of others their age, the general practices of the test can easily be transferred to test different populations, even if the measures used are changed.

 
Reproduction of an item from the 1908 Binet–Simon intelligence scale, that shows three pairs of pictures, and asks the tested child, "Which of these two faces is the prettier?" Reproduced from the article "A Practical Guide for Administering the Binet–Simon Scale for Measuring Intelligence" by J. W. Wallace Wallin in the December 1911 issue of the journal The Psychological Clinic (volume 5 number 7), public domain[3][unreliable source]

One of the first intelligence tests, the Binet–Simon test quickly gained support in the psychological community, many of whom further spread it to the public. Lewis M. Terman, a psychologist at Stanford University, was one of the first to create a version of the test for people in the United States, naming the localized version the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale. Terman used the test not only to help identify children with learning difficulties but also to find children and adults who had above average levels of intelligence. In creating his version, Terman also tested additional methods for his Stanford revision, publishing his first official version as 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 (Fancher & Rutherford, 2012) (Becker, 2003).

The original tests in the 1905 form include:

  1. "Le Regard"
  2. Prehension Provoked by a Tactile Stimulus
  3. Prehension Provoked by a Visual Perception
  4. Recognition of Food
  5. Quest of Food Complicated by a Slight Mechanical Difficulty
  6. Execution of Simple Commands and Imitation of Simple Gestures
  7. Verbal Knowledge of Objects
  8. Verbal Knowledge of Pictures
  9. Naming of Designated Objects
  10. Immediate Comparison of Two Lines of Unequal Lengths
  11. Repetition of Three Figures
  12. Comparison of Two Weights
  13. Suggestibility
  14. Verbal Definition of Known Objects
  15. Repetition of Sentences of Fifteen Words
  16. Comparison of Known Objects from Memory
  17. Exercise of Memory on Pictures
  18. Drawing a Design from Memory
  19. Immediate Repetition of Figures
  20. Resemblances of Several Known Objects Given from Memory
  21. Comparison of Lengths
  22. Five Weights to be Placed in Order
  23. Gap in Weights
  24. Exercise upon Rhymes
  25. Verbal Gaps to be Filled
  26. Synthesis of Three Words in One Sentence
  27. Reply to an Abstract Question
  28. Reversal of the Hands of a Clock
  29. Paper Cutting
  30. Definitions of Abstract Terms

Historical use edit

One hindrance to widespread understanding of the test is its use of a variety of different measures. In an effort to simplify the information gained from the Binet–Simon test into a more comprehensible and easier to understand form, German psychologist William Stern created the well known Intelligence Quotient (IQ). By comparing the mental age a child scored at to their biological age, a ratio is created to show the rate of their mental progress as IQ. Terman quickly grasped the idea for his Stanford revision with the adjustment of multiplying the ratios by 100 to make them easier to read.

As also discussed by Leslie, in 2000, Terman was another of the main forces in spreading intelligence testing in the United States (Becker, 2003). Terman quickly promoted the use of the Stanford–Binet for schools across the United States where it saw a high rate of acceptance. Terman's work also had the attention of the U.S. government, who recruited him to apply the ideas from his Stanford–Binet test for military recruitment near the start of World War I. With over 1.7 million military recruits taking a version of the test and the acceptance of the test by the government, the Stanford–Binet saw an increase in awareness and acceptance (Fancher & Rutherford, 2012).

Given the perceived importance of intelligence and with new ways to measure intelligence, many influential individuals, including Terman, began promoting controversial ideas to increase the nation's overall intelligence. These ideas included things such as discouraging individuals with low IQ from having children and granting important positions based on high IQ scores. While there was significant opposition, many institutions proceeded to adjust students' education based on their IQ scores, often with a heavy influence on future career possibilities (Leslie, 2000).

Revisions of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale edit

 
Maud Merrill

Since the first publication in 1916, there have been four additional revised editions of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales, the first of which was developed by Lewis Terman. Over twenty years later, Maud Merrill was accepted into Stanford's education program shortly before Terman became the head of the psychology department. She completed both her master's degree and Ph.D. under Terman and quickly became a colleague of his as they started the revisions of the second edition together. There were 3,200 examinees, aged one and a half to eighteen years, ranging in different geographic regions as well as socioeconomic levels in attempts to comprise a broader normative sample (Roid & Barram, 2004). This edition incorporated more objectified scoring methods, while placing less emphasis on recall memory and including a greater range of nonverbal abilities (Roid & Barram, 2004) compared to the 1916 edition.

