I wonder, what do you think of a kid, say, age 14, who takes an IQ test in Florida in the school system in the mid-80s, takes it four times, and scores, in order, 145, 85, 166, and 100? Same test. Further, what do you think of said kid predicting, before entering the test, what his scores would be, give or take 10 points?
Kid finally took a 'covert IQ test' in high school and scored 142, which was used as his base IQ test when he went to join the military.
And why did the school system hide this IQ test from me, and its results?
Thank you, O major in cognitive psy...
I must come across as pretty arrogant in my posts, since I keep getting good dings like this one. That's cool / it's all good.
Er, I can't explain this. The tests have reliabilities in the upper .90s, so your score bouncing around by that much suggests something very wrong happened.
Perhaps the administrator was incompetent, I dunno-- but obviously, the test wasn't a valid indicator of your IQ for whatever reason (I wonder if it's the test's fault, though)?
Person-who examples are likely irrelevant for discrediting IQ testing (or discrediting anything else). My uncle smoked 4 packs a day and lived til 90. What's up with that?!
*
To Dr. K:
I know very little about physics (as such, I will gladly defer to the experts here) but aren't there things in physics that we don't completely have defined / figured out, but which we can nonetheless measure very accurately?
Is gravity a good example? We can measure it reliably and validly, even though we don't completely understand what it is?
Is this analogous to g? We can measure it with high reliability; we can show that it has criterion validity (predicts the things that an IQ test ought too) and construct validity:
-- it doesn't predict things it ought not too-- like personality
-- it correlates with basic mental process like the speed with which neurons in our brain fire; individual differences in myelenization; working memory capacity, etc.
But, we don't completely understand what it is.
Nonetheless, how much explanatory precision does one require before accepting a construct as real / scientifically valid?
I'm ok with saying-- as a scientific hypothesis-- that g is some basic mental process (or combination of mental processes) like speed of processing, or working memory capacity or the ability to think in the face of distraction.
Can I point to where in the brain g is. No. (it may not be somewhere but everywhere-- in that it's the overall information processing capacity of one's brain). However, we can measure all kinds of psych constructs (personality, attitudes, job satisfaction) and critics don't typically ask "where in the brain is job satisfaction".
I think throwing out 90 years of data and prediction and utility until we biologically reduce g would indeed be throwing the baby out.
Finally, again, part of my arrogance here comes from me trying to defend my field. We've made fun of IT people before here, and there was a thread where IT people stepped up, offended, and defended themselves. No different here I think.
I don't have all the answers. I'm not even sure I'm an expert in the study of intelligence (if by expert one means publishes in A journals in that specific area).
I am somewhat current on the literature here, though, and I am consistently surprised by how big the divide is between the IQ scientists and people who are not (and it especially irks me when skeptical people form strong opinions about it without bothering to read up on it).
It often reminds me of creationism versus evolutionism. The creationists just refuse to look at and accept the data for the validity of evolution
The Gouldians do the same with regard to the importance of g to humanity.
The analogy even has an interesting parallel:
Biologists were so frustrated at how the general public misunderstands evolution that they signed a petition about it (there's a thread here with a link to it).
Psychometricians were so frustrated at how the public reacted to the bell curve that they signed a petition on it.
http://www.lrainc.com/swtaboo/taboos/wsj_main.html
It's only 40 names, but they are the front runners in the field (many of them were co-authors on the very fair APA task force article about IQ...)