How to Raise Our I.Q.

FUCK THE POLICE

911 EVERY DAY
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/16/opinion/16kristof.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

How to Raise Our I.Q.


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By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: April 15, 2009

Poor people have I.Q.’s significantly lower than those of rich people, and the awkward conventional wisdom has been that this is in large part a function of genetics.

After all, a series of studies seemed to indicate that I.Q. is largely inherited. Identical twins raised apart, for example, have I.Q.’s that are remarkably similar. They are even closer on average than those of fraternal twins who grow up together.

If intelligence were deeply encoded in our genes, that would lead to the depressing conclusion that neither schooling nor antipoverty programs can accomplish much. Yet while this view of I.Q. as overwhelmingly inherited has been widely held, the evidence is growing that it is, at a practical level, profoundly wrong. Richard Nisbett, a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, has just demolished this view in a superb new book, “Intelligence and How to Get It,” which also offers terrific advice for addressing poverty and inequality in America.

Professor Nisbett provides suggestions for transforming your own urchins into geniuses — praise effort more than achievement, teach delayed gratification, limit reprimands and use praise to stimulate curiosity — but focuses on how to raise America’s collective I.Q. That’s important, because while I.Q. doesn’t measure pure intellect — we’re not certain exactly what it does measure — differences do matter, and a higher I.Q. correlates to greater success in life.

Intelligence does seem to be highly inherited in middle-class households, and that’s the reason for the findings of the twins studies: very few impoverished kids were included in those studies. But Eric Turkheimer of the University of Virginia has conducted further research demonstrating that in poor and chaotic households, I.Q. is minimally the result of genetics — because everybody is held back.

“Bad environments suppress children’s I.Q.’s,” Professor Turkheimer said.

One gauge of that is that when poor children are adopted into upper-middle-class households, their I.Q.’s rise by 12 to 18 points, depending on the study. For example, a French study showed that children from poor households adopted into upper-middle-class homes averaged an I.Q. of 107 by one test and 111 by another. Their siblings who were not adopted averaged 95 on both tests.

Another indication of malleability is that I.Q. has risen sharply over time. Indeed, the average I.Q. of a person in 1917 would amount to only 73 on today’s I.Q. test. Half the population of 1917 would be considered mentally retarded by today’s measurements, Professor Nisbett says.

Good schooling correlates particularly closely to higher I.Q.’s. One indication of the importance of school is that children’s I.Q.’s drop or stagnate over the summer months when they are on vacation (particularly for kids whose parents don’t inflict books or summer programs on them).

Professor Nisbett strongly advocates intensive early childhood education because of its proven ability to raise I.Q. and improve long-term outcomes. The Milwaukee Project, for example, took African-American children considered at risk for mental retardation and assigned them randomly either to a control group that received no help or to a group that enjoyed intensive day care and education from 6 months of age until they left to enter first grade.

By age 5, the children in the program averaged an I.Q. of 110, compared with 83 for children in the control group. Even years later in adolescence, those children were still 10 points ahead in I.Q.

Professor Nisbett suggests putting less money into Head Start, which has a mixed record, and more into these intensive childhood programs. He also notes that schools in the Knowledge Is Power Program (better known as KIPP) have tested exceptionally well and favors experiments to see if they can be scaled up.

Another proven intervention is to tell junior-high-school students that I.Q. is expandable, and that their intelligence is something they can help shape. Students exposed to that idea work harder and get better grades. That’s particularly true of girls and math, apparently because some girls assume that they are genetically disadvantaged at numbers; deprived of an excuse for failure, they excel.

“Some of the things that work are very cheap,” Professor Nisbett noted. “Convincing junior-high kids that intelligence is under their control — you could argue that that should be in the junior-high curriculum right now.”

The implication of this new research on intelligence is that the economic-stimulus package should also be an intellectual-stimulus program. By my calculation, if we were to push early childhood education and bolster schools in poor neighborhoods, we just might be able to raise the United States collective I.Q. by as much as one billion points.