When Terman died in 1956, the revisions for the third edition were well underway, and Merrill was able to publish the final revision in 1960 (Roid & Barram, 2004). The use of deviation IQ made its first appearance in third edition, however the use of the mental age scale and ratio IQ were not eliminated. Terman and Merrill attempted to calculate IQs with a uniform standard deviation while still maintaining the use of the mental age scale by including a formula in the manual to convert the ratio IQs with means varying between age ranges and nonuniform standard deviations to IQs with a mean of 100 and a uniform standard deviation of 16. However, it was later demonstrated that very high scores occurred with much greater frequency than what would be predicted by the normal curve with a standard deviation of 16, and scores in the gifted range were much higher than those yielded by essentially every other major test, so it was deemed that the ratio IQs modified to have a uniform mean and standard deviation, referred to as "deviation IQs" in the manual of the third edition of the Stanford–Binet (Terman & Merrill, 1960), could not be directly compared to scores on "true" deviation IQ tests, such as the Wechsler Intelligence Scales, and the later versions of the Stanford–Binet, as those tests compare the performance of examinees to their own age group on a normal distribution (Ruf, 2003). While new features were added, there were no newly created items included in this revision. Instead, any items from the 1937 form that showed no substantial change in difficulty from the 1930s to the 1950s were either eliminated or adjusted (Roid & Barram, 2004).

Robert Thorndike was asked to take over after Merrill's retirement. With the help of Elizabeth Hagen and Jerome Sattler, Thorndike produced the fourth edition of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale in 1986. This edition covers the ages two through twenty-three and has some considerable changes compared to its predecessors (Graham & Naglieri, 2003). This edition was the first to use the fifteen subtests with point scales in place of using the previous age scale format. In an attempt to broaden cognitive ability, the subtests were grouped and resulted in four area scores, which improved flexibility for administration and interpretation (Youngstrom, Glutting, & Watkins, 2003). The fourth edition is known for assessing children that may be referred for gifted programs. This edition includes a broad range of abilities, which provides more challenging items for those in their early adolescent years, whereas other intelligence tests of the time did not provide difficult enough items for the older children (Laurent, Swerdlik, & Ryburn, 1992).

Gale Roid published the most recent edition of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale. Roid attended Harvard University where he was a research assistant to David McClelland. McClelland is well known for his studies on the need for achievement. While the fifth edition incorporates some of the classical traditions of these scales, there were several significant changes made.

Timeline edit

  • April 1905: Development of Binet–Simon Test announced at a conference in Rome
  • June 1905: Binet–Simon Intelligence Test introduced
  • 1908 and 1911: New Versions of Binet–Simon Intelligence Test
  • 1916: Stanford–Binet First Edition by Terman
  • 1937: Second Edition by Terman and Merrill
  • 1960: Third Edition by Merrill (form L-M)
  • 1973: Third Edition by Merrill (1937 norms were re-normed)
  • 1986: Fourth Edition by Thorndike, Hagen, and Sattler
  • 2003: Fifth Edition by Roid

Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale: Fifth Edition edit

Just as it was used when Binet first developed the IQ test, the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale: Fifth Edition (SB5) is based in the schooling process to assess intelligence. It continuously and efficiently assesses all levels of ability in individuals with a broader range in age. It is also capable of measuring multiple dimensions of abilities (Ruf, 2003).

The SB5 can be administered to individuals as early as two years of age. There are ten subsets included in this revision including both verbal and nonverbal domains. Five factors are also incorporated in this scale, which are directly related to Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) hierarchical model of cognitive abilities. These factors include fluid reasoning, knowledge, quantitative reasoning, visual-spatial processing, and working memory (Bain & Allin, 2005). Many of the familiar picture absurdities, vocabulary, memory for sentences, and verbal absurdities still remain from the previous editions (Janzen, Obrzut, & Marusiak, 2003), however with more modern artwork and item content for the revised fifth edition.

For every verbal subtest that is used, there is a nonverbal counterpart across all factors. These nonverbal tasks consist of making movement responses such as pointing or assembling manipulatives (Bain & Allin, 2005). These counterparts have been included to address language-reduced assessments in multicultural societies. Depending on age and ability, administration can range from fifteen minutes to an hour and fifteen minutes.

The fifth edition incorporated a new scoring system, which can provide a wide range of information such as four intelligence score composites, five factor indices, and ten subtest scores. Additional scoring information includes percentile ranks, age equivalents, and a change-sensitive score (Janzen, Obrzut, & Marusiak, 2003). Extended IQ scores and gifted composite scores are available with the SB5 in order to optimize the assessment for gifted programs (Ruf, 2003). To reduce errors and increase diagnostic precision, scores are obtained electronically through the use of computers now.

The standardization sample for the SB5 included 4,800 participants varying in age, sex, race/ethnicity, geographic region, and socioeconomic level (Bain & Allin, 2005).

