As one of the most ignored innovators in educational psychology, Leta Stetter Hollingworth had a great influence on the knowledge of our special children. II. Leta Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886 in Dowes County, Nebraska, Margaret Eleanor Dunly and John George Sterling (1992). As the top sister among the three sisters, Hollingworth's mother died after giving birth to her. III. Leta Hollingworth, born on May 25, 1886, was born in Dow County, Nebraska, and died on 27 November 1939.
Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886. Her fathers are hunters, team members, ranchers, businessmen, and owners of bars. She is the first child and the mother died shortly after the third child was born. She inherited her mother's first year journal, which recorded Leta's life, and spread this tradition to her life. When she was twelve years old, her father remarried and they were taken away from the grandparents' houses that were placed at the house of their new stepmother. I found out that this was a terrible experience.
When Leta was 16 years old, she studied at the University of Nebraska and achieved a wonderful academic record for four years. In the meantime, she was also involved in Henry Hollingworth. In 1906, she received her bachelor's degree and state teacher's certificate. After moving to join Hollworth in New York in 1908 she specialized in education and sociology and in 1913 got her master's degree in education at Columbia University. In 1916, she studied at the Columbia University of Edward L. Sundhodheke. Then she gained status at Columbia Teacher College and maintained this position for the rest of her life.
Studies of talented children can be traced back for at least a century. In 1916, psychologist Leta Hollingworth dismissed the idea that women are scientifically struggling due to instability in the menstrual cycle and started several earliest studies on high children with high IQ. Twenty years later, she began working at the Speyer School in New York. This is one of the first schools that provided a challenging course for these students. IQ test caused intense criticism. For skeptics, journalist Christopher Hitchens thinks "There is an abnormally high and consistent correlation between human stupidity and the tendency to be impressed with IQ measurements". As with other evaluations, the IQ test is not perfect