Ocean Academy: 2. According To Sternberg, Intelligence Is
Ocean Academy: 2. According To Sternberg, Intelligence Is
Ocean Academy: 2. According To Sternberg, Intelligence Is
A) many specific abilities that are independent of one another and affect how well a child learns
at school.
B) a combination of general and specific abilities for which mental age affects test performance
at specific chronological ages.
C) a general ability associated with specific, but related, mental functions.
D) a general ability that is not age-related.
10. A feature of practical intelligence is having tacit knowledge or being regarded as:
A) sassy
B) book smart
C) street smart
D) people smart
11. Who has regarded intelligence as a capacity of the organism to adjust itself to an
increasingly complex environment?
(a) Guilford
(b) Jensen
(c) Spencer
(d) Gallon
(e) E.G. Boring
12. Who described the composition of intelligence in terms of “intellectual breadth and
intellectual altitude?
(a) R. B. Cattell
(b) A. R. Jensen
(c) L. L. Thurstone
(d) E. G. Boring
(e) Carl Spearman
13. According to Wechsler, intelligence is global because it characterises the individual’s
behaviour:
(a) Throughout the world
(b) As the capacity to learn
(c) As the ability to carry an abstract thinking
(d) As a whole
(e) None of the above
14. It has been suggested that mental growth stops somewhere between the ages:
(a) 16 and 20
(b) 14 and 24
(c) 10 and 20
(d) 8 and 12
(e) 6 and 8
15. Mental age (MA) reaches its maximum limit by about the age of:
(a) 16
(b) 17
(c) 14
(d) 20
(e) 19
16. Which type of tests of intelligence was developed when people of different languages or
illiterates had to be tested?
(a) Verbal tests
(b) Reasoning tests
(c) Non-verbal tests
(d) Culture-free tests
(e) None of the above
18. E.L. Thorndike’s multifactor theory of intelligence is at one extreme of the interpre-
tations regarding the nature of:
(a) Motor Organization
(b) Intellectual Organization
(c) Mental Organization
(d) Reasoning
(e) None of the above
19. The two-factor and the group-factor theories emerge from the methods of:
(a) Psychophysics
(b) Psychotherapy
(c) Psychophysiology
(d) Factor Analysis
(e) None of the above
20. The first scale, devised primarily to identify mentally deficient children in the school of
Paris is known as:
(a) Thurstone Scale
(b) The 1905 Binet – Simon scale
(c) Wechsler Scale
(d) Galton Scale
(e) Spencer Scale