Does anyone have the rubric for the 1995 essay #1 on the AP Test?

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 8/26/03 8:17:32 AM >>>
Dear Tipsters,

As a historical note, my understanding is that "intelligence" is
dervied from the Latin "inter legens" that means "between reading"
or loosely "reading between the lines".

You might enjoy seeing how this idea applies to various uses of the
term "intelligence". Using a phrase that was applied to perception, it
means "going beyond the information given". Do you think that this
should be applied to emotiona, social, spiritual etc?

Stuart

Date sent:              Tue, 26 Aug 2003 09:19:56 -0400
From:                   "Christopher D. Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Re: IQ
Send reply to:          "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Allen Esterson wrote:
>
> > Incidentally, I wish that IQ was discussed in terms of
well-constructed IQ
> > tests being a measure (albeit imperfect) of *cognitive*
intelligence,
> > rather than "intelligence". Any comments on this also welcome!
>
> Wouldn't this just give the game over to all those who have, of
late,
> attempted to "extend" (read: misuse) the word "intelligence" in order
to lend
> historical weight and credibility to their own more questionable
projects
> (e.g., emotional intelligence, social intelligence, spiritual
intelligence,
> etc.). The word comes from the same root as "intellect." What could
be more
> "cognitive" than that? If there are other mental virtues we want to
study
> (emotional *sensitivity*? social *skill*? spiritual *awareness*?)
then let's
> call them by their right names rather than try to falsely capitalize
on the
> succes of those in other domains.
>
> Regards,
> --
> Christopher D. Green
> Department of Psychology
> York University
> Toronto, Ontario, Canada
> M3J 1P3
>
> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> phone:  416-736-5115 ext. 66164
> fax:    416-736-5814
> http://www.yorku.ca/christo/ 
>
>
>
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___________________________________________________
Stuart J. McKelvie, Ph.D.,                Phone: (819)822-9600
Department of Psychology,                 Extension 2402
Bishop's University,                      Fax: (819)822-9661
3 Route 108 East,
Lennoxville,                              e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Quebec J1M 1Z7,
Canada.

Bishop's University Psychology Department Web Page:
http://www.ubishops.ca/ccc/div/soc/psy 
___________________________________________________


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