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THE GROWTH OF IQ AMONG ESTONIAN SCHOOLCHILDREN FROM AGES 7 TO 19

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2004

HELLE PULLMANN
Affiliation:
The Estonian Centre of Behavioral and Health Sciences, Department of Psychology, University of Tartu, Estonia
JÜRI ALLIK
Affiliation:
The Estonian Centre of Behavioral and Health Sciences, Department of Psychology, University of Tartu, Estonia
RICHARD LYNN
Affiliation:
University of Ulster, Coleraine, Northern Ireland
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Abstract

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The Standard Progressive Matrices test was standardized in Estonia on a representative sample of 4874 schoolchildren aged from 7 to 19 years. When the IQ of Estonian children was expressed in relation to British and Icelandic norms, both demonstrated a similar sigmoid relationship. The youngest Estonian group scored higher than the British and Icelandic norms: after first grade, the score fell below 100 and remained lower until age 12, and after that age it increased above the mean level of these two comparison countries. The difference between the junior school children and the secondary school children may be due to schooling, sampling error or different trajectories of intellectual maturation in different populations. Systematic differences in the growth pattern suggest that the development of intellectual capacities proceeds at different rates and the maturation process can take longer in some populations than in others.

Type
Regular Articles
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press