yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How should we measure intelligence? | Mary-Helen Immordino Yang


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

  • I don't know that there's a need to measure intelligence. We have this incredible drive in our culture to enumerate everything and measure everything, and I'm not sure that we need to do that.

From my perspective, our current education system measures intelligence by a young person's ability to perform on a predetermined, pre-designed assessment at a particular time and to give back the answers that are expected given what was given to them. That system of measurement does tell you something about what they can do under those conditions, but it doesn't tell you anything about their potential.

So one of the real problems with this way of thinking about achievement, which often morphs over into intelligence, is that it undermines agency in a sort of broader sense, and instead teaches kids to focus very narrowly on the problem spaces that have already been invented, that are being given to them and formulated by somebody else on somebody else's terms.

Some of that is fine, but the problem is that becomes the privileged and oftentimes only way of knowing what a child knows, how smart a child is, rather than looking at what I would call a more dynamic, lived, ecologically valid sort of emergent kind of intelligence— which is the ability to manage yourself in complex context and make sense out of things and invent in real-time on the fly.

That is a much more adaptive sort of ecological kind of intelligence, and I think it's essential for society, and we really should do more to support it.

More Articles

View All
How Growing Trees Helps Fight Poverty in Cameroon | National Geographic
[Music] Just imagine that you are a farmer in Cameroon. You spend all your life struggling to cultivate cocoa, coffee, and rubber, cutting which you don’t eat. They are called cash crops, and that’s where the problem lies. Big Industry fixes their prices,…
Transitioning from counting to multiplying to find area | 3rd grade | Khan Academy
This square is one square unit. So, what is the area of rectangle A? The first thing we’re told is that each of these little squares equals one square unit, and then we’re asked to find the area of rectangle A. Here’s rectangle A, and area is the space th…
Second-order reactions | Kinetics | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
Let’s say we have a hypothetical reaction where reactant A turns into products. Let’s say the reaction is second order with respect to A. If the reaction is second order with respect to A, then we can write the rate of the reaction is equal to the rate co…
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors | Cosmos: Possible Worlds
OK, just for argument’s sake, suppose we’re nothing more than the sum total of our genetic inheritance. It’s not as bad as it sounds. There are passages in our DNA that are every bit as heroic as anything ever written in any epic saga. [low growl] [gentl…
Multiplying monomials | Polynomial arithmetic | Algebra 2 | Khan Academy
Let’s say that we wanted to multiply 5x squared, and I’ll do this in purple: 3x to the fifth. What would this equal? Pause this video and see if you can reason through that a little bit. All right, now let’s work through this together. Really, all we’re …
Return on capital and economic growth
One of the core ideas of “Capital in the 21st Century” is comparing the after-tax return on capital, let me write that a little bit neater: return on capital, to economic growth. The contention is that if the return on capital ® is greater than economic g…