On Aug 29, 2011, at 8:50 AM, Camm wrote:

> This topic has been quite interesting and narrow minded ...........

In essence, intelligence represents the rate at which a person learns. For 
instance the average elementary school child learns to read at the rate of one 
academic year per chronological year. Some elementary school children learn to 
read at the rate of two academic years per chronological year. Others at 
one-half academic year per chronological year. All three of these cases lie 
within the normal range.

For instance, most high school graduates can learn to do useful things in 
LiveCode. If we could develop equal-sized units of LiveCode mastery, some would 
learn at the rate of one Mastery Unit per month, some at ten MUs per month. 
Both of these cases also likely lie within the normal range.

As a general rule, the ability to learn one subject is highly correlated with 
the ability to learn another. This is a "fuzzy" rule, of course.

Contrary to urban legends about good and bad schools, great and terrible 
teachers, intelligence is a robust and persistent attribute, after age six or 
seven. Some people are more intelligent than others. Intelligence is also a 
rather fuzzy attribute, of course, but it's real and it makes a difference.

We don't know how to increase intelligence. If it can be done, interventions 
would probably have to be implemented between age one and six years. It's not 
impossible it can be accomplished later on in life, but evidence to date 
suggests this is a long shot. (We do know that adults who have intellectually 
stimulating occupations gradually increase in intelligence, very slowly, over 
periods of decades.)

Intelligence predicts about half of the total variance in academic success. The 
other half is predicted by a grab bag of factors, including academic interest, 
ambition, persistence, emotional stability, and luck.

Intelligence also predicts about half of the variance in non-academic pursuits 
that require intelligence. Self-taught computer experts, for example.

Most research indicates that about half the variance in intelligence is 
heritable. Estimates range from 40 to 70%. However, new discoveries about 
epigenetics blur those numbers. Grandma's life experience, before Mom was 
conceived, could make a difference. We know approximately nothing about the 
epigenetics of intelligence.

Contrary to urban legend, intelligence and common sense are closely related. 
Yes, a few very intelligent people seem clueless. But cluelessness is most 
common among the least intelligent.

A standardized IQ test is the best way we know of to measure intelligence, and 
an IQ score is the best single number. These are not perfect measures. 
Perfection is not possible, because intelligence is a fuzzy attribute.

it's probably not very important to measure intelligence, except for research 
purposes. Better to give each person a chance to demonstrate his or her 
intelligence by actual performance.

Many of the educational problems we're concerned about on this thread occur 
because children (or young adults) who learn at dramatically different rates 
inhabit the same classrooms where they are expected to achieve approximately 
equal academic success. This approach seems doomed to failure, and it is in 
fact failing as we speak.

This whole thread is necessary and inevitable because modern industrialized 
democracies are schizophrenic about intelligence. On one hand, the foregoing is 
apparent to anyone with eyes and ears. On the other hand, the foregoing is 
deeply offensive to people who put a high value on egalitarian beliefs, e.g., 
"All men are created equal." And Brown vs. The Board of Education. "Every child 
has the right to attend a 'good school.'"

Another part of the problem is that modern society has been promoted to its 
level of incompetence. There is a minimum level of intelligence necessary to 
function well and participate wisely in a modern democracy. That level is 
higher than the intelligence of the average citizen. Hence "Jersey Shore."

This conversation, i.e.,  the "Mediocre Britain" thread, happens every day, in 
many venues, all over the industrialized world. The conversations are 
necessary, but there is currently no progress toward resolution. It takes a 
long time for societies to work out such difficult controversies. For example, 
Great Britain needed about 100 years to settle some simple controversies about 
representative democracy (from early debate about the first reform act to the 
voting reforms of 1918). It took the U.S. even longer.

I have trouble accounting for my weird compulsion to write about this, on such 
an inappropriate forum. I guess it's because I believe the foregoing ought to 
be common knowledge. In my opinion, certain social and educational problems 
cannot be solved until the foregoing is widely understood.

I hope to post no more about it.

Cheers,

Tim





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