Reliability edit

Several reliability tests have been performed on the SB5 including split-half reliability, standard error of measurement, plotting of test information curves, test-retest stability, and inter-scorer agreement. On average, IQ scores for this scale have been found quite stable across time (Janzen, Obrzut, & Marusiak, 2003). Internal consistency was tested by split-half reliability and was reported to be substantial and comparable to other cognitive batteries (Bain & Allin, 2005). The median interscorer correlation was .90 on average (Janzen, Obrzut, & Marusiak, 2003). The SB5 has also been found to have great precision at advanced levels of performance meaning that the test is especially useful in testing children for giftedness (Bain & Allin, 2005). There have only been a small amount of practice effects and familiarity of testing procedures with retest reliability; however, these have proven to be insignificant. Readministration of the SB5 can occur in a six-month interval rather than one year due to the small mean differences in reliability (Bain & Allin, 2005).

Validity edit

Content validity has been found based on the professional judgments Roid received concerning fairness of items and item content as well as items concerning the assessment of giftedness (Bain & Allin, 2005). With an examination of age trends, construct validity was supported along with empirical justification of a more substantial g loading for the SB5 compared to previous editions. The potential for a variety of comparisons, especially for within or across factors and verbal/nonverbal domains, has been appreciated with the scores received from the SB5 (Bain & Allin, 2005).

Score classification edit

The test publisher includes suggested score classifications in the test manual.

Stanford–Binet Fifth Edition (SB5) classification[4]
IQ Range ("deviation IQ") IQ Classification
145–160 Very gifted or highly advanced
130–144 Gifted or very advanced
120–129 Superior
110–119 High average
90–109 Average
80–89 Low average
70–79 Borderline impaired or delayed
55–69 Mildly impaired or delayed
40–54 Moderately impaired or delayed

The classifications of scores used in the Fifth Edition differ from those used in earlier versions of the test.

Subtests and factors edit

Fluid reasoning Knowledge Quantitative reasoning Visual-spatial processing Working memory
Early reasoning Vocabulary Non-verbal quantitative reasoning (non-verbal) Form board and form patterns

(non-verbal)

Delayed response (non-verbal)
Verbal absurdities Procedural knowledge (non-verbal) Verbal quantitative reasoning Position and direction Block span (non-verbal)
Verbal analogies Picture absurdities (non-verbal) Memory for sentences
Object series matrices (non-verbal) Last word

Source:[5]

Recent use edit

Since its inception, the Stanford–Binet has been revised several times. The test is in its fifth edition, called the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition, or SB5. According to the publisher's website, "The SB5 was normed on a stratified random sample of 4,800 individuals that matches the 2000 U.S. Census". By administering the Stanford–Binet test to large numbers of individuals selected at random from different parts of the United States, it has been found that the scores approximate a normal distribution. The revised edition of the Stanford–Binet over time has devised substantial changes in the way the tests are presented. The test has improved when looking at the introduction of a more parallel form and more demonstrative standards. For one, a non-verbal IQ component is included in the tests whereas in the past, there was only a verbal component. It evolved to have equally balanced verbal and non-verbal content. It is also more animated than the other tests, providing the test-takers with more colourful artwork, toys and manipulatives. This allows the test to have a higher range in the age of the test takers. This test is purportedly useful in assessing the intellectual capabilities of people ranging from young children all the way to young adults. However, the test has come under criticism for not being able to compare people of different age categories, since each category gets a different set of tests. Furthermore, very young children tend to do poorly on the test because they lack the ability to concentrate long enough to finish it.

