The mean IQ of Americans: massive gains 1932 to 1978.

JR Flynn - Psychological bulletin, 1984 - psycnet.apa.org
Psychological bulletin, 1984psycnet.apa.org
Abstract Demonstrates that every Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, WISC, WAIS, WISC-R,
WAIS-R, and WPPSI standardization sample from 1932 to 1978 established norms of a
higher standard than its predecessor. The obvious interpretation of this pattern is that
representative samples of Americans did better and better on IQ tests over a period of 46 yrs,
the total gain amounting to a rise in mean IQ of 13.8 points. The implications of this finding
are developed: The combination of IQ gains and the decline in Scholastic Aptitude Test …
Abstract
Demonstrates that every Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, WISC, WAIS, WISC-R, WAIS-R, and WPPSI standardization sample from 1932 to 1978 established norms of a higher standard than its predecessor. The obvious interpretation of this pattern is that representative samples of Americans did better and better on IQ tests over a period of 46 yrs, the total gain amounting to a rise in mean IQ of 13.8 points. The implications of this finding are developed: The combination of IQ gains and the decline in Scholastic Aptitude Test scores seems almost inexplicable; obsolete norms have acted as an unrecognized confounding variable in hundreds of studies; and IQ gains of this magnitude pose a serious problem of causal explanation.(114 ref)(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
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