That should be a no-brainer.
 
Want to increase your IQ? Only watch PBS on TV. :usflag:

and don't forget Hustler Magazine. What they lack in class they sure do make up for by sheer vulgarity. Then there's the pictures!! I like pictures in my story books. Makes it easier to foller the story. Know what I mean?

Buttz out!
 
and don't forget Hustler Magazine. What they lack in class they sure do make up for by sheer vulgarity. Then there's the pictures!! I like pictures in my story books. Makes it easier to foller the story. Know what I mean?

Buttz out!

Butt wouldn't that make me a wide stamce republican or something?
 
Truth is unfashionable amongst the intellectual conservative elite as of late, no?

Look, you are talking to a full-fledged elitist here, but this even makes me blush. This I would have expected from an article in 1909, when we had craniologists and eugenicists running abound in academia. Evem if this stuff were true, it is still majorly politically incorrect to say it, which begs the question of why the NYT would want this kind of press?
 
Look, you are talking to a full-fledged elitist here, but this even makes me blush. This I would have expected from an article in 1909, when we had craniologists and eugenicists running abound in academia. Evem if this stuff were true, it is still majorly politically incorrect to say it, which begs the question of why the NYT would want this kind of press?

It's an argument that IQ isn't as naturally set in stone as most people have thought. It is a fact that intelligence is at least somewhat genetic.
 
It's an argument that IQ isn't as naturally set in stone as most people have thought. It is a fact that intelligence is at least somewhat genetic.

Yeah, but doesn't it say that a lower IQ still leads to poverty? I'll look at it again, but I thought it said that...

And the big one is that living in a poor family will cause children to have low IQs...
 
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Poor people have I.Q.’s significantly lower than those of rich people, and the awkward conventional wisdom has been that this is in large part a function of genetics.


LOL that's just retarded.
opportunities shape ecomonic fate. not intelligence
 
Poor people have I.Q.’s significantly lower than those of rich people, and the awkward conventional wisdom has been that this is in large part a function of genetics.


LOL that's just retarded.
opportunities shape ecomonic fate. not intelligence

LOL factor x has nothing to do with success because I just presented factor y.


More intelligent people are more successful than less intelligent people. Source: Common sense.
 
Yeah, but doesn't it say that a lower IQ still leads to poverty? I'll look at it again, but I thought it said that...

And the big one is that living in a poor family will cause children to have low IQs...

It says that a poor environment can radically effect a child's IQ that in a way not dependent on genetics.
 
This is bullshit. It's just to get people to vote for massive expenditures on tenure for teachers. A society of geniuses, if we only cared enough. Weep.
 
This is bullshit. It's just to get people to vote for massive expenditures on tenure for teachers.

Where did the article advocate this?

A society of geniuses, if we only cared enough. Weep.

Liberals believe in making people more equal by bringing everyone up to the top level. Conservatives believe in making themselves more equal than others by bringing others down below them.
 
Where did the article advocate this?
Where didn't it?

We can do it seventh grade style if you want.

"question 1: according to the article above, what would be the best way to increase intelligence in our society?"
Liberals believe in making people more equal by bringing everyone up to the top level. Conservatives believe in making themselves more equal than others by bringing others down below them.


Too bad nobody believes in reality.
 
It says that a poor environment can radically affect a child's IQ in a way not dependent on genetics.

I don't know about radically, but both adequate nutrition and cognitive stimulation can affect attention and perception. The tests have undergone some important modifications over the past couple of decades or so, once it was shown that the originals were seriously culturally biased. If poor children have little to no intellectual stimulation, for various reasons, that certainly will influence their test performance. The time during development that that stimulation is withheld or provided will also have an important effect. One question that nobody brought up is whether or not the tests are well enough designed to adequately tap into intelligence factors for all social strata.
 
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