The measurement of intelligence : an explanation of and a complete guide for the use of the Stanford revision and extension of the Binet-Simon intelligence scale . niversity. E. M. is as superior in personal and moral traits as in intelli-gence. Responsible, sturdy, playful, full of humor, loving, obedi-ent. Health is excellent. Has had no home instruction in schoolwork. His progress has been perfectly natural. The above list of very superior children includesonly a few of those we have tested who belong to this gradeof intelligence. Every child in the list is so interesting thatit is hard to


The measurement of intelligence : an explanation of and a complete guide for the use of the Stanford revision and extension of the Binet-Simon intelligence scale . niversity. E. M. is as superior in personal and moral traits as in intelli-gence. Responsible, sturdy, playful, full of humor, loving, obedi-ent. Health is excellent. Has had no home instruction in schoolwork. His progress has been perfectly natural. The above list of very superior children includesonly a few of those we have tested who belong to this gradeof intelligence. Every child in the list is so interesting thatit is hard to omit any. We have found all such children(with one or two exceptions not included here) so superiorto average children in all sorts of mental and moral traits INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENT SIGNIFICANCE 101 that one is at a loss to understand how the popular super-stitions about the queerness of bright children couldhave originated or survived. Nearly every child we havefound with I Q above 140 is the kind one feels, before thetest is over, one would like to adopt. If the crime of kid-naping could ever be forgiven it would be in the case of achild like one of


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