Background
Everett Lindquist was born on June 4, 1901, in Gowrie, Iowa, the United States. He was the son of Jonas Algot and Hannah Olivia (Anderson) Lindquist.
Everett Lindquist was born on June 4, 1901, in Gowrie, Iowa, the United States. He was the son of Jonas Algot and Hannah Olivia (Anderson) Lindquist.
Everett Lindquist joined the University of Iowa in 1925 as a research assistant. He received his Doctor of Philosophy in 1927 and was a member of the Iowa faculty until retirement in 1969. In 1953 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.
What became generally known as the Iowa Testing Programs (ITP) began in 1929 when Everett Lindquist, under the direction of Professor Thomas Kirby at the State University of Iowa, developed a statewide scholastic competition known as the Iowa Academic Meet, which became popularly known as the "Brain Derby." The Brain Derby was designed for high schools across the state and became very popular within just a few years. Everett Lindquist and his associates soon concluded that the testing program could be broadened to include children at lower grade levels, and the tests could also be used for educational guidance, individualization of instruction, and evaluation of instruction rather than just for its competitive aspects. As a result, from 1931 to 1942 they developed the Iowa Every-Pupil Achievement Tests.
A cornerstone accomplishment came in 1935 with the introduction of the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (ITBS) for grades six through eight. Its immediate success across the state led to the extension of the program to grades three through five in 1940. In 1942 the Iowa Tests of Educational Development (ITED) were implemented. The ITED were characterized by a series of new features: the basic purpose was to facilitate the individualization of instruction and guidance; emphasis was on general intellectual skills and abilities, understanding of broad concepts, and critical thinking and problem-solving skills; the individual tests were standardized and scaled to yield highly comparable scores; test scoring was done in Iowa City (previously, teachers graded the tests at their own schools and reported results to Iowa City); and each participating school was required to spend 20 minutes at each testing occasion trying out new test items for future tests.
The proliferation of the use of these tests across Iowa and then increasingly across the country soon began to challenge the ability of staff in Iowa City to grade the sheer volume of tests. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Everett Lindquist and many of his associates began to work on possible electronic means of dealing with this volume. In 1953 they established the Measurement Research Center, which featured a newly designed electronic scoring machine. The first machine was able to score 4,000 sheets per hour, a phenomenal improvement over the existing system. Within a few years a series of improved machines raised scanning ability to 40,000 sheets per hour, and by the time Everett Lindquist retired in 1969, scanning ability was up to 100,000 sheets per hour.
The success of these testing programs led to the development of other major tests and test agencies. During World War II, after the U.S. Armed Forces Institute (USAFI) was organized, Everett Lindquist developed the USAFI Tests of General Educational Development (GED), which is used today for both military personnel and workers in government and private industry.
In 1957 the ITED and GED were used as building blocks to develop the Qualifying Test of the National Merit Scholarship Program. In 1959 another major spin-off of the ITP was achieved with the launching of the American College Testing Program (ACT). The vast increase in college admissions after World War II stimulated demand for pre-college admissions testing. The ACT was designed as a test of the student’s general educational development and could be used with other criteria to predict student success at the college level.
Everett Franklin Lindquist married Marguerite Liebig of Mascoutah, August 31, 1927.