Uses for the test include clinical and neuropsychological assessment[citation needed], educational placement, compensation evaluations, career assessment, adult neuropsychological treatment, forensics, and research on aptitude. Various high-IQ societies also accept this test for admission into their ranks; for example, the Triple Nine Society accepts a minimum qualifying score of 151 for Form L or M, 149 for Form L-M if taken in 1986 or earlier, 149 for SB-IV, and 146 for SB-V; in all cases the applicant must have been at least 16 years old at the date of the test. Intertel accepts a score of 135 on SB5 and 137 on Form L-M.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nicolas, Serge; Andrieu, Bernard; Croizet, Jean-Claude; Sanitioso, Rasyid B.; Burman, Jeremy Trevelyan (2013). "Sick? Or slow? On the origins of intelligence as a psychological object". Intelligence. 41 (5): 699–711. doi:10.1016/j.intell.2013.08.006.
  2. ^ "Is Intelligence Fixed or Malleable? | Poet; Don't Know It".
  3. ^ "Psychol Clin Volume 5(7); 1911 Dec 15". www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
  4. ^ Kaufman, Alan S. (2009). IQ Testing 101. New York: Springer Publishing. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-8261-0629-2. Sattler, Jerome M. (2008). Assessment of Children: Cognitive Foundations. La Mesa, CA: Jerome M. Sattler, Publisher. inside back cover. ISBN 978-0-9702671-4-6.
  5. ^ Chase, Danielle (2005). "Underlying Factor Structures of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales – Fifth Edition". Drexel University.
  6. ^ "Intertel - Join us". www.intertel-iq.org. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  • Bain, S. K., & Allin, J. D. (2005). Book review: Stanford–Binet intelligence scales, fifth edition. Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 23, 87–95.
  • Becker, K. A. (2003). History of the Stanford–Binet intelligence scales: Content and psychometrics.
  • Fancher, Raymond E., & Rutherford, Alexandra. (2012). Pioneers of psychology. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
  • Graham, J. & Naglieri, J. (2003). Handbook of Psychology. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  • Janzen, H., Obrzut, J., & Marusiak, C. (2004). Test review: Roid, G. H. (2003). Stanford–binet intelligence scales, fifth edition (sb:v). Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 19, 235–244.
  • Laurent, J., Swerdlik, M., & Ryburn, M. (1992). Review of validity research on the stanford–Binet intelligence scale: Fourth edition. Psychological Assessment, 4, 102–112.
  • Leslie, M. (2000). The vexing legacy of Lewis Terman. Retrieved from http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=40678
  • Roid, G. (n.d.). Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition
  • Roid, G. & Barram, R. (2004). Essentials of Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales (SB5) Assessment. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  • Roid, Kamphaus, Randy W., Martha D. Petoskey, and ANNA WALTERS Morgan. "A history of intelligence test interpretation." Contemporary intellectual assessment: Theories, tests, and issues (1997): 3–16.
  • Ruf, D. L. (2003). Use of the SB5 in the Assessment of High Abilities. Itasca, IL: Riverside Publishing Company.
  • Stanovich, K. E. (2009). What intelligence tests miss: The psychology of rational thought. Yale University Press.
  • Terman, Lewis Madison, & Merrill, Maude A. (1960). Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale: Manual for the third revision, Form L-M. Boston (MA): Houghton Mifflin.
  • Youngstrom, E., Glutting, J., & Watkins, M. (2003). Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale: Fourth edition (SB4): Evaluating the Empirical Bases for Interpretations. Handbook of Psychological and Educational Assessment: Intelligence, Aptitude, and Achievement, 2, 217–242.

Further reading edit

  • Becker, K.A (2003). "History of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence scales: Content and psychometrics". Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition Assessment Service Bulletin No. 1.
  • Binet, Alfred; Simon, Th. (1916). The development of intelligence in children: The Binet–Simon Scale. Publications of the Training School at Vineland New Jersey Department of Research No. 11. E. S. Kite (Trans.). Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 9780598668028. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
  • Brown, A. L.; French, L. A. (1979). "The Zone of Potential Development: Implications for Intelligence Testing in the Year 2000". Intelligence. 3 (3): 255–273. doi:10.1016/0160-2896(79)90021-7.
  • Fancher, Raymond E. (1985). The Intelligence Men: Makers of the IQ Controversy. New York (NY): W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-95525-5.
  • Freides, D. (1972). "Review of Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale, Third Revision". In Oscar Buros (ed.). Seventh Mental Measurements Yearbook. Highland Park, NJ: Gryphon Press. pp. 772–773.
  • Gould, Stephen Jay (1981). The Mismeasure of Man. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-31425-0.
    • Christopher Lehmann-Haupt (October 21, 1981). "Books Of The Times: The Mismeasure of Man". The New York Times (Review).
  • McNemar, Quinn (1942). The revision of the Stanford–Binet Scale. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Pinneau, Samuel R. (1961). Changes in Intelligence Quotient Infancy to Maturity: New Insights from the Berkeley Growth Study with Implications for the Stanford–Binet Scales and Applications to Professional Practice. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Terman, Lewis Madison; Merrill, Maude A. (1937). Measuring intelligence: A guide to the administration of the new revised Stanford–Binet tests of intelligence. Riverside textbooks in education. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Terman, Lewis Madison; Merrill, Maude A. (1960). Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale: Manual for the Third Revision Form L–M with Revised IQ Tables by Samuel R. Pinneau. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Richardson, Nancy (1992). "Stanford–Binet IV, of Course!: Time Marches On! (originally published as Which Stanford–Binet for the Brightest?)". Roeper Review. 15 (1): 32–34. doi:10.1080/02783199209553453.
  • Waddell, Deborah D. (1980). "The Stanford–Binet: An Evaluation of the Technical Data Available since the 1972 Restandardization". Journal of School Psychology. 18 (3): 203–209. doi:10.1016/0022-4405(80)90060-6. Retrieved 29 June 2010.

