On Intelligence : A Biological Treatise on Intellectual Development, Expanded Edition.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780674029316
- 153.9
- BF431
Intro -- Contents -- Preface, 1996 -- Preface to the Original Edition -- Acknowledgments -- PART ONE SOCIAL CONTEXT AND INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT -- CHAPTER 1 Why a Treatise on Intelligence? -- Five Easy Facts -- Old Wine in New Bottles? -- Traditional Psychological Theories of Intelligence -- About the Rest of This Book -- CHAPTER 2 Toward an Inductive Theory of Intellectual Complexity -- Toward a Developmental Framework -- Terminological Considerations -- Elaborated Knowledge Structures versus Cognitive Processes -- Knowledge versus Intelligence -- CHAPTER 3 Mismatches Between Intelligent Peformance and IQ -- Cultural Anthropology -- Grocery Shopping -- Dairy Workers -- !Kung San Hunters -- Experimental Psychology -- Cupcake Baking -- Capturing Butterflies -- City Manager -- A Day at the Races -- CHAPTER 4 A Social-Organizational Analysis of Intellectual Development -- Social Class and IQ -- Motivational Values Inculcated Through Parenting -- SAT Scores and Academic Achievement -- Income and SATs: One Interpretation -- Income and SATs: An Alternate Interpretation -- The Terman Study of Genius -- The Validity of IQ -- Convergence from Recent Life Course Analyses -- Thirtysomething: To Be Born Rich or Smart -- CHAPTER 5 The Impact of Schooling on Intelligence -- Correlation Between IQ and Years in School -- Influence of Summer Vacation on IQ -- Continuous Impact of Schooling on IQ -- Impact of Delayed Schooling on IQ -- School Achievement versus Aptitude -- Influence of Early Termination of Schooling on IQ -- Influence of Northern Schooling on Black IQ -- Influence of Early School Entry on Cognitive Development -- Influence of Intergenerational Changes in Schooling -- Quality of Schooling -- Schooling and Information Processing -- Perceptual Abilities -- Concept Formation -- Memory -- Other Cognitive Skills -- Taking Stock.
PART TWO THE BIOECOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK -- CHAPTER 6 The Role of Context in Shaping Multiple Intelligences -- Contextualism and Intelligence -- Cognitive Molecules Out of Context -- Culture's Role -- A Bioecological Theoretical Framework -- Introducing the Bioecological View -- Multiple Cognitive Potentials -- Pitting g Against a Multiple Potential Perspective -- Central Processing Capacity -- The Problem with Factors -- Contexts of Crystallization -- Motives as Crystallizing Agents -- Environmental Challenges -- Knowledge versus Intelligence -- Some Illustrative Anecdotes -- Knowledge and Process in Symbiosis -- CHAPTER 7 A Model of Cognitive Complexity -- Evaluating the Bioecological Framework vis-a-vis Classic Forms of Evidence: The Case of Heritability -- Genetics -- Methods of Estimating h2 -- The Stability, Nature, and Meaning of h2 -- The Assumption of Additivity -- Differences Between Correlations and Means -- Confounding Genetic and Ecological Sources of Shared Variance -- CHAPTER 8 The Fallacy: Biology =IQ =Intelligence =Singularity of Mind =Real-World Success -- Cross-Task Commonality -- The Role of Task Complexity -- g and Job Success -- Positive Manifold -- Same-Different Judgments -- The Role of Practice -- Age of Aquisition and Memory -- CHAPTER 9 How Abstract Is Intelligence? -- The Relationship Between Intelligence and Abstraction -- Transfer Within and Across Domains -- Abstractness Defined -- The Role of Knowledge in Abstraction -- Race and Abstraction: The Jensen Study -- Generality -- The Effect of Training on Transfer -- Transfer and Cross-Task Correlations -- The Problem of Problem Isomorphs -- CHAPTER 10 Taking Stock of the Options -- Contrasting the Bioecological Framework with Existing Theories -- Contextualist Theories -- Information Processing Theory -- Structural Theories: Piaget's Theory and Case's Theory.
Case's Theory of Intellectual Development -- Knowledge-based Theories of Intellectual Development -- Theories of Multiple Intelligences -- Sternberg's Triarchic Theory -- Modularity Theories -- Caveat Lector -- Epilogue -- Endnotes -- References -- Subject Index.
Ceci argues that traditional conceptions of intelligence ignore the role of society in shaping intelligence and underestimate the intelligence of non-Western societies. He puts forth a "bio-ecological" framework of individual differences in intellectual development intended to address major deficiencies of extant theories of intelligence.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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