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Home » A New Theory of Human Intelligence: Scott Barry Kaufman (Transcript)

A New Theory of Human Intelligence: Scott Barry Kaufman (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Scott Barry Kaufman’s talk titled “A New Theory of Human Intelligence” at TEDxZumbroRiver conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Rethinking Human Intelligence

I would like to offer you today a broader definition of human intelligence. One that I think takes into account the whole person, both our deepest challenges as well as our most profound strengths. I believe our standard model of intelligence is systematically letting far too many kids fall between the cracks in an educational system that has such limited notions of human potential. Let me share with you two school evaluations that I think do a nice job illustrating this point.

So, this one is a middle school assessment about a quiet but friendly and hardworking young man who’s enrolled in a small private academy. Depending on the subject, he works at a variety of different grade levels. His teachers report he’s a willing participant in every facet of school and becomes fervent, even obsessive, about activities of particular interest, showing superior grasp of academic concepts in his homework, class discussions, and projects. He occasionally suggests alternatives to teacher-directed assignments so that he can demonstrate his comprehension and skill. As a result, his relationships with peers, older students with mutual interests, and adults continue to improve.

Okay, now I want to show you another school evaluation about an eight-year-old boy who was referred to a neurologist. According to this neurologist, information provided by mother and observations in the office setting indicate that difficulties displayed have a multifactorial basis, including attention deficit hyperactive disorder, mild oppositional defiant disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and mild unevenness in skill development. Now I want to ask you all a question.

Raise your hand if you thought I was talking about two completely different children. So, I see some hands here. I mean, would it surprise anyone in this room to know that this was actually the same kid, Blaine, at different points in this kid’s life? One when he was eight years old and one in middle school.

The Case of Twice Exceptional Students

Do you think, just looking at this report, by the way, these are the recommendations of this kid. We have a whole bunch of things including counseling, medication, social interventions, behavioral management. Is there anything in this evaluation that would have allowed you to predict this kid? I want you to think about that for a second.

In recent years, a number of very thoughtful educators, clinicians, psychologists, and parents have identified the unique needs and learning styles of a particular classification of students called the twice exceptional student. So, I want to tell you today about these twice exceptional students. What you find is that twice exceptional students simultaneously have exemplary strengths as well as extraordinary challenges. So, you may see the child could have difficulty with written expression, high anxiety, could become easily frustrated, difficulty with social interactions, uneven academic performance, while also having a rich vocabulary, being resourceful, being curious, imaginative, creative, having a special talent or interest, all in a single package.

Now, it’s estimated there are about 300,000 of these kids in this country, but I think that’s a gross underestimate for a number of reasons. For one, I don’t think we fully realize that a lot of these challenges can be strengths in the right context, but I also think we have a really narrow notion of strengths to begin with. So, I think in order to really find out how many of these kids are falling through the cracks and really get the best out of these students, I think we need to take into account a 4C model. So, we need to take into account capacity, competence, commitment, and creativity.

Understanding Capacity, Competence, and Creativity

Importantly, they’re not all the same thing. You often, you do sometimes see them all in the same package, but I think it’s really important to differentiate them from each other. So, first of all, what is the difference between capacity and competence? Well, here’s a chart of so-called, of one of our biggest metrics of potential, IQ, the IQ test.

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Most of you have heard of the IQ test. It’s supposed to forecast your ability to achieve academically on actual competence tests of standardized achievement. And what you see here is, yeah, it’s true. IQ does correlate with standardized achievement.

I’m not saying that IQ is a useless measure of human, of potential in academics, but what you see here is that about 50% of individuals are underperforming based on their predicted measure of potential. And often unrecognized, 50% are overperforming based on their predicted measure of human potential. That often is not made nearly as much. We need to leave much more room in our models in school for children to surprise us.

The Role of Commitments and Creativity

Something is clearly not complete here in our understanding of human intelligence. But if we just stop there, there’s obviously more to getting out of possibility in children than just their academic performance, their capacity, or even their competence. We also have commitments. You see kids in special education have so many commitments, so much values.

They have so many values and passions for special interest areas, for things that they’re, for making the world a better place. I think something is deeply flawed with an education system where if a child comes to you and says, “Look, I’d really like resources to end violence or end bullying or to develop my musical talents, et cetera, et cetera,” that we say, “Hold on, we have to measure your IQ or look at your standardized test to see whether or not you score above a certain threshold in order to make the world a better place.”

I think something is deeply flawed with a system where we don’t just immediately say, “Great, how can we help you get there?” And in addition to commitment, I also see creativity as extraordinarily important. You find that creativity often comes in the most unexpected packages.