Psychological Test, Pintner-Toops Revised Directions Test

Psychological Test, Pintner-Toops Revised Directions Test

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Description
Rudolf Pintner (1884 -1942) and Herbert A. Toops (1895-1972) prepared this test of the ability to follow directions, which was published by C. H. Stoelting Company of Chicago. They sought to combine two tests of following directions (one deemed easy and one deemed hard) introduced in 1911 by R.S. Woodworth and F.L. Wells (see MA.316371.076). The Pintner-Toops test had only fifteen fill-in-the blank questions. These increased in difficulty in such a way that the test was suitable for both children and adults.
Pintner, born in England, received a Master of Arts from the University of Edinburgh in 1906 and a PhD. from Leipzig University in 1913. He came to the United States in 1912. After a year at Toledo University in Ohio, he went to Ohio State University, and then, from 1921 until his death, was at Teachers College of Columbia University.
Toops obtained his undergraduate (1916) and master’s (1917) degrees from Ohio State University and his doctorate from Columbia University (1921). He worked for the armed forces during World War I and at Teachers College of Columbia and then the University of Minnesota before returning to Ohio State University in1927, spending the remainder of his career there.
References:
American Psychological Association, 1962 Directory, ed. James Q. Holsopple, Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, 1962, p. 731.
Pintner, R., & Toops, H. A., “A Revised Directions Test,” Journal of Educational Psychology, 1918, 9 #3, pp. 123–142. A copy of the Pintner-Toops test appears as an illustration here.
Location
Currently not on view
Object Name
Psychological Test
maker
Pintner, R.
C. H. Stoelting Company
Physical Description
paper (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 21.7 cm x 28 cm; 8 17/32 in x 11 1/32 in
ID Number
1990.0034.150
accession number
1990.0034
catalog number
1990.0034.150
Credit Line
Gift of Samuel Kavruck
subject
Mathematics
Psychological Tests
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Science & Mathematics
Data Source
National Museum of American History
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