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Standford-Binet Test By Alfred Binet - Coggle Diagram
Standford-Binet Test
By
Alfred Binet
History
How was the test
developed?
Originate in France and was being revised in the U.S
➢ French Government give commissioned for those who can develop a test to identify children with learning difficulties to sort them into special education program
➢ Binet belief that using case studies provide a more detailed and helpful but the time taken to
administered the test is to excessive
➢ Lewin Terman (1916)- revised and introduce “Stanford-Binet Test”
➢ Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon teamed up to study mental retardation - French School Children
➢ Adopted the Binet -Simon Test 1905 ; attention, memory and verbal skill
➢ Consist of 30 items and varying in difficulties
➢ 1916- Terman - released the Stanford Revision of the Binet -Simon Scale
➢ He removed some items and introduce several new items on the revised version
➢ Army Alpha and Army Beta test - classify recruiters into what position in the army.
Objective
Used as a tool in school placement
Determine individuals with a learning disability
Tracking intellectual development
To assess brain functioning of individuals
with neurological impairments
Administration
Points:
Ages: 2 to 85+ years
★ Times: Approximately 5 minutes for each of 10 subtests
★ Administration: Individual
★ The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales-Fifth Edition (SB5) have been widely known as the standard for
intelligence measurement since 1916
★ This collection of 10 subtests, providing Nonverbal, Verbal, and
Full Scale IQ scores and other diagnostic
Timeline
1905 (development of binet-simon test announced at a conference in Rome)
1908 & 1911 (new versions of binet-simon intelligence test)
1916 (standford-binet first edition by Terman)
1937 (second ed by terman and Merrill)
1973 (third edition by Merrill)
1986 (fourth ed by Thorndike, Hagen and Sattler)
2003 (fifth edition by Roid)