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E-raamat: Nature of Intelligence and Its Development in Childhood

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In this Element, I first introduce intelligence in terms of historical definitions. I show that intelligence, as conceived even by the originators of the first intelligence tests, Alfred Binet and David Wechsler, is a much broader construct than just scores on narrow tests of intelligence and their proxies. I then review the major approaches to understanding intelligence and its development: the psychometric (test-based), cognitive and neurocognitive (intelligence as a set of brain-based cognitive representations and processes), systems, cultural, and developmental. These approaches, taken together, present a much more complex portrait of intelligence and its development than the one that would be ascertained just from scores on intelligence tests. Finally, I draw some take-away conclusions.

In this Element, I first introduce intelligence in terms of historical definitions. I then review the major approaches to understanding intelligence and its development. These approaches, taken together, present a much more complex portrait of intelligence and its development than would be ascertained just from scores on intelligence tests.

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Intelligence is not IQ. It's one's ability to make something positively meaningful out of one's life, given one's sociocultural milieu.
1 Introduction
1(1)
2 Early Conceptions of Intelligence
2(9)
3 Psychometric Conceptions of Intelligence
11(7)
4 Cognitive and Neurocognitive Conceptions of Intelligence
18(8)
5 Systems Conceptions of Intelligence
26(10)
6 Cultural Conceptions of Intelligence
36(11)
7 Developmental Conceptions of Intelligence
47(10)
8 Conclusions about Intelligence and Its Development
57(4)
References 61