Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test | Complete Guide to the SB-5 Assessment
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Stanford-Binet
Intelligence Test

Complete guide to the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales (SB-5): history, structure, administration, scoring and clinical applications. Understand this widely-used professional IQ assessment for children and adults.

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What is the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test?

One of the world's most widely-used IQ tests

The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales (SB-5) is a professional, clinically-valid assessment of cognitive ability for individuals ages 2โ€“85 years. First published in 1916 by Lewis Terman at Stanford University (based on the original Binet-Simon scales), it has been revised multiple times and remains one of the most respected intelligence assessment instruments in psychology and education. The current version (SB-5, published 2003) provides comprehensive measurement across multiple cognitive domains and is used by psychologists, educators, and clinicians worldwide for diagnosis, placement decisions, and clinical assessment.

Professional-grade assessment

Unlike free online tests, the Stanford-Binet is: Clinically normed and validated on large representative samples, Individually administered by trained examiners, Comprehensive across multiple cognitive domains, Admissible in legal and educational contexts, and Suitable for clinical diagnosis and identification. The SB-5 requires professional training to administer and interpret โ€” it is not a tool for casual online assessment but rather a clinical instrument used in psychological evaluation.

Development history
Evolution of the Stanford-Binet from 1905 to today

The Stanford-Binet represents over a century of refinement in intelligence assessment, building on the foundational work of Alfred Binet and evolving into a modern, comprehensive cognitive assessment tool.

1905

Binet-Simon Scales Created

Alfred Binet and Thรฉodore Simon develop the first mental ability test in Paris for identifying children needing special education.

1916

Stanford-Binet Published (1st Edition)

Lewis Terman at Stanford University adapts Binet's test for English speakers. Introduces the "Intelligence Quotient" (IQ) formula and establishes American norms.

1937

Second Edition (Form L & M)

Revised and restandardised with improved item selection and updated norms. Forms L and M provide equivalent but independent test versions.

1960

Third Edition (Form L-M)

Combined forms L and M; updated items and norms. Becomes the most widely-used IQ test through the 1970s.

1986

Fourth Edition (SB:FE)

Major revision introducing factor structure, composite scores, and broader cognitive assessment. Renamed "Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale: Fourth Edition."

2003

Fifth Edition (SB-5) โ€” Current Version

Modern revision with updated norms, item pool, and assessment of five cognitive factors. SB-5 is the current gold-standard professional IQ test for children and adults.

Assessment structure
What the Stanford-Binet Fifth Edition (SB-5) measures

The SB-5 assesses five cognitive factors across verbal, non-verbal and written domains. This multi-factor structure provides a comprehensive profile of cognitive strengths and weaknesses.

๐Ÿ“š

Fluid Reasoning

Novel problem-solving, pattern recognition and logical thinking independent of learned knowledge.

๐Ÿ’ญ

Knowledge

Accumulated verbal knowledge, vocabulary, comprehension and learned information.

๐Ÿง 

Quantitative Reasoning

Mathematical reasoning, numerical ability and problem-solving with numbers and quantities.

๐ŸŽจ

Visual-Spatial Processing

Spatial relationships, mental imagery, visual analysis and non-verbal reasoning.

โšก

Working Memory

Short-term memory, attention, concentration and ability to hold and manipulate information.

Comprehensive assessment across domains

The SB-5 contains 10 subtests (5 verbal, 5 non-verbal) that measure these five factors. Testing takes 45โ€“90 minutes depending on the individual and the examiner's thoroughness. Results provide: Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) representing overall cognitive ability, Verbal IQ (VIQ) measuring language-based reasoning, Non-Verbal IQ (NVIQ) measuring visual-spatial and abstract reasoning, and Factor scores for each of the five cognitive domains. This multi-dimensional approach identifies cognitive strengths and specific areas of weakness, making it ideal for diagnosis and educational planning.

Clinical applications
When and why Stanford-Binet is used

๐ŸŽ“ Giftedness Identification

Gold standard for identifying academically gifted children. Scores 130+ qualify for gifted programs in most districts.

๐Ÿฅ Clinical Diagnosis

Assesses cognitive disability, intellectual disability and developmental delay. Results inform intervention planning.

๐Ÿง‘โ€โš–๏ธ Legal Assessment

Results admissible in legal proceedings, special education hearings and court cases involving cognitive capacity.

๐Ÿ“š Educational Placement

Determines appropriate educational level, special education services and accommodation needs.

๐Ÿ”ฌ Research

Widely used in cognitive psychology and neuroscience research. Gold standard for research participant screening.

๐Ÿ’ผ Career Assessment

Sometimes used in career counselling, vocational rehabilitation and job placement evaluations.

