User:Benvdo/sandbox

Florence Laura Goodenough (1886-1959) was an American psychologist and professor at the University of Minnesota who is noted for developing the Minnesota Preschool Scale and the Goodenough Draw-A-Man test (now the Goodenough-Harris Draw-A-Person Test). She wrote Handbook of Child Psychology in 1933, and she became president of the National Counsel of Women Psychologists in 1942. She is also noted for her instruction of Ruth Howard, the second African American woman to earn a Ph.D. in Psychology.

Biography
Florence Laura Goodenough (1886-1959) was born on August 6 in Honesdale, Pennsylvania and was the youngest of eight children  ). She was home-schooled and received the equivalent of a high school diploma (Harris). In 1908 she graduated with a Bachelor of Pedagogy from Normal School in Millersville, Pennsylvania  . She earned her B.S. in 1920 from Colombia University   .  At Columbia she studied under Leta Stetter Hollingworth, and earned her M.A. in 1921  . She received her Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1924  . Also at Stanford, Lewis Terman was beginning a study on gifted children and was selecting prospective researchers for his work . Goodenough was noticed by Lewis Terman because of her IQ score  .  She was chosen, and contributed substantially over the duration of the project, serving as chief field psychologist and chief research psychologist   . Goodenough was listed as a contributor to Terman's book Genetic Studies of Genius  Thompson 1990). Soon after she joined the Institute of Child Welfare at the University of Minnesota as an Assistant Professor (Harris). She became a professor in 1931. At the University of Minnesota Goodenough created the Draw-a-Man test, which could measure intelligence in children. She published the test in her book Measurement of Intelligence by Drawing (1926), which included detailed accounts of procedures, scoring, and examples. Later she suffered from a degenerative disease and was forced into early retirement in 1947. Despite the illness which induced a loss in sight and hearing, Goodenough published three more books after learning braille; Mental Testing: Its History, Principles, and Applications in 1949, Exceptional Children in 1954, and the third edition of Developmental Psychology in 1959. She died of a stroke in Florida on April 4, 1959.