stanford, binet, intelligence, scales, this, article, needs, more, complete, citations, verification, please, help, missing, citation, information, that, sources, clearly, identifiable, january, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, more, commonl. This article needs more complete citations for verification Please help add missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales or more commonly the Stanford Binet is an individually administered intelligence test that was revised from the original Binet Simon Scale by Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon It is in its fifth edition SB5 which was released in 2003 Stanford Binet Intelligence scalesICD 9 CM94 01It is a cognitive ability and intelligence test that is used to diagnose developmental or intellectual deficiencies in young children in contrast to the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale WAIS The test measures five weighted factors and consists of both verbal and nonverbal subtests The five factors being tested are knowledge quantitative reasoning visual spatial processing working memory and fluid reasoning The development of the Stanford Binet initiated the modern field of intelligence testing and was one of the first examples of an adaptive test The test originated in France then was revised in the United States It was initially created by the French psychologist Alfred Binet who following the introduction of a law mandating universal education by the French government began developing a method of identifying slow children so that they could be placed in special education programs instead of labelled sick and sent to the asylum 1 As Binet indicated case studies might be more detailed and helpful but the time required to test many people would be excessive In 1916 at Stanford University the psychologist Lewis Terman released a revised examination that became known as the Stanford Binet test Contents 1 Development 1 1 Historical use 2 Revisions of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale 2 1 Timeline 3 Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Fifth Edition 3 1 Reliability 3 2 Validity 3 3 Score classification 4 Subtests and factors 5 Recent use 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingDevelopment editAs discussed by Fancher amp Rutherford in 2012 the Stanford Binet is a modified version of the Binet Simon Intelligence scale The Binet Simon scale was created by the French psychologist Alfred Binet and his student Theodore Simon Due to changing education laws of the time Binet had been requested by a government commission to come up with a way to detect children who were falling behind developmentally and in need of help Binet believed that intelligence is malleable and that intelligence tests would help target children in need of extra attention to advance their intelligence 2 To create their test Binet and Simon first created a baseline of intelligence A wide range of children were tested on a broad spectrum of measures in an effort to discover a clear indicator of intelligence Failing to find a single identifier of intelligence Binet and Simon instead compared children in each category by age The children s highest levels of achievement were sorted by age and common levels of achievement considered the normal level for that age Because this testing method merely compares a person s ability to the common ability level of others their age the general practices of the test can easily be transferred to test different populations even if the measures used are changed nbsp Reproduction of an item from the 1908 Binet Simon intelligence scale that shows three pairs of pictures and asks the tested child Which of these two faces is the prettier Reproduced from the article A Practical Guide for Administering the Binet Simon Scale for Measuring Intelligence by J W Wallace Wallin in the December 1911 issue of the journal The Psychological Clinic volume 5 number 7 public domain 3 unreliable source One of the first intelligence tests the Binet Simon test quickly gained support in the psychological community many of whom further spread it to the public Lewis M Terman a psychologist at Stanford University was one of the first to create a version of the test for people in the United States naming the localized version the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Terman used the test not only to help identify children with learning difficulties but also to find children and adults who had above average levels of intelligence In creating his version Terman also tested additional methods for his Stanford revision publishing his first official version as 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 Fancher amp Rutherford 2012 Becker 2003 The original tests in the 1905 form include Le Regard Prehension Provoked by a Tactile Stimulus Prehension Provoked by a Visual Perception Recognition of Food Quest of Food Complicated by a Slight Mechanical Difficulty Execution of Simple Commands and Imitation of Simple Gestures Verbal Knowledge of Objects Verbal Knowledge of Pictures Naming of Designated Objects Immediate Comparison of Two Lines of Unequal Lengths Repetition of Three Figures Comparison of Two Weights Suggestibility Verbal Definition of Known Objects Repetition of Sentences of Fifteen Words Comparison of Known Objects from Memory Exercise of Memory on Pictures Drawing a Design from Memory Immediate Repetition of Figures Resemblances of Several Known Objects Given from Memory Comparison of Lengths Five Weights to be Placed in Order Gap in Weights Exercise upon Rhymes Verbal Gaps to be Filled Synthesis of Three Words in One Sentence Reply to an Abstract Question Reversal of the Hands of a Clock Paper Cutting Definitions of Abstract TermsHistorical use edit One hindrance to widespread understanding of the test is its use of a variety of different measures In an effort to simplify the information gained from the Binet Simon test into a more comprehensible and easier to understand form German psychologist William Stern created the well known Intelligence Quotient IQ By comparing the mental age a child scored at to their biological age a ratio is created to show the rate