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Public Domain · 1935 · Educational

Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (Early Forms): Most-used American achievement battery

The most influential American achievement-and-aptitude testing battery ever produced. E.F. Lindquist at the University of Iowa developed the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (ITBS) starting in 1935, eventually testing essentially every American schoolchild for half a century. The Iowa Tests dominated school accountability and college admissions testing infrastructure.

About the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (Early Forms)

E.F. Lindquist arrived at the University of Iowa in 1929 with a mandate to build the most ambitious testing program ever attempted. By 1935 he had launched the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (ITBS), which tested Iowa schoolchildren annually in reading, vocabulary, work-study skills, language, arithmetic, and basic concepts. The Iowa Tests rapidly expanded beyond Iowa into the rest of the United States.

Lindquist's tests were both achievement tests (what has the child learned?) and aptitude tests (how well can the child reason?). The boundary between these two purposes was deliberately blurred. By the 1950s the Iowa Tests were administered to about 50% of American schoolchildren and were the primary basis for school-quality comparisons across the United States.

Lindquist also built the testing infrastructure that the Iowa Tests required: he invented the optical mark recognition scanner (1935-1955), the high-speed test-scoring machine, and the modern test-development laboratory. He founded the American College Testing program (ACT) in 1959 as a competitor to the SAT. Every American achievement-testing innovation from 1935 to 1975 came out of Lindquist's Iowa Testing Programs.

The 6 subtests

#1
Vocabulary Word meanings.
Interactive
#2
Reading Comprehension Read a passage and answer questions.
Paper Test
#3
Arithmetic Computation Pure computation, no word problems.
Interactive
#4
Arithmetic Problems Word problems.
Interactive
#5
Language Mechanics Spelling, punctuation, grammar.
Interactive
#6
Work-Study Skills Use of reference materials, maps, charts.
Paper Test

Take the interactive subset

Sample items at grade 5 difficulty (the original 1935 ITBS Form D).

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About these items: These Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (Early Forms) items are originally-written reconstructions in the tradition of the original 1935 test, NOT verbatim copies of the historical items. Where the original is a 1-on-1 oral or physical-apparatus test (e.g., examiner shows a card, child draws a shape), we have adapted the format to self-administered multiple choice.

Source

All test materials and historical content on this page are transcribed from:

Lindquist, E. F. & Greene, H. A. (1935-1955). Iowa Tests of Basic Skills. Iowa City: Iowa Testing Programs.

Public domain. E.F. Lindquist (1901-1978) was the most influential educational measurement figure of the 20th century. He also invented the optical mark recognition (OMR) scanner that made large-scale testing economically feasible, and founded the American College Testing program (ACT).

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This page is part of the Historical IQ Tests Archive. Editorial content, transcription notes, and curation are released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0). Public-domain primary sources retain their public-domain status. BibTeX · RIS · CSL JSON

Historical test materials are obsolete and are not valid modern IQ assessments. This page is preserved for educational, research, and historiographic purposes.

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