Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Achievements  



2.1  IQ testing  





2.2  Origins of ability  





2.3  Psychology of Extreme Talent  



2.3.1  Role of complex tasks in developing potential  









3 Legacy  





4 Support for eugenics  





5 Publications  





6 Partial bibliography  





7 See also  





8 Notes  





9 References and further reading  





10 External links  














Lewis Terman






العربية
Български
Català
Čeština
Deutsch
Español
Euskara
فارسی
Français
Bahasa Indonesia
Italiano

Polski
Português
Русский
Slovenščina
Українська
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikisource
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Lewis Terman
Born

Lewis Madison Terman


(1877-01-15)January 15, 1877
DiedDecember 21, 1956(1956-12-21) (aged 79)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materClark University (Ph.D., 1905)
Indiana University Bloomington (B.A , M.A., 1903)
Central Normal College (B.S., B.Pd., 1894; B.A., 1898)
Known forIQ testing, Positive Psychology of Talent, eugenics
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology
InstitutionsStanford University
Los Angeles Normal School
Doctoral studentsHarry Harlow

Lewis Madison Terman (January 15, 1877 – December 21, 1956) was an American psychologist, academic, and proponent of eugenics. He was noted as a pioneer in educational psychology in the early 20th century at the Stanford School of Education. Terman is best known for his revision of the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales and for initiating the longitudinal study of children with high IQs called the Genetic Studies of Genius.[1] As a prominent eugenicist, he was a member of the Human Betterment Foundation, the American Eugenics Society, and the Eugenics Research Association.[2] He also served as president of the American Psychological Association. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Terman as the 72nd most cited psychologist of the 20th century, in a tie with G. Stanley Hall.[3]

Background[edit]

Terman was born in Johnson County, Indiana, the son of Martha P. (Cutsinger) and James William Terman.[4][5] He received a BS, BPd (Bachelor of Pedagogy), and BA from Central Normal College in 1894 and 1898, and a BA and MA from the Indiana University Bloomington in 1903. He received his PhD from Clark University in 1905.

He worked as a school principalinSan Bernardino, California in 1905, and as a professoratLos Angeles Normal School in 1907. In 1910, he joined the faculty of Stanford University as a professor of educational psychology at the invitation of Ellwood Patterson Cubberley and remained associated with the university until his death. He served as chairman of the psychology department from 1922 to 1945.

His son, Frederick Terman, is widely credited (together with William Shockley) with being the father of Silicon Valley.[6]

Achievements[edit]

IQ testing[edit]

Terman published the Stanford Revision of the Binet-Simon Scale in 1916 and revisions were released in 1937 and 1960.[7] Original work on the test had been completed by Alfred Binet and Théodore SimonofFrance. Terman promoted his test – the "Stanford-Binet" – as an aid for the classification of developmentally disabled children. Early on, Terman adopted William Stern's suggestion that mental age/chronological age times 100 be made the intelligence quotientorIQ. Later revisions adopted David Wechsler's cohort-norming of IQ.

Revisions (mostly recently the fifth) of the Stanford-Binet remain in widespread use as a measure of general intelligence for both adults and for children.

The first mass administration of IQ testing was done with 1.7 million soldiers during World War I, when Terman served in a psychological testing role with the United States military. Terman was able to work with other applied psychologists to categorize army recruits. The recruits were given group intelligence tests which took about an hour to administer. Testing options included Army Alpha, a text-based test, and Army Beta, a picture-based test for nonreaders. 25% could not complete the Alpha test.[8] The examiners scored the tests on a scale ranging from "A" through "E".

Recruits who earned scores of "A" would be trained as officers while those who earned scores of "D" and "E" would never receive officer training. The work of psychologists during the war proved to Americans that intelligence tests could have broader utility. After the war Terman and his colleagues pressed for intelligence tests to be used in schools to improve the efficiency of growing American schools.