of their mental progress as IQ Terman quickly grasped the idea for his Stanford revision with the adjustment of multiplying the ratios by 100 to make them easier to read As also discussed by Leslie in 2000 Terman was another of the main forces in spreading intelligence testing in the United States Becker 2003 Terman quickly promoted the use of the Stanford Binet for schools across the United States where it saw a high rate of acceptance Terman s work also had the attention of the U S government who recruited him to apply the ideas from his Stanford Binet test for military recruitment near the start of World War I With over 1 7 million military recruits taking a version of the test and the acceptance of the test by the government the Stanford Binet saw an increase in awareness and acceptance Fancher amp Rutherford 2012 Given the perceived importance of intelligence and with new ways to measure intelligence many influential individuals including Terman began promoting controversial ideas to increase the nation s overall intelligence These ideas included things such as discouraging individuals with low IQ from having children and granting important positions based on high IQ scores While there was significant opposition many institutions proceeded to adjust students education based on their IQ scores often with a heavy influence on future career possibilities Leslie 2000 Revisions of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale edit nbsp Maud MerrillSince the first publication in 1916 there have been four additional revised editions of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales the first of which was developed by Lewis Terman Over twenty years later Maud Merrill was accepted into Stanford s education program shortly before Terman became the head of the psychology department She completed both her master s degree and Ph D under Terman and quickly became a colleague of his as they started the revisions of the second edition together There were 3 200 examinees aged one and a half to eighteen years ranging in different geographic regions as well as socioeconomic levels in attempts to comprise a broader normative sample Roid amp Barram 2004 This edition incorporated more objectified scoring methods while placing less emphasis on recall memory and including a greater range of nonverbal abilities Roid amp Barram 2004 compared to the 1916 edition When Terman died in 1956 the revisions for the third edition were well underway and Merrill was able to publish the final revision in 1960 Roid amp Barram 2004 The use of deviation IQ made its first appearance in third edition however the use of the mental age scale and ratio IQ were not eliminated Terman and Merrill attempted to calculate IQs with a uniform standard deviation while still maintaining the use of the mental age scale by including a formula in the manual to convert the ratio IQs with means varying between age ranges and nonuniform standard deviations to IQs with a mean of 100 and a uniform standard deviation of 16 However it was later demonstrated that very high scores occurred with much greater frequency than what would be predicted by the normal curve with a standard deviation of 16 and scores in the gifted range were much higher than those yielded by essentially every other major test so it was deemed that the ratio IQs modified to have a uniform mean and standard deviation referred to as deviation IQs in the manual of the third edition of the Stanford Binet Terman amp Merrill 1960 could not be directly compared to scores on true deviation IQ tests such as the Wechsler Intelligence Scales and the later versions of the Stanford Binet as those tests compare the performance of examinees to their own age group on a normal distribution Ruf 2003 While new features were added there were no newly created items included in this revision Instead any items from the 1937 form that showed no substantial change in difficulty from the 1930s to the 1950s were either eliminated or adjusted Roid amp Barram 2004 Robert Thorndike was asked to take over after Merrill s retirement With the help of Elizabeth Hagen and Jerome Sattler Thorndike produced the fourth edition of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale in 1986 This edition covers the ages two through twenty three and has some considerable changes compared to its predecessors Graham amp Naglieri 2003 This edition was the first to use the fifteen subtests with point scales in place of using the previous age scale format In an attempt to broaden cognitive ability the subtests were grouped and resulted in four area scores which improved flexibility for administration and interpretation Youngstrom Glutting amp Watkins 2003 The fourth edition is known for assessing children that may be referred for gifted programs This edition includes a broad range of abilities which provides more challenging items for those in their early adolescent years whereas other intelligence tests of the time did not provide difficult enough items for the older children Laurent Swerdlik amp Ryburn 1992 Gale Roid published the most recent edition of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Roid attended Harvard University where he was a research assistant to David McClelland McClelland is well known for his studies on the need for achievement While the fifth edition incorporates some of the classical traditions of these scales there were several significant changes made Timeline edit April 1905 Development of Binet Simon Test announced at a conference in Rome June 1905 Binet Simon Intelligence Test introduced 1908 and 1911 New Versions of Binet Simon Intelligence Test 1916 Stanford Binet First Edition by Terman 1937 Second Edition by Terman and Merrill 1960 Third Edition by Merrill form L M 1973 Third Edition by Merrill 1937 norms were re normed 1986 Fourth Edition by Thorndike Hagen and Sattler 2003 Fifth Edition by RoidStanford Binet Intelligence Scale Fifth Edition editJust as it was used when Binet first developed the IQ test the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Fifth Edition SB5 is based in the schooling process to assess intelligence It continuously and efficiently assesses all levels of