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Are
We all Getting Smarter? Scientists Puzzle Over The "Flynn
Effect"
By Walter Truett Anderson, PNS, February 12, 2001
Striking
discoveries often come almost by accident, and so it is with
the "Flynn effect," an unexplained -- and perhaps unexplainable
-- rise in the general level of intelligence everywhere. PNS
associate editor Walter Truett Anderson is the author of "The
Future of the Self" (Tarcher Putnam, 1997).
For
several years now, psychologists have been trying to decide
what to make of the discovery by a scholar in New Zealand
that people all over the world are getting higher scores on
IQ tests
The
discovery is generally known as the "Flynn effect," after
James R. Flynn, an American-born political scientist who teaches
at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. Although
Flynn now has an international reputation based on the discovery,
it was -- at least in the beginning -- an accident.
He
had been engaged in a long-running academic battle with Arthur
R. Jensen of the University of California at Berkeley and
other proponents of the idea that blacks are genetically inferior
in intelligence to whites.
Searching
for evidence to refute this, he made a study of U.S. military
intelligence tests and found that the scores of black recruits
had improved markedly from the 1920s to the 1950s. He anticipated
that his opponents would dismiss this as simply the result
of improved education among the later groups of recruits,
and decided to investigate the long-term results of people
who had been given other IQ tests such as the widely-used
Stanford Binet and Wechsler series.
He
found to his amazement that their test scores had been improving
also: on the average, about 9 points per generation.
Since
that finding could also be dismissed as a reflection of educational
factors, Flynn proceeded to study the long-term results that
had been obtained in a number of different countries from
a test called Raven Progressive Matrices, which uses patterns
instead of numbers or words, and from other tests that seek
to measure problem-solving abilities without a cultural or
educational bias.
He
eventually obtained data from over 20 countries and found
that the results were even more striking -- IQs growing from
5 to 25 points in a single generation, on the average about
15 points.
Many
other investigators have checked Flynn's findings, and most
psychologists agree that his numbers are accurate.
There
is no comparable agreement about what they mean.
Psychologists
aren't prepared to say that people are simply getting smarter,
and most experts -- including Flynn -- prefer to say cautiously
that the findings measure something "correlated to intelligence."
Many
explanations for the increase have been offered: better nutrition,
of course; better parenting, better schools, maybe the cumulative
effects of exposure to the information-rich environment created
by television and other communications media.
Outside
the world of psychology and the bafflement about IQ scores,
at least one well-known observer of recent global events claims
that there is plenty of evidence that people are in fact behaving
more intelligently. James Rosenau of George Washington University
has written extensively about what he calls a worldwide "skill
revolution" in which individuals are acting more effectively:
"Their
scenarios have become lengthier and more elaborate. Their
judgments have become sharper and more incisive. Their imaginations
have become more wide-ranging and less inhibited."
Rosenau
doesn't think at all that this upheaval of personal energies
simply means that everything gets peacefully worked out --
his major work is entitled "Turbulence in World Politics."
But
he does believe it is an essentially healthy development and
an important piece of the larger changes that are underway
-- and also something that seems to get left out of most of
the arguments about what's going on in the world.
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