Stanford-Binet vs. other assessments
How the Stanford-Binet compares to other IQ tests

Multiple professional IQ tests exist. Each has strengths and is used in different contexts. The Stanford-Binet distinguishes itself through its comprehensive structure and long historical track record.

Stanford-Binet (SB-5)

  • 5 cognitive factors measured
  • 45โ€“90 minute administration
  • Ages 2โ€“85 covered
  • Strong for giftedness ID
  • Excellent verbal/non-verbal balance
  • Longest historical track record (100+ years)
  • Gold standard in many settings

WAIS-IV (Wechsler)

  • 4 index scores measured
  • 60โ€“90 minute administration
  • Ages 16โ€“90 covered
  • Excellent for working adults
  • Strong process/deficit analysis
  • Slightly more popular in clinical settings
  • Detailed subtest profile analysis

Choosing between Stanford-Binet and WAIS

Use Stanford-Binet for: Young children (under 16), giftedness screening, comprehensive cognitive profile, non-verbal ability emphasis. Use WAIS for: Adults and adolescents, detailed deficit analysis, working memory emphasis, high-level cognitive screening. Many psychologists use both within a broader assessment battery.

Administration & scoring
How Stanford-Binet testing works

Professional administration required

The Stanford-Binet can only be administered by a qualified professional: psychologists, educational psychologists, school psychologists, clinical assessors and others with specialized training. It is not a self-administered test and requires licensing to purchase and use. A trained examiner: establishes rapport with the test-taker, administers items in a standardised way, observes behaviour and motivation, scores responses immediately, and interprets results contextually.

Subtest Factor Measured Task Type Time
Verbal Subtests
Vocabulary Knowledge Define words ~5 min
Comprehension Knowledge Explain concepts ~5 min
Absurdities Fluid Reasoning Identify logical errors ~5 min
Verbal Analogies Fluid Reasoning Complete analogies ~5 min
Number Series Quantitative Reasoning Continue number patterns ~5 min
Non-Verbal Subtests
Object Series/Matrices Fluid Reasoning Complete visual patterns ~5 min
Quantitative (Non-Verbal) Quantitative Reasoning Solve numerical problems nonverbally ~5 min
Picture Absurdities Fluid Reasoning Identify visual errors ~5 min
Matrices Visual-Spatial Processing Complete matrix patterns ~5 min
Paper Folding Visual-Spatial Processing Mental paper-folding tasks ~5 min

Scoring and interpretation

Raw scores are converted to scaled scores (mean 10, SD 3) by age group. Composite scores are calculated for each factor and overall domains, yielding standard scores (mean 100, SD 15) with percentile ranks and confidence intervals. Interpretation considers: overall cognitive ability (FSIQ), verbal vs. non-verbal strengths, factor-specific strengths and weaknesses, scatter patterns suggesting learning disabilities or giftedness, behavioral observations, and clinical impressions. Results are typically provided in a detailed psychological report with recommendations for intervention, accommodation or further evaluation.

Common questions
Frequently asked questions about Stanford-Binet testing
QHow much does Stanford-Binet testing cost?
Professional Stanford-Binet assessment typically costs ยฃ300โ€“ยฃ800 depending on the examiner's qualifications, location and report complexity. School psychologists may administer it free as part of special education evaluation. Private psychological evaluation is more expensive than school-based assessment.
QHow long does Stanford-Binet testing take?
The test itself takes 45โ€“90 minutes depending on the individual's age and engagement. Younger children may finish in 45 minutes; adults often take 60โ€“75 minutes. Adding rapport-building and clinical interview, a full assessment appointment typically lasts 2โ€“3 hours.
QWhat age groups can take the Stanford-Binet?
The SB-5 covers ages 2โ€“85 years. For very young children (2โ€“3), assessment focuses heavily on non-verbal tasks. For older adults, the test remains reliable, though processing speed may decline normally with age.
QHow reliable is the Stanford-Binet?
The Stanford-Binet has excellent reliability. Internal consistency is typically 0.95โ€“0.97 for the Full Scale IQ. Test-retest reliability over 1โ€“8 weeks is 0.91โ€“0.92. These figures reflect that the test provides consistent, stable measurement of cognitive ability.
QIs Stanford-Binet culturally biased?
Like all cognitive tests, Stanford-Binet has some cultural factors affecting performance (language, educational exposure, cultural familiarity with test formats). The SB-5 was normed on diverse samples and includes non-verbal subtests to reduce language bias. Professional examiners consider cultural context in interpretation.
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About professional vs. online assessment

The Stanford-Binet is a professional assessment requiring qualified administration. If you're seeking cognitive assessment: for clinical diagnosis, legal proceedings or educational placement, work with a licensed psychologist. For general self-knowledge and cognitive screening, online assessments provide valuable information. Both have distinct purposes and value โ€” they complement rather than replace each other.