ability in individuals with a broader range in age It is also capable of measuring multiple dimensions of abilities Ruf 2003 The SB5 can be administered to individuals as early as two years of age There are ten subsets included in this revision including both verbal and nonverbal domains Five factors are also incorporated in this scale which are directly related to Cattell Horn Carroll CHC hierarchical model of cognitive abilities These factors include fluid reasoning knowledge quantitative reasoning visual spatial processing and working memory Bain amp Allin 2005 Many of the familiar picture absurdities vocabulary memory for sentences and verbal absurdities still remain from the previous editions Janzen Obrzut amp Marusiak 2003 however with more modern artwork and item content for the revised fifth edition For every verbal subtest that is used there is a nonverbal counterpart across all factors These nonverbal tasks consist of making movement responses such as pointing or assembling manipulatives Bain amp Allin 2005 These counterparts have been included to address language reduced assessments in multicultural societies Depending on age and ability administration can range from fifteen minutes to an hour and fifteen minutes The fifth edition incorporated a new scoring system which can provide a wide range of information such as four intelligence score composites five factor indices and ten subtest scores Additional scoring information includes percentile ranks age equivalents and a change sensitive score Janzen Obrzut amp Marusiak 2003 Extended IQ scores and gifted composite scores are available with the SB5 in order to optimize the assessment for gifted programs Ruf 2003 To reduce errors and increase diagnostic precision scores are obtained electronically through the use of computers now The standardization sample for the SB5 included 4 800 participants varying in age sex race ethnicity geographic region and socioeconomic level Bain amp Allin 2005 Reliability edit Several reliability tests have been performed on the SB5 including split half reliability standard error of measurement plotting of test information curves test retest stability and inter scorer agreement On average IQ scores for this scale have been found quite stable across time Janzen Obrzut amp Marusiak 2003 Internal consistency was tested by split half reliability and was reported to be substantial and comparable to other cognitive batteries Bain amp Allin 2005 The median interscorer correlation was 90 on average Janzen Obrzut amp Marusiak 2003 The SB5 has also been found to have great precision at advanced levels of performance meaning that the test is especially useful in testing children for giftedness Bain amp Allin 2005 There have only been a small amount of practice effects and familiarity of testing procedures with retest reliability however these have proven to be insignificant Readministration of the SB5 can occur in a six month interval rather than one year due to the small mean differences in reliability Bain amp Allin 2005 Validity edit Content validity has been found based on the professional judgments Roid received concerning fairness of items and item content as well as items concerning the assessment of giftedness Bain amp Allin 2005 With an examination of age trends construct validity was supported along with empirical justification of a more substantial g loading for the SB5 compared to previous editions The potential for a variety of comparisons especially for within or across factors and verbal nonverbal domains has been appreciated with the scores received from the SB5 Bain amp Allin 2005 Score classification edit Main article IQ classification The test publisher includes suggested score classifications in the test manual Stanford Binet Fifth Edition SB5 classification 4 IQ Range deviation IQ IQ Classification145 160 Very gifted or highly advanced130 144 Gifted or very advanced120 129 Superior110 119 High average90 109 Average80 89 Low average70 79 Borderline impaired or delayed55 69 Mildly impaired or delayed40 54 Moderately impaired or delayedThe classifications of scores used in the Fifth Edition differ from those used in earlier versions of the test Subtests and factors editFluid reasoning Knowledge Quantitative reasoning Visual spatial processing Working memoryEarly reasoning Vocabulary Non verbal quantitative reasoning non verbal Form board and form patterns non verbal Delayed response non verbal Verbal absurdities Procedural knowledge non verbal Verbal quantitative reasoning Position and direction Block span non verbal Verbal analogies Picture absurdities non verbal Memory for sentencesObject series matrices non verbal Last wordSource 5 Recent use editSince its inception the Stanford Binet has been revised several times The test is in its fifth edition called the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales Fifth Edition or SB5 According to the publisher s website The SB5 was normed on a stratified random sample of 4 800 individuals that matches the 2000 U S Census By administering the Stanford Binet test to large numbers of individuals selected at random from different parts of the United States it has been found that the scores approximate a normal distribution The revised edition of the Stanford Binet over time has devised substantial changes in the way the tests are presented The test has improved when looking at the introduction of a more parallel form and more demonstrative standards For one a non verbal IQ component is included in the tests whereas in the past there was only a verbal component It evolved to have equally balanced verbal and non verbal content It is also more animated than the other tests providing the test takers with more colourful artwork toys and manipulatives This allows the test to have a higher range in the age of the test takers This test is purportedly useful in assessing the intellectual capabilities of people ranging from young children all the way to young adults However the test has come under criticism for not being able to compare people of different age categories since each category gets a different set of tests Furthermore very young children tend to do poorly on the test