stanford-binet test: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

C2
UK/ˌstænfəd bɪˈneɪ ˌtest/US/ˌstænfərd bɪˈneɪ ˌtest/

Technical/Formal (psychology, educational assessment)

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Quick answer

What does “stanford-binet test” mean?

An individually administered intelligence test used to measure cognitive abilities and intelligence in children and adults.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

An individually administered intelligence test used to measure cognitive abilities and intelligence in children and adults.

A standardized assessment originally developed to identify children needing special education, now widely used to evaluate reasoning, knowledge, quantitative processing, visual-spatial processing, and working memory. The modern version yields a composite IQ score and measures five cognitive factors.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No significant lexical differences; the test name is identical. Usage frequency may be slightly higher in American psychological literature due to its historical development at Stanford University.

Connotations

In both varieties, it carries connotations of formal psychological assessment, often associated with school placements, gifted programs, or clinical evaluation. It may evoke stronger historical associations with eugenics and early IQ testing debates among educated audiences.

Frequency

More frequently referenced in American academic and educational contexts, but universally recognized in professional psychology globally.

Grammar

How to Use “stanford-binet test” in a Sentence

The psychologist administered {the Stanford-Binet test} to the child.Her {Stanford-Binet score} placed her in the 98th percentile.The school requires {a Stanford-Binet assessment} for admission.

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
administer the Stanford-Binet testStanford-Binet Intelligence ScalesStanford-Binet scoreStanford-Binet assessmentStanford-Binet version
medium
take the Stanford-BinetStanford-Binet resultsStanford-Binet testingStanford-Binet compositeStanford-Binet norms
weak
Stanford-Binet evaluationStanford-Binet profileStanford-Binet measureStanford-Binet subtest

Examples

Examples of “stanford-binet test” in a Sentence

verb

British English

  • The educational psychologist will Stanford-Binet test the pupil next week.
  • They don't routinely Stanford-Binet test children that young.

American English

  • The school district Stanford-Binet tests all candidates for the gifted program.
  • We need to Stanford-Binet test him to get a baseline.

adverb

British English

  • Not applicable/derived.

American English

  • Not applicable/derived.

adjective

British English

  • The Stanford-Binet testing process took two hours.
  • She reviewed the Stanford-Binet assessment guidelines.

American English

  • They offer Stanford-Binet test preparation, which is controversial.
  • His Stanford-Binet score report was detailed.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Rare, except in HR contexts for executive assessment or in educational technology companies.

Academic

Common in psychology, education, and neuroscience research papers and textbooks.

Everyday

Very rare; used primarily by parents discussing educational testing or in media reports on intelligence.

Technical

Standard term in psychometrics, school psychology, clinical psychology, and special education reports.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “stanford-binet test”

Strong

Wechsler Intelligence Scale (a different specific test)cognitive ability test

Neutral

IQ testcognitive assessmentintelligence test

Weak

psychometric evaluationmental ability test

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “stanford-binet test”

non-cognitive assessmentpersonality testachievement test (measures learned knowledge, not innate ability)behavioral observation

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “stanford-binet test”

  • Incorrect: 'Stanford Binet test' (missing hyphen).
  • Incorrect: 'the Stanford-Binet' (as a standalone noun without 'test' or 'scales' is too vague in formal writing).
  • Incorrect: Using it as a verb, e.g., 'He was Stanford-Bineted.'

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No, modern versions (starting with the 4th edition) are designed for individuals aged 2 to 85+ years.

While both measure intelligence, the Stanford-Binet historically provided a single IQ score and emphasizes fluid reasoning. The Wechsler scales (like the WAIS and WISC) provide separate verbal and performance IQ scores and are more commonly used in clinical settings.

The original Binet-Simon scale was created by French psychologists Alfred Binet and Théodore Simon. It was later adapted and standardized for the U.S. population by Lewis Terman at Stanford University, hence the combined name.

No. While it measures certain cognitive potentials, success depends on numerous factors including creativity, emotional intelligence, perseverance, opportunity, and specific skills not measured by the test.

An individually administered intelligence test used to measure cognitive abilities and intelligence in children and adults.

Stanford-binet test is usually technical/formal (psychology, educational assessment) in register.

Stanford-binet test: in British English it is pronounced /ˌstænfəd bɪˈneɪ ˌtest/, and in American English it is pronounced /ˌstænfərd bɪˈneɪ ˌtest/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • Not applicable for this technical term.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Imagine a STANford student named BINET who aces every TEST. Link the university name (Stanford) with the original creator (Binet) and the purpose (test).

Conceptual Metaphor

THE MIND AS A MEASURABLE CONTAINER (intelligence is a quantifiable substance that can be gauged and compared).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
The school psychologist decided to administer the to get a comprehensive view of the child's cognitive strengths.
Multiple Choice

What is the Stanford-Binet test primarily used to measure?

Practise

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