Abstract