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Questions about the nature of intelligence and intelligence testing have sparked increasing controversy during the past two decades. The widely held view that intelligence is measureable, and both genetic endowment and environment are key determinants of intelligence, first came under sharp attack during the decade of the 1960s. It was asserted that we do not know what intelligence is, that we do not know how to measure intelligence, and that IQ tests are biased against both minorities and the poor.
To determine current opinions among the relevant scientific communities on these issues, the authors used survey research to sample a broad group of experts in educational and developmental psychology as well as those whose specific expertise is intelligence testing. They found that, despite the common understanding to the contrary, most experts continue to believe that intelligence can be measured and that genetic endowment plays an important role in IQ.
The central question addressed in this book is why expert opinion and public views toward intelligence and its measurement are so widely divergent. The authors conclude that the public’s view of the IQ controversy has been shaped by inaccurate media coverage; and, more importantly, by changes in the nature of American liberalism as well as the key role of civil rights issues in American life. The increasing influence of new strategic elites in the United States, and the changing role of the mass media, have profoundly affected the character of scientific information communicated to the general public and how it is communicated.
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The IQ Controversy, the Media and Public Policy Mark Snyderman and Stanley Rothman 19 Transaction Books N ew B runsw ick (U SA ) and O xford (UK ) C opy rig h t © 1988 by T ra n sactio n , Inc. N ew B runsw ick, N ew Jersey 08903 All rights reserved u n d e r In te rn a tio n a l a n d P an -A m erica n C o p y rig h t C o n v entions. N o p a rt o f th is b o o k m ay be re p ro d u ce d o r tra n sm itte d in an y fo rm o r by an y m eans, elec tro n ic o r m e ch an ical, in c lu d in g photocopy, recording, o r an y in fo rm a tio n storage an d retrieval system , w ith o u t p rio r p erm issio n in w riting from th e publisher. All in q u irie s sh o u ld be ad d ressed to T ra n sactio n Books, R u tg ers— T h e S tate U niversity, N ew B runsw ick, N ew Jersey 08903. L ib rary o f C ongress C atalog N u m b er: 87-35403 ISBN: 0-88738-151-0 P rin ted in th e U n ite d S tates o f A m erica Library o f C ongress Cataloging in Publication Data S n y d e rm a n , M ark. T h e controversy, th e m edia, a n d p u b lic policy / M ark S n y d e rm a n an d S tanley R o th m a n . p. cm . ISB N 0-88738-151-0 1. Intelligence levels. 2. Intelligence levels in m ass m ed ia. 3. Intelligence levels— P ublic o p in io n . 4. Intelligence levels-G o v e rn m e n t policy. I. R o th m a n , Stanley, 1927. II. T itle. III. T itle: Intelligence q u o tie n t controversy, th e m ed ia, a n d p u b lic policy. BF431.S615 1988 153.9'dc 19 87-35403 To m y p a re n ts for all they have given. — M.S. To D .R .T. for helping m e u n d ersta n d . — S.R. Contents P reface A ck now ledgm ents 1. In tro d u c tio n : T h e IQ C ontroversy in P erspective 2. T h e N a tu re o f Intelligence 3. T h e H erita b ility o f IQ 4. R ace an d Class D ifferences in IQ 5. T h e Im p ac t o f Intelligence T esting 6. It's All T h ere in Black an d W hite: T h e E x ten t o f N ew s M edia C overage 7. N o N ew s Is G o o d News: T he N a tu re o f N ew s M edia C overage 8. C onclusion: T h e N ew Sociology o f Science A p p endices Index ix x iii 1 43 79 105 139 175 203 249 261 303 Preface Very few q u estio n s have spark ed m o re vio len t co n tro v ersy in th e past tw o decades th a n tho se