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World Reconstruction and the Concept of Distribution of Mental Abilities in Races,Nations, and Social Strata
Abstract:Summary

This study represents an attempt to study the development of situational causality among preadolescents in four diverse cultures. The subjects were 320 children, 80 each in India, Western Samoa, Mexico, and the United States (Metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia), divided equally between the fourth and sixth grades and advantaged and disadvantaged backgrounds. The subjects' responses to the Guess Causes task of the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking were scored for causality. Comparisons were made on the basis of both number of responses and proportion of responses for cultures, grade levels, and advantageness of socioeconomic background. In general, children in India and the United States were more causally oriented than their counterparts in Mexico and Western Samoa. The sixth-grade children tended to be more causally oriented than the fourth graders, and the advantaged children were more causally oriented than their more disadvantaged counterparts. There were a number of statistically significant interactions for grade by culture, however, indicating that developmental trends are modified by cultural forces.
Keywords:advertisements  ethnicity  gender  stereotypes  television
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