Children Above 180 IQ Stanford-Binet: Origin and Development
Title: Children Above 180 IQ Stanford-Binet: Origin and Development
Author: Leta S. Hollingworth
Original publisher: World Book Company
Copyright 1942.
About the online edition.
The seven new cases which the original author had intended to include in the manuscript she had not yet written up. For these, therefore, it has been necessary to study the data she had accumulated for each child, to secure additional data when and where possible, and to present such an account of each as she might herself have written, patterned after her reports of the earlier cases.
Much is lost that would have been contributed had the author lived to complete her project. She knew these cases intimately and at first hand. Some of them she had followed for as long as twenty years, taking a personal interest in the individual children and their problems, advising them, assisting them, continuously observing them, and frequently testing and measuring them.
Particularly inadequate must be the accounts of the later development of the individuals herein described, for many of the details well known to the author she not committed to paper, since she fully expected to complete the manuscript herself. It is to be regretted that a follow-up study of these recent developments could not have been undertaken, and a hope is expressed that this may yet be done.
The chapters summarizing the group of twelve new cases are wholly without Leta S. Hollingworth's touch. It seemed desirable, however, to give such a summary as could be made under the circumstances. Had the original author been able to complete her book, we know that penetrating light would have been thrown on many of the more personal difficulties of these children of rare intelligence. This experience and insight can no longer be recovered. It must suffice to put on record chiefly the factual data now available, leaving it for future workers to follow up, if it should seem desirable, the subsequent career and destiny of the individuals whose early development and background are herein reported. Identification of these children is not made in this book, but the necessary facts for this purpose are on file and identification can be made at any time in the interests of educational research.
Leta Stetter Hollingworth
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CONTENTS
PREFACE
PART II: TWELVE CASES NEW TO LITERATURE CONCERNING TESTED CHILDREN
PART III: GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND IMPLICATIONS.
PREFACE
CHAPTER TWO EARLY SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF EMINENT ADULTS [1]
CHAPTER THREE PUBLISHED REPORTS ON TESTED CHILDREN
CHAPTER FIVE CHILD B
CHAPTER SIX CHILD C
CHAPTER SEVEN CHILD D
CHAPTER EIGHT CHILD E
CHAPTER NINE CHILD F
CHAPTER TEN CHILD G
CHAPTER ELEVEN CHILD H
CHAPTER TWELVE CHILD I
CHAPTER THIRTEEN CHILD J
CHAPTER FOURTEEN CHILD K
CHAPTER FIFTEEN CHILD L
CHAPTER SIXTEEN SUMMARIES OF HEREDITY AND EARLY BEHAVIOR
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT AND CREATIVE ACTIVITY
CHAPTER NINETEEN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALITY IN HIGHLY INTELLIGENT CHILDREN [1]
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOLING OF VERY BRIGHT CHILDREN