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- Can You Drive? -- an Adaptive Test of Intelligence
-
- Robert J. Weinstein
-
- PhD. thesis idea #321, 03/21/87
-
-
-
- Since the Stanford-Binet was first published in the United States, the
- sine qua non of I.Q. testing has been vocabulary. The Raven matrices
- and the Kohs block design, both of which are commonly thought of as
- requiring minimal verbal skills and which appear to measure abstract
- thinking abilities have long demonstrated high correlations with tests
- of verbal intelligence. Edgar Doll's work, including the Vineland
- Social Maturity Scale led to the inclusion of adaptive behavior in
- considerations of intellectual capabilities. This basic concept
- (adaptive behavior) of psychology [with thanks to Ann Boehm] was
- formally codified in the AAMD definition of mental retardation which
- roughly states: significantly subaverage general intellectual
- functioning which occurs within the developmental period and which is
- associated with deficits in adaptive behavior.
-
-
- I work as a senior psychologist in a 100 bed residential treatment
- facility; I work in an institution. It (the Rockland Multiply Disabled
- Unit) is operated under the auspices of Letchworth Village Developmental
- Disability Services. I am an employee of N.Y.State's Office of Mental
- Retardation and Developmental Disabilities. My unit, we call it "the MDU",
- is located on the grounds of a suburban (N.Y.S. Office of Mental Health-
- operated) psychiatric center. Some of my clients (I am personally
- responsible for 50) are dually diagnosed which means that they have been
- diagnosed as both mentally retarded and psychiatrically impaired. And in my
- spare time, I am co-sysop of an extremely large computer bulletin board,
- PC-Rockland BBS. For those of you who "modem", the freeboard number is
- (914) 353-2176; N81, 1200/2400 baud, 24 hrs., IBMPC/MS-DOS only.
-
- I have always wished for better tests of intelligence and I would love
- to develop a new one. The greater part of my vocational efforts over the
- past five years has been devoted to the development and implementation of
- behavioral programs. Essentially, I'm functioning as a behavioral clinician
- and I think I gotten pretty good at it. Now, perhaps it's time to move on
- in my professional development. I never completed a dissertation thesis for
- Mary Alice White [nb.] and I think I'd like to have another shot at it. Some
- of us learn slower than others (I'm almost 40!) and maybe now I have an idea
- that I think is good enough.
-
- My basic thesis is that any individual who has demonstrated the
- independent ability to drive a car is functioning adequately in this society
- and therefore should not be classified as mentally retarded. Moreover, any
- individual who cannot drive a car solely because of their intellectual
- limitations should be classified as retarded, assuming that they they have
- been given the opportunity to learn the requisite skills, received adequate
- and appropriate training (we need better/cheaper simulators) and otherwise
- meet the previously specified AAMD criteria.
-
- Finally, I offer the glimmer of an idea... half-baked so to speak.
-
- Might I have stumbled over the beginning to a fair test of the right to vote?
-
-
- Whatcha think?
-
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- w/thanks to C.I., K.P.G., P.C., blondie and Mom
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- **********************************************rjw