Origins of ability[edit]

Terman followed J. McKeen Cattell's work which combined the ideas of Wilhelm Wundt and Francis Galton saying that those who are intellectually superior will have better "sensory acuity, strength of grip, sensitivity to pain, and memory for dictated consonants".[9]AtClark University, Terman wrote his doctoral dissertation entitled Genius and stupidity: a study of some of the intellectual processes of seven "bright" and seven "stupid" boys. He administered Cattell's tests on boys who were considered intelligent versus boys who were considered unintelligent.[10]

Unlike Binet and Simon, whose goal was to identify less able school children in order to aid them with the needed care required, Terman proposed using IQ tests to classify children and put them on the appropriate job-track. He believed IQ was inherited and was the strongest predictor of one's ultimate success in life. [citation needed]

Psychology of Extreme Talent[edit]

Terman's study of genius and gifted children was a lifelong interest.[11] His fascination with the intelligence of children began early in his career since he was familiar with Alfred Binet's research in this area.[12]

Through his studies on gifted children, Terman hoped first, to discover the best educational settings for gifted children and, second, to test and dispel the negative stereotypes that gifted children were "conceited, freakish, socially eccentric, and [insane]".[13]

Previously, the research looking at genius adults had been retrospective, examining their early years for clues to the development of talent. With Binet's development of IQ tests, it became possible to quickly identify gifted children and study them from their early childhood into adulthood.[12] In his 1922 paper called A New Approach to the Study of Genius, Terman noted that this advancement in testing marked a change in research on geniuses and giftedness.[14]

Terman found his answers in his longitudinal study on gifted children: Genetic Studies of Genius.[15] Initiated in 1921, the Genetic Studies of Genius was from the outset a long-term study of gifted children. Published in five volumes, Terman followed children with extremely high IQ in childhood throughout their lives. The fifth volume examined the children in a 35-year follow-up, and looked at the gifted group during mid-life.[16]

Genetic Studies of Genius revealed that gifted and genius children were in at least as good as average health and had normal personalities. Few of them demonstrated the previously held negative stereotypes of gifted children. He found that gifted children did not fit the existing stereotypes often associated with them: they were not weak and sickly social misfits, but in fact were generally taller, in better health, better developed physically, and better adapted socially than other children. The children included in his studies were colloquially referred to as "Termites".[17] The gifted children thrived both socially and academically. In relationships, they were less likely to divorce.[9] Additionally, those in the gifted group were generally successful in their careers: Many received awards recognizing their achievements. Though many of the children reached exceptional heights in adulthood, not all did. Terman explored the causes of obvious talent not being realized, exploring personal obstacles, education, and lack of opportunity as causes.[12]

Terman died before he completed the fifth volume of Genetic Studies of Genius, but Melita Oden, a colleague, completed the volume and published it.[16] Terman wished for the study to continue on after his death, so he selected Robert Richardson Sears, one of the many successful participants in the study as well as a colleague of his, to continue with the work.[9] The study is still supported by Stanford University and will continue until the last of the "Termites" withdraws from the study or dies.

Role of complex tasks in developing potential[edit]

In 1915, he wrote a paper called The mental hygiene of exceptional children.[18] He pointed out that though he believed the capacity for intelligence is inherited, those with exceptional intelligence also need exceptional schooling. Terman wrote that "[bright children] are rarely given tasks which call forth their best ability, and as a result they run the risk of falling into lifelong habits of submaximum efficiency".[12] In other words, nature (heredity) plays a large role in determining intelligence, but nurture (the environment) is also important in fostering the innate intellectual ability. By his own admission, there was nothing in his own ancestry that would have led anyone to predict him to have an intellectual career.[19]

Legacy[edit]

During his lifetime, Terman was an elected Member of the United States National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society.[20][21][22]

From 1957 until 2018, a middle school was named after Terman and his son Frederick Terman. However, in 2018, the school board of the Palo Alto Unified School District unanimously decided to rename the school in honor of former Palo Alto City Councilwoman Ellen Fletcher after Terman's involvement with the eugenics movement came to the attention of parents and the school board.[23][24][25]

Frederick Terman, as provostofStanford University, greatly expanded the science, statistics and engineering departments that helped catapult Stanford into the ranks of the world's first class educational institutions, as well as spurring the growth of Silicon Valley. Stanford University has an endowed professorship in his honor.

Support for eugenics[edit]

Terman came to believe that IQ was, in addition to dependent on education, highly heritable.

