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The Dutch curve: The introduction and reception of intelligence testing in the Netherlands, 1908–1940

✍ Scribed by Ernst Mulder; Frieda Heyting


Book ID
101297704
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
130 KB
Volume
34
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-5061

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✦ Synopsis


In the Netherlands, intelligence testing has been pragmatic and has not generated the heated controversies found in other cultures. Four historical reasons are presented for this paradoxical development. First, the Binet test was used mainly as a diagnostic instrument for professional judgments about admission to special education. Second, the eugenic use of IQ tests was moderated by the marginal position of eugenics in Dutch society. Third, the process of "pillarization" gave considerable power to denominational groups in Dutch society, and they strongly criticized deterministic ideas about the heredity of intelligence. Fourth, the educational scientist, cognitive psychologist, philosopher, and government adviser, Philip Kohnstamm, was very influential in Dutch science and politics. He rejected intelligence testing and its deterministic connotations in favor of the idea of the educability of cognitive capacities.


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