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Blum, Jeffrey M. – 1978
Pseudoscience, or the process of persuasion by establishing a pretense of scientific discovery, is examined in this book in an effort to dispel false notions about the validity of various measures of intelligence and the correlations of genetics to mental ability. The history and development of concepts related to hereditary intelligence and…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Educational Research, Environmental Influences, Ethnic Groups
Bagley, Christopher – 1977
West Indian children in British schools tend to have lower scores than white children on conventional tests of achievement. However, when factors such as social class, length of exposure to the British educational system, and school quality are taken into account, the differences in test scores between blacks and whites narrow. A broader concept…
Descriptors: Black Students, Educational Quality, Elementary Secondary Education, Environmental Influences
Zigler, Edward – 1968
Areas of agreement and disagreement concerning intellectual developmental and the problems of mental retardation espoused by the author and by Uzgiris are discussed in this paper. The importance of environmental factors, along with the genetic and/or constitutional nature of the organism on which these environmental events impinge, is seen as…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Biological Influences, Cognitive Development, Cultural Differences
Barron, Frank – 1973
This report reviews five current research projects in aesthetic education. Chapter 2 describes recent studies at the Institute of Personality Assessment and Research (IPAR) which relate aesthetics and creativity. Chapter 3 reviews measures of perceptual and cognitive performance; perceptual and aesthetic preference; and aesthetic interests,…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Affective Behavior, Art Education, Cognitive Development
Gartner, Alan; Riessman, Frank – 1973
Once again intelligence tests are being used as the major basis to establish the genetically determined limitations of minority and economically disadvantaged groups. By reviewing the arguments regarding the I.Q. test and the hereditability of intelligence, the author compares these with two sets of phenomena: the I.Q. test scores and the…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cognitive Ability, Compensatory Education, Cultural Differences
Goldberger, Arthur S. – 1974
In his book, "I.Q. in the Meritocracy," Richard J. Herrnstein (1973) calls on a classic article by Barbara S. Burks (1928) to support his position that a large part of the variation in intelligence can be accounted for by variation in heredity, as distinguished from variation in environment, and from covariation of heredity and…
Descriptors: Adopted Children, Cross Sectional Studies, Environmental Influences, Family Influence
Yawkey, Thomas D.; Aronin, Eugene L. – 1974
This paper discusses some of the new ways of looking at the growth and development of children that were pioneered by the day care and preschool movement of the 1960's, and that are currently being adopted by the elementary schools. Specifically, five premises about child development are outlined: (1) the notion that the I. Q. is flexible; (2) the…
Descriptors: Child Development, Day Care, Educational Innovation, Educational Objectives
Karier, Clarence J., Ed. – 1975
In this historical study the author provides a critical interpretation of selected movements that have shaped the educational state in America during the 20th century. Two questions provide the thematic structure of the book. The first question concerns the role, function, and responsibility of the professional in the educational state; the second…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, Educational Development, Educational History
Nichols, Robert C. – 1976
A review of the twin literature and analyses of two large twin samples found identical twin correlations higher than fraternal twin correlations by about .20 for a variety of traits of ability, personality and interests. This was interpreted as indicating that about half of the variation among people in a broad spectrum of psychological traits is…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Aptitude Tests, Birth Rate, Correlation
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Snyderman, Mark; Rothman, Stanley – Public Interest, 1986
The controversy over intelligence testing is more often influenced by political considerations than empirical research. A survey of 1,020 experts found that a majority agree that (1) intelligence can be defined; (2) heredity plays a role in individual and group IQ differences; and (3) intelligence testing in schools should continue at its present…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Differences, Intelligence Differences
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Rossi, Alice S. – American Sociological Review, 1984
Examines demographic trends relevant to change in gender and parenting roles. Reviews gender differences in parenting in traditional and nontraditional family arrangements. Examines current social explanations of gender differences in parenting, and argues for a model drawing on bio-evolutionary theory and the neurosciences. (CMG)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Child Rearing, Family Structure, Father Attitudes
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Brenzel, Barbara – Harvard Educational Review, 1980
This history of Lancaster, a nineteenth-century reform school for poor girls, illustrates the change in reform ideology from belief in the efficacy of family-style environment to concern for protecting the social order from "hereditarily deviant" children. The role of institutions as mechanisms for social control of the poor and of women…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Theories, Children, Delinquent Rehabilitation
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Aguirre, Adalberto, Jr. – Educational Research Quarterly, 1979
It is asserted that intelligence testing is part of a national educational ideology which is used to rationalize Chicanos' educational inequalities. This rationale suggests that inequality is the result of the group's inability to function competently within the American social and educational structures. (MH)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Educational Benefits, Educational Philosophy, Equal Education
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Rodwell, Grant – History of Education, 1997
Profiles the work of Dr. Caleb Williams Saleeby, a late 19th-century propagandist for eugenics. Eugenics is a science that deals with the transmission of hereditary racial traits, coupled with a desire to use this for the elimination of social ills. Discusses Saleeby's work with the Eugenics Education Society. (MJP)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Educational History, Foreign Countries, Genetics
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Akbar, Na'im – Counseling Psychologist, 1989
Responds to two opening articles by Parham ("Cycles of Psychological Nigrescence") and Helms ("Considering Some Methodological Issues in Racial Identity Counseling Research"). Argues that Black or African identity is not a developmental reaction to social oppression, but is a core personality trait, essential to healthy…
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Culture, Blacks, Developmental Psychology
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