because they lack the ability to concentrate long enough to finish it Uses for the test include clinical and neuropsychological assessment citation needed educational placement compensation evaluations career assessment adult neuropsychological treatment forensics and research on aptitude Various high IQ societies also accept this test for admission into their ranks for example the Triple Nine Society accepts a minimum qualifying score of 151 for Form L or M 149 for Form L M if taken in 1986 or earlier 149 for SB IV and 146 for SB V in all cases the applicant must have been at least 16 years old at the date of the test Intertel accepts a score of 135 on SB5 and 137 on Form L M 6 See also edit nbsp Science portalCattell Infant Intelligence Scale The Flynn effect Military psychology Intelligence quotient IQ classificationReferences edit Nicolas Serge Andrieu Bernard Croizet Jean Claude Sanitioso Rasyid B Burman Jeremy Trevelyan 2013 Sick Or slow On the origins of intelligence as a psychological object Intelligence 41 5 699 711 doi 10 1016 j intell 2013 08 006 Is Intelligence Fixed or Malleable Poet Don t Know It Psychol Clin Volume 5 7 1911 Dec 15 www ncbi nlm nih gov Retrieved 2020 07 03 Kaufman Alan S 2009 IQ Testing 101 New York Springer Publishing p 112 ISBN 978 0 8261 0629 2 Sattler Jerome M 2008 Assessment of Children Cognitive Foundations La Mesa CA Jerome M Sattler Publisher inside back cover ISBN 978 0 9702671 4 6 Chase Danielle 2005 Underlying Factor Structures of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales Fifth Edition Drexel University Intertel Join us www intertel iq org Retrieved 2021 03 15 Bain S K amp Allin J D 2005 Book review Stanford Binet intelligence scales fifth edition Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment 23 87 95 Becker K A 2003 History of the Stanford Binet intelligence scales Content and psychometrics Fancher Raymond E amp Rutherford Alexandra 2012 Pioneers of psychology New York NY W W Norton amp Company Inc Graham J amp Naglieri J 2003 Handbook of Psychology Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc Janzen H Obrzut J amp Marusiak C 2004 Test review Roid G H 2003 Stanford binet intelligence scales fifth edition sb v Canadian Journal of School Psychology 19 235 244 Laurent J Swerdlik M amp Ryburn M 1992 Review of validity research on the stanford Binet intelligence scale Fourth edition Psychological Assessment 4 102 112 Leslie M 2000 The vexing legacy of Lewis Terman Retrieved from http alumni stanford edu get page magazine article article id 40678 Roid G n d Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales Fifth Edition Roid G amp Barram R 2004 Essentials of Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales SB5 Assessment Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc Roid Kamphaus Randy W Martha D Petoskey and ANNA WALTERS Morgan A history of intelligence test interpretation Contemporary intellectual assessment Theories tests and issues 1997 3 16 Ruf D L 2003 Use of the SB5 in the Assessment of High Abilities Itasca IL Riverside Publishing Company Stanovich K E 2009 What intelligence tests miss The psychology of rational thought Yale University Press Terman Lewis Madison amp Merrill Maude A 1960 Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Manual for the third revision Form L M Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Youngstrom E Glutting J amp Watkins M 2003 Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Fourth edition SB4 Evaluating the Empirical Bases for Interpretations Handbook of Psychological and Educational Assessment Intelligence Aptitude and Achievement 2 217 242 Further reading editBecker K A 2003 History of the Stanford Binet Intelligence scales Content and psychometrics Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales Fifth Edition Assessment Service Bulletin No 1 Binet Alfred Simon Th 1916 The development of intelligence in children The Binet Simon Scale Publications of the Training School at Vineland New Jersey Department of Research No 11 E S Kite Trans Baltimore Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 9780598668028 Retrieved 18 July 2010 Brown A L French L A 1979 The Zone of Potential Development Implications for Intelligence Testing in the Year 2000 Intelligence 3 3 255 273 doi 10 1016 0160 2896 79 90021 7 Fancher Raymond E 1985 The Intelligence Men Makers of the IQ Controversy New York NY W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 95525 5 Freides D 1972 Review of Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Third Revision In Oscar Buros ed Seventh Mental Measurements Yearbook Highland Park NJ Gryphon Press pp 772 773 Gould Stephen Jay 1981 The Mismeasure of Man New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 31425 0 Christopher Lehmann Haupt October 21 1981 Books Of The Times The Mismeasure of Man The New York Times Review McNemar Quinn 1942 The revision of the Stanford Binet Scale Boston Houghton Mifflin Pinneau Samuel R 1961 Changes in Intelligence Quotient Infancy to Maturity New Insights from the Berkeley Growth Study with Implications for the Stanford Binet Scales and Applications to Professional Practice Boston Houghton Mifflin Terman Lewis Madison Merrill Maude A 1937 Measuring intelligence A guide to the administration of the new revised Stanford Binet tests of intelligence Riverside textbooks in education Boston Houghton Mifflin Terman Lewis Madison Merrill Maude A 1960 Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale Manual for the Third Revision Form L M with Revised IQ Tables by Samuel R Pinneau Boston Houghton Mifflin Richardson Nancy 1992 Stanford Binet IV of Course Time Marches On originally published as Which Stanford Binet for the Brightest Roeper Review 15 1 32 34 doi 10 1080 02783199209553453 Waddell Deborah D 1980 The Stanford Binet An Evaluation of the Technical Data Available since the 1972 Restandardization Journal of School Psychology 18 3 203 209 doi 10 1016 0022 4405 80 90060 6 Retrieved 29 June 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanford Binet Intelligence Scales amp oldid 1191777881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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