Terman was a member of numerous American eugenic organizations, and listed in their rosters as a leader. For example, the Eugenical News (1916), publication of the leading Eugenic Records Office noted that the newly formed American Eugenic Organization included the following top American psychologists as its members:

new active members of Eugenics Research Association… C. C. Brigham, Psychological Laboratory, Princeton, N. J., G. Stanley Hall, Clark University, C. E. Seashore, State University of Iowa, Lewis, M. Terman, Stanford University, Calif., John B. Watson, Johns Hopkins Hospital.

— p. 53

Terman's wide-scale IQ testing exposed him to diverse groups of test-takers. Administering the tests to Spanish-speakers and unschooled African-Americans from the Southwest, he concluded:

High-grade or border-line deficiency... is very, very common among Spanish-Indian and Mexican families of the Southwest and also among negroes. Their dullness seems to be racial, or at least inherent in the family stocks from which they come... Children of this group should be segregated into separate classes... They cannot master abstractions but they can often be made into efficient workers... from a eugenic point of view they constitute a grave problem because of their unusually prolific breeding[26]

Terman's work in addition to other openly eugenic psychologists and education scholars such as Edward Thorndike, Leta Hollingworth, Carl Brigham, and H. H. Goddard contributed to long standing policies and practices of racial school segregation.

In this same book, Terman further stated that eugenics was important in the study of intelligence because "considering the tremendous cost of vice and crime…it is evident that psychological testing has found here one of its richest applications".[27] He further insisted that human "dullness... seems to be racial, or at least inherent in the family" and found with "extraordinary frequency among Indians, Mexicans, and negroes".[28]

Testing other groups in California, he observed:

Perhaps a median IQ of 80 for Italian, Portuguese, and Mexican school children in the cities of California would be a liberal estimate. How much of this inferiority is due to the language handicap and to other environmental factors it is impossible to say, but the relatively good showing made by certain other immigrant groups similarly handicapped would suggest that the true causes lie deeper than environment.[29]

The suggestions of a significant role for genetics in IQ led Terman to later join the Human Betterment Foundation, a Pasadena-based eugenics group founded by E. S. Gosney in 1928 which had as part of its agenda the promotion and enforcement of compulsory sterilization laws in California. Stern et al. (2017) documented significant long-standing violence inflicted on those identified by eugenicists as unfit and sterilized.

A modern-day assessment of Terman's contributions concluded:

Lewis Terman was a man of his less-than-enlightened time. He believed in eugenics, and his research project was called "Genetic Studies of Genius." He naively assumed that his high IQ kids (nearly all white) would become the future leaders of science, industry, and politics. His inclusion of girls was an important exception to the biases of the era, since women had only just gotten the right to vote, and had few career options. However, Terman was above all a scientist; and he was dedicated to collecting meaningful data, and to accepting what the data showed even when it contradicted his beliefs.[30]

Publications[edit]

Partial bibliography[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Sears, R. R. (1957). L. M. Terman, pioneer in mental measurement. Science, 125, 978-979. doi:10.1126/science.125.3255.978
  • ^ Maldonado, Ben (2019-11-06). "Eugenics on the Farm: Lewis Terman". stanforddaily.com. The Stanford Daily Publishing Corporation.
  • ^ Haggbloom, Steven J.; Warnick, Renee; Warnick, Jason E.; Jones, Vinessa K.; Yarbrough, Gary L.; Russell, Tenea M.; Borecky, Chris M.; McGahhey, Reagan; Powell III, John L.; Beavers, Jamie; Monte, Emmanuelle (2002). "The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century". Review of General Psychology. 6 (2): 139–152. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.1913. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139. S2CID 145668721.
  • ^ Reef, Catherine (2010). Education and Learning in America. Infobase Publishing. p. 343. ISBN 978-1-4381-2690-6.
  • ^ Boring, Edwin Garrigues (1959). "Lewis Madison Terman, 1877-1956: A Biographical Memoire by Edwin G. Boring". Stanford University Press.
  • ^ "Palo Alto History Project". Archived from the original on 2010-01-16. Retrieved 2015-05-05.
  • ^ "Terman, Lewis Madison - Infoplease.com". Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  • ^ Teigen, En psykologihistorie, page 235
  • ^ a b c May V. Seagoe (1975). Terman and the gifted. Los Altos, CA: William Kaufmann Inc. 1981. ISBN 978-0913232279
  • ^ Terman, L.M. (1906). Genius and stupidity: a study of some of the intellectual processes of seven 'bright' and seven 'stupid' boys. Pedagogical Seminary, 13, 307-373.
  • ^ (Vialle, 1994)
  • ^ a b c d Bernreuter, R. G., Miles, C.C., Tinker, M.A., & Young, K. (1942). Studies in personality. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Book Company.
  • ^ Bernreuter, R. G., Miles, C.C., Tinker, M.A., & Young, K. (1942). Studies in personality. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Book Company. p. 11
  • ^ (Terman, 1922)
  • ^ Minton, 1988
  • ^ a b (Terman, 1959)
  • ^ Shurkin, Joel (1992). Terman's Kids: The Groundbreaking Study of How the Gifted Grow Up. Boston, MA: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-78890-8.
  • ^ (Terman, 1915)
  • ^ Terman, L.M. (1932). Autobiography. In C. Murchison (Ed.), A history of psychology, Vol.II (pp. 297-332). Worcester, MA; Clark University Press.
  • ^ "Lewis M. Terman". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  • ^ "Lewis Madison Terman". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  • ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  • ^ Kadvany, Elena (March 28, 2018). "School board votes to rename schools after Frank Greene, Ellen Fletcher: Divisive, years long debate ends with final decision Tuesday night". Palo Alto Weekly.
  • ^ Kelly, Kevin (March 28, 2018). "Palo Alto: Middle schools to be named after Frank Greene Jr., Ellen Fletcher: Terman Middle School will be renamed in honor of Ellen Fletcher, Jordan Middle will be renamed after Frank Greene Jr., putting end to controversy". San Jose Mercury News.
  • ^ Ashoke, Sohini & Lee, Amanda (March 31, 2017). "Board cuts eugenicist ties with vote to rename schools". Gunn Oracle.
  • ^ Terman, Lewis (1916). The Measurement of Intelligence. pp. 91–92.
  • ^ Terman, Lewis (1916). The Measurement of Intelligence. p. 12.
  • ^ Terman, Lewis (1916). The Measurement of Intelligence. p. 91.
  • ^ Terman, Lewis (1925). Mental and Physical Traits of a Thousand Gifted Children, Volume 1. p. 57.
  • ^ "Psychological Predictors of Long Life". Looking in the Cultural Mirror. psychologytoday.com. June 5, 2012.
  • References and further reading[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lewis_Terman&oldid=1226277173"

    Categories: 
    1877 births
    1956 deaths
    American eugenicists
    Canterbury College (Indiana) alumni
    Clark University alumni
    Factors related to intelligence
    Indiana University alumni
    American intelligence researchers
    Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences
    Presidents of the American Psychological Association
    Psychometricians
    Race and intelligence controversy
    Stanford Graduate School of Education faculty
    Stanford University Department of Psychology faculty
    Writers from Indiana
    Inventors from Indiana
    American educational psychologists
    Members of the American Philosophical Society
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles with hCards
    All articles with unsourced statements
    Articles with unsourced statements from May 2015
    Articles with Project Gutenberg links
    Articles with LibriVox links
    Articles with Internet Archive links
    Articles with FAST identifiers
    Articles with ISNI identifiers
    Articles with VIAF identifiers
    Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
    Articles with BNF identifiers
    Articles with BNFdata identifiers
    Articles with CANTICN identifiers
    Articles with GND identifiers
    Articles with J9U identifiers
    Articles with LCCN identifiers
    Articles with Libris identifiers
    Articles with NKC identifiers
    Articles with NLG identifiers
    Articles with NTA identifiers
    Articles with PLWABN identifiers
    Articles with CINII identifiers
    Articles with MGP identifiers
    Articles with Trove identifiers
    Articles with SNAC-ID identifiers
    Articles with SUDOC identifiers
     



    This page was last edited on 29 May 2024, at 16:46 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki