Almost Forgotten Research Contexts: William Stern’s Giftedness Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. William Stern’s Personalistic Concept of Intelligence and Giftedness
2.1. Scientific–Historical Background: Observations of Children
2.2. Philosophy of Critical Personalism as a Theoretical Basis
2.3. Differences between US and German Intelligence Research—Dealing with Intelligence Tests
2.4. Stern’s Criticism of Intelligence Tests
2.5. Connection of Stern’s Giftedness Research and School Reform
2.6. Critical Attitude towards Eugenics
2.7. Stern and Terman: Similarities and Differences
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | A significant reason for Stern’s lack of reception in the USA is the different understandings of science. Stern criticized the exclusively scientific orientation of psychology and called for the combination of scientific and humanistic methods. In particular, he criticized behaviorist psychology, which in his eyes did not focus on human freedom and self-determination. An exception among American psychologists was the personality psychologist Allport (1938, 1968), who studied Stern’s work. More recent works that reflect Stern’s work come from Kreppner (1992) and Lamiell (2010, 2022). |
2 | German giftedness research was only “revived” in the 1980s and was initially still strongly focused on by US research. Due to the experiences of the Nazi era, for decades it had been associated with anti-democratic elitism in Germany. The early history of German talent and giftedness research in the first third of the 20th century was largely unknown at that time. After the Second World War, a middle-class society critical of the elite developed in the Federal Republic of Germany, most of which were opposed to the promotion of highly gifted people (Bergold 2013). The notion that broad funding came at the expense of promoting an already “privileged” elite was widespread up until the 1980s). |
3 | This contributed to the provisions of the Immigration Restriction Act of 1924, which limited the annual immigration of migrants to the United States to 2% of the proportion already immigrating to the United States from each affected country. The responsible politicians referred to Robert M. Yerkes’ intelligence studies on soldiers and derived from his results that immigrant soldiers were less intelligent, which was ultimately generally transferred to the group of immigrants. As a consequence, it was proposed that immigration from Asia, especially from China and Japan, should stop altogether, while immigration from southern and eastern European countries should be severely restricted. |
4 | The teaching of child psychological knowledge was already an integral part of teacher training in the USA by the end of the 19th century (Heinemann 2016). |
5 | The term “mental tests” comes from the Wundt student James McKeen Cattell, whom Binet was actually critical of. |
6 | Lewis Terman adopted Stern’s concept of the intelligence quotient and a few years later presented the Stanford-Binet test, which provided for multiplying IQ by 100 (Terman 1916), without mentioning Stern. |
7 | In this context, Stern explicitly referred to ambitions to select military personnel by use of intelligence tests: “Psychological tests are something else than determining body length or weight, which can only be carried out by non-commissioned officers” (Stern 1912, p. 9). |
8 | After the First World War, pedagogy was constituted as an independent university discipline, as “humanities pedagogy”. This institutionalization process was characterized by the clear demarcation from empirical psychology. |
9 | The Republic introduced the common four-year elementary school and decided to abolish the privileged pre-schools. |
10 | The results of the investigation “contradict those pessimistic views, as if gifted children were unchildlike, unwilling to play, antisocial, and given to ugly tendencies” (Stern 1928a, p. 462). |
11 | In contrast to Stern, for example, his friend and colleague Otto Lipmann assumed “intelligences”. |
12 | Stern pointed out forms of giftedness that would today be referred to as “island talents”, and in this context named the gifted and disabled draftsman Gottfried Mint (1768–1814), who had possessed an extraordinary talent for depicting cats and people (Stern 1928a). |
13 | Only at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century were new approaches in intelligence research developed that contain central elements of Stern’s concept of intelligence and talent. Gardner (1999), Sternberg (2003), Heller et al. (2000), and Weinert (2000), for example, have criticized the measurement of intelligence and the one-sidedness of theories of intelligence that are one-sidedly cognitive. |
14 | The reason for this gap is certainly the rupture of the First World War and its negative effects on German–American academic relations. |
15 | From then on, German psychologists oriented themselves towards American psychology, which was scientifically oriented. This also hindered the reception of Stern, who had called for the combination of scientific and philosophical approaches in psychology. |
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Heinemann, R. Almost Forgotten Research Contexts: William Stern’s Giftedness Research. J. Intell. 2023, 11, 174. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11090174
Heinemann R. Almost Forgotten Research Contexts: William Stern’s Giftedness Research. Journal of Intelligence. 2023; 11(9):174. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11090174
Chicago/Turabian StyleHeinemann, Rebecca. 2023. "Almost Forgotten Research Contexts: William Stern’s Giftedness Research" Journal of Intelligence 11, no. 9: 174. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11090174
APA StyleHeinemann, R. (2023). Almost Forgotten Research Contexts: William Stern’s Giftedness Research. Journal of Intelligence, 11(9), 174. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11090174