The dark history of IQ tests - Stefan C. Dombrowski
 In 1905, psychologists 
 Alfred Binet and Théodore Simon
  designed a test for children 
 who were struggling in school in France.
  Designed to determine which children
 required individualized attention,
  their method formed 
 the basis of the IQ test.
  Beginning in the late 19th century,
  researchers hypothesized that cognitive
 abilities like verbal reasoning,
  working memory, and visual-spatial skills
  reflected an underlying 
 general intelligence, or g factor.
  Simon and Binet designed a battery of 
 tests to measure each of these abilities
  and combine the results 
 into a single score.
  Questions were adjusted 
 for each age group,
  and a child’s score reflected how they 
 performed relative to others their age.
  Dividing someone’s score by their age 
 and multiplying the result by 100
  yielded the intelligence quotient, or IQ.
  Today, a score of 100 represents 
 the average of a sample population,
  with 68% of the population 
 scoring within 15 points of 100.
  Simon and Binet thought the skills 
 their test assessed
  would reflect general intelligence.
  But both then and now,
  there’s no single agreed upon 
 definition of general intelligence.
  And that left the door open 
 for people to use the test
  in service of their own preconceived 
 assumptions about intelligence.
  What started as a way to identify 
 those who needed academic help
  quickly became used to sort 
 people in other ways,
  often in service of deeply flawed 
 ideologies.
  One of the first large-scale 
 implementations
  occurred in the United States during WWI, 
 when the military used an IQ test
  to sort recruits and screen 
 them for officer training.
  At that time, many people 
 believed in eugenics,
  the idea that desirable 
 and undesirable genetic traits
  could and should be controlled 
 in humans through selective breeding.
  There were many problems 
 with this line of thinking,
  among them the idea that intelligence
 was not only fixed and inherited,
  but also linked to a person’s race.
  Under the influence of eugenics,
  scientists used the results 
 of the military initiative
  to make erroneous claims 
 that certain racial groups
  were intellectually superior to others.
  Without taking into account 
 that many of the recruits tested
  were new immigrants to the United States
  who lacked formal education 
 or English language exposure,
  they created an erroneous 
 intelligence hierarchy of ethnic groups.
  The intersection of eugenics and IQ
 testing influenced not only science,
  but policy as well.
  In 1924, the state of Virginia 
 created policy
  allowing for the forced sterilization 
 of people with low IQ scores—
  a decision the United States 
 Supreme Court upheld.
  In Nazi Germany, the government 
 authorized the murder of children
  based on low IQ.
  Following the Holocaust 
 and the Civil Rights Movement,
  the discriminatory uses of IQ tests
  were challenged on both 
 moral and scientific grounds.
  Scientists began to gather evidence 
 of environmental impacts on IQ.
  For example, as IQ tests were periodically
 recalibrated over the 20th century,
  new generations scored consistently
 higher on old tests
  than each previous generation.
  This phenomenon, 
 known as the Flynn Effect,
  happened much too fast to be caused 
 by inherited evolutionary traits.
  Instead, the cause was likely 
 environmental—
  improved education, 
 better healthcare, and better nutrition.
  In the mid-twentieth century,
  psychologists also attempted 
 to use IQ tests
  to evaluate things other than 
 general intelligence,
  particularly schizophrenia, depression,
 and other psychiatric conditions.
  These diagnoses relied in part on 
 the clinical judgment of the evaluators,
  and used a subset of the tests 
 used to determine IQ—
  a practice later research found does 
 not yield clinically useful information.
  Today, IQ tests employ many similar
 design elements and types of questions
  as the early tests,
  though we have better techniques for
 identifying potential bias in the test.
  They’re no longer used to diagnose
 psychiatric conditions.
  But a similarly problematic practice 
 using subtest scores
  is still sometimes used to diagnose
 learning disabilities,
  against the advice of many experts.
  Psychologists around the world 
 still use IQ tests
  to identify intellectual disability,
  and the results can be used 
 to determine
  appropriate educational support,
 job training, and assisted living.
  IQ test results have been used 
 to justify horrific policies
  and scientifically baseless ideologies.
  That doesn’t mean the test itself 
 is worthless—
  in fact, it does a good job of measuring
 the reasoning and problem-solving skills
  it sets out to.
  But that isn’t the same thing 
 as measuring a person’s potential.
  Though there are many complicated
 political, historical, scientific,
  and cultural issues wrapped up 
 in IQ testing,
  more and more researchers 
 agree on this point,
  and reject the notion that individuals
 can be categorized
  by a single numerical score.