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IQ Tester Complains About Offers on EBay

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News Max, December 18, 2007

Intelligence tests widely used to help determine the competence of criminal defendants and the placement of students are for sale on eBay Inc.’s online auction site, and the test maker is worried they will be misused.

The series of Wechsler intelligence tests, made by San Antonio-based Harcourt Assessment Inc., are supposed to be sold to and administered by only clinical psychologists and trained professionals.

Given more than a million times a year nationwide, according to Harcourt, the intelligence tests often are among numerous tests ordered by prosecutors and defense attorneys to determine the mental competence of criminal defendants. A low IQ, for example, can be used to argue leniency in sentencing.

Schools use the tests to determine whether to place a student in a special program, whether for gifted or struggling students.

Harcourt officials say they fear the tests for sale on eBay will be misused for coaching by lawyers or parents.

But eBay has denied their request to restrict the sale of the tests.

{snip}

The tests generally involve a series of questions and tasks like putting blocks together. Misinterpreting the results, even without malicious intent, could lead to mistakes in assessing a child’s intelligence, said Aurelio Prifitera, the president of Harcourt’s clinical division.

If there were a violation of intellectual property rights, eBay would remove the items, Durzy said. But he said Harcourt has not lodged that complaint.

{snip}

It has taken out a full-page ad in The National Psychologist magazine, asking clinicians and test publishers to contact eBay to express their concern, he said.

Jack King, communications director for the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said it would be very difficult to fake the results of an IQ test because cognitive and psychological tests are usually given as part of a battery of tests, and in most cases, there is a profile of scores that would be considered normal for certain disabilities or disorders.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on December 19, 2007)

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