1958
DOI: 10.1111/j.2044-8341.1958.tb01967.x
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Assessment of the Feebleminded

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…of the patients previously graded as imbeciles, with I.Q.s in the range 35â€"49, were in full-time paid employment at the time of his survey and that their work record did not differ significantly from that of a feeble-minded group followed up at the same time. Mundy and Maxwell (1958) and Fisher, Kilman and Shotwell (1961), have shown mean Binet I.Q.s to be very significantly (from 10â€"25 I.Q. points) below those on Wechsler scales when the tests have been administered within a short interval, and the difference between the two scales to increase with increasing age and at the higher I.Q.…”
Section: The O@cial Classzfications and Their Effectsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…of the patients previously graded as imbeciles, with I.Q.s in the range 35â€"49, were in full-time paid employment at the time of his survey and that their work record did not differ significantly from that of a feeble-minded group followed up at the same time. Mundy and Maxwell (1958) and Fisher, Kilman and Shotwell (1961), have shown mean Binet I.Q.s to be very significantly (from 10â€"25 I.Q. points) below those on Wechsler scales when the tests have been administered within a short interval, and the difference between the two scales to increase with increasing age and at the higher I.Q.…”
Section: The O@cial Classzfications and Their Effectsmentioning
confidence: 94%