Journal of Applied Psychology, Volume 5

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Granville Stanley Hall
American Psychological Association, 1921

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Página 157 - HE clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ring'd with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.
Página 349 - In no case may we interpret an action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher psychical faculty, if it can be interpreted as the outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower in the psychological scale.
Página 159 - You would not easily guess All the modes of distress Which torture the tenants of earth ; And the various evils, Which like so many devils, Attend the poor souls from their birth. m Some a living require, And others desire An old fellow out of the way ; And which is the best I leave to be guessed, For I cannot pretend to say.
Página 172 - Arlitt to conclude: the difference in median IQ which is due to race alone is in this case at most only 8.6 points whereas the difference between children of the same race but of Inferior and Very Superior social status may amount to 33.9 points.
Página 8 - It is sometimes said that we ought not to assert that the lower races have not the capacity for social evolution, because we do not know what they could do if they had the opportunity.
Página 85 - From this compilation it appears that there are hundreds of special funds, trusts, or foundations for the encouragement or support of research, in the mathematical, physical and biological sciences, and their applications in engineering, medicine, agriculture and other useful arts. The income from these funds, which amounts annually to at least fifty million dollars, is used principally for prizes, medals, research scholarships and fellowships, grants and sustaining appropriations or endowments....
Página 85 - It appears that there are hundreds of special funds, trusts or foundations for the encouragement or support of research in the mathematical, physical, and biological sciences, and their applications in engineering, medicine, agriculture and other useful arts. The chief uses of these moneys are prizes, medals, research scholarships or fellowships, grants, sustaining appropriations, and endowments.
Página 8 - ... there is no race and no class of human beings who are incapable of assimilating the social achievement of mankind and of profitably employing the social heritage (ibid., p.
Página 19 - ... of the soldier's job; (c) that the soldier receives much; (d) that in the Army he learns those things that will promote his health and usefulness; (e) that he owes much; (f) that in appreciation of what he gets he will be happy to serve his country. 3. That all suggestions of proper habits, duties and virtues are most effective when camouflaged and, especially when the learner unwittingly becomes a teacher of those duties and ideals which it is desired he shall get. 4. That the school and Army,...
Página 173 - Superior social status may amount to 339 points, It is apparent that such differences as we have between the negro and Italian children and between these and children of native born white parents are not nearly so striking as the difference between children of the same race but of different social status, Of the two factors social status seems to play the more important part...

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