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Howard Andrew Knox: Pioneer of Intelligence Testing at Ellis Island PDF

344 Pages·2011·5.32 MB·English
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Preview Howard Andrew Knox: Pioneer of Intelligence Testing at Ellis Island

R i c h praise for a R d (Continued from front flap) Howard an drew Knox s HOWARD AnDREW KnOx (1885–1949) o n served as assistant surgeon at Ellis Island Their work presents a useful and extremely during the 1910s, administering a range of human portrait of psychological testing verbal and nonverbal tests to determine and its limits, particularly with regard “John Richardson’s work does much to bring us a new look at our past. the mental capacity of potential immi- to the predicament of the people His book tells of an important chapter in American history and psychology and grants. An early proponent of nonverbal examined at Ellis Island. Richardson provides new insights into our ongoing struggles to understand the intelligence testing (largely through the concludes with the development of expression of our cognitive abilities and limitations.” use of formboards and picture puzzles), Knox’s work in later decades and its HH Knox developed an evaluative approach david B. BaKer, University of Akron and the changing application in conjunction oo that today informs the techniques of prac- Center for the History of Psychology with modern psychological theory. ww titioners and researchers. Whether adapted to measure intelligence and performance “Howard Andrew Knox is comprehensive and compelling. John Richardson aa in children, military recruits, neurological has created a very original work, and his examination of a previously unknown rr and psychiatric patients, or the average job contributor to the science of intelligence testing dd applicant, Knox’s pioneering methods are is insightful and original.” part of contemporary psychological prac- JoHn T. e. ricHardSon is the professor eric TurKHeimer, University of Virginia aa tice and deserve in-depth investigation. of student learning and assessment at nn the Open University in the United Kingdom “With respect to the centrality of psychological testing on a truly dd Completing the first biography of and a former professor of psychology and global scale today (not to mention human resource recruitment, personality as- rr this unjustly overlooked figure, John T. E. head of the Department of Human Sciences sessment, and terrorism defense), John Richardson’s book will acquire a ee Richardson, former president of the Interna- at Brunel University. He is an academician of wide readership extending far beyond the community of psychologists and histori- ww tional Society for the History of the neurosci- the U.K. Academy of Social Sciences, a fellow ans of psychology and immigration. In fact, the audience for this book ranges ences, takes stock of Knox’s understanding of the British Psychological Society, and a from scholars in American history, historians of science, and public and popu- fellow of the Society for Research into Higher KK pioneer of intelligence testing of intelligence and his legacy beyond Ellis lation health researchers to a wide general readership. Richardson focuses on a Education. He is an associate editor of the nn at ellis island Island. Consulting published and unpublished long-forgotten forebear and a pioneering test protocol, which often goes sources, Richardson establishes a chronology British Journal of Educational Psychology and Psy- oo unnoticed in many standard psychology and behavioral medicine textbooks. of Knox’s life, including details of his medi- chology Teaching Review, and among his fifteen xx His book is an original contribution.” cal training and his time as a physician for the coauthored and coedited books are Gender FranK w. STaHniScH, University of Calgary, Alberta U.S. Army. He describes the conditions that Differences in Human Cognition; Imagery: Current gave rise to intelligence testing, including the Developments; The Future for Higher Education; public’s concern that the United States was Intelligent Systems in a Human Context; HHoowwaarrdd aannddrreeww KKnnooxx opening its doors to the mentally unfit. He and Mental Imagery and Human Memory. then recounts the development of intelligence columBia univerSiTY PreSS • new YorK c o tests by Knox and his colleagues and the cuP.columBia.edu PrinTed in THe u.S.a. l u widely discussed publication of their research. JacKeT image: © Brown BroTHerS, “docTor Knox m . . TeSTing a Female immigranT.” b j o h n t e r i c h a r d s o n JacKeT deSign: SHaina andrewS ia (Continued on back flap) HOWARD ANDREW KNOX CC55663311..iinnddbb II 88//2255//1111 11::1144 PPMM COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS - NEW YORK CC55663311..iinnddbb IIII 88//2255//1111 11::1144 PPMM PIONEER of INTELLIGENCE TESTING AT ELLIS ISLAND HHOOWWAARRDD AANNDDRREEWW KKNNOOXX . . J O H N T E R I C H A R D S O N CC55663311..iinnddbb IIIIII 88//2255//1111 11::1144 PPMM Columbia University Press Publishers Since 1893 New York Chichester, West Sussex Copyright © 2011 Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Richardson, John T. E. Howard Andrew Knox : pioneer of intelligence testing at Ellis Island / John T. E. Richardson. p. cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-231-14168-0 (cloth : alk. paper)—ISBN 978-0-231-51211-4 (ebook : alk. paper) 1. Nonverbal intelligence tests—United States. 2. Knox, Howard Andrew, 1885–1949. I. Title. BF432.5.N65R53 2011 153.9′3092—dc22 2011010220 Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. This book is printed on paper with recycled content. Printed in the United States of America c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared. CC55663311..iinnddbb IIVV 88//2255//1111 11::1144 PPMM CONTENTS List of Illustrations vii List of Tables ix Foreword by Robert J. Sternberg xi Preface xv Chronology xix Key People in the Text xxiii Introduction xxv PART I: BEFORE ELLIS ISLAND 1 Early Years 3 2 Army Days 14 PART II: THE CONTEXT 3 Immigration, Intelligence, and the Public Health Service 35 4 The Measurement of Intelligence 47 5 At Ellis Island 69 PART III: DEVELOPING THE ELLIS ISLAND TESTS 6 The Ellis Island Tests 97 7 Popularizing the Work at Ellis Island 142 CC55663311..iinnddbb VV 88//2255//1111 11::1155 PPMM 8 Practical Issues in Intelligence Testing 168 9 After Ellis Island 186 PART IV: THE LEGACY 10 Developing Performance Scales 197 11 Borrowing the Ellis Island Tests 218 12 What Do Performance Tests Measure? 241 13 An Appraisal 250 References 273 Index 297 CONTENTS VI CC55663311..iinnddbb VVII 88//2255//1111 11::1155 PPMM ILLUSTRATIONS I.1 A partial family tree of Howard Andrew Knox xxvii 1.1 Howard Reuben Knox; Jennie Mahaffy Knox with Howard Andrew Knox 4 1.2 The family of Aquilla and Dolly Blackwell 6 1.3 Leander and Jennie Blackwell 8 1.4 Howard Andrew Knox, upon his graduation from Dartmouth College 11 2.1 Howard Andrew Knox, just after he enlisted in the Medical Reserve Corps of the U.S. Army 15 2.2 Howard Andrew Knox, shortly before his graduation from the U.S. Army Medical School 18 3.1 The immigration station at Ellis Island, New York Harbor 39 5.1 Doctors Knox, Vogel, Glueck, Laughlin, and Gwyn at Ellis Island 92 6.1 The Seguin Form Board 102 6.2 The Mare-and-Foal Picture Form Board 103 6.3 Healy and Fernald’s Construction Puzzle (A) 104 6.4 Healy and Fernald’s Construction Puzzle (B) 105 6.5 The Visual Comparison Test 109 6.6 The Diamond Frame Test 111 6.7 Knox’s Cube Imitation Test 112 CC55663311..iinnddbb VVIIII 88//2255//1111 11::1155 PPMM 6.8 The Geographical Puzzle 113 6.9 The Imbecile Test 116 6.10 The Moron Test 117 6.11 The Construction Blocks Test 119 6.12 Two models of the Casuist Test 120 6.13 The Feature Profi le Test 121 6.14 The Ship Test 127 6.15 Gwyn’s Triangle Form Board and Kempf’s Diagonal Form Board 131 6.16 The Inkblot Imagination Test 133 6.17 Howard Knox testing a female emigrant at Ellis Island 139 6.18 Howard Knox testing a male emigrant at Ellis Island 140 7.1 Surgeon Louis L. Williams and his staff at Ellis Island 153 7.2 Dr. Harry White testing a female emigrant 154 7.3 Dr. Harry White testing a male emigrant 155 7.4 The modifi ed version of the Cube Imitation Test 161 9.1 Howard Knox in a 1916 Oldsmobile 187 9.2 Howard and Maka Knox in their New Jersey garden 191 ILLUSTRATIONS VIII CC55663311..iinnddbb VVIIIIII 88//2255//1111 11::1155 PPMM TABLES 4.1 Binet and Simon’s 1905 Series of Tests 53 4.2 Binet and Simon’s 1908 Measuring Scale of Intelligence 56 5 .1 Glueck’s Series of Tests 91 6.1 Knox’s Performing Test Examination 126 6.2 Scale for Estimating Mental Defects 128 6.3 Sources of Symmetrical and Asymmetrical Inkblots 137 7.1 Additional Tests for Educated Emigrants 152 10.1 The Psychological Tests Developed at Ellis Island 198 11.1 The Structure of the Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Scale 232 11.2 Variations of the Cube Imitation Test 237 CC55663311..iinnddbb IIXX 88//2255//1111 11::1155 PPMM

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Howard Andrew Knox (1885-1949) served as assistant surgeon at Ellis Island during the 1910s, administering a range of verbal and nonverbal tests to determine the mental capacity of potential immigrants. An early proponent of nonverbal intelligence testing (largely through the use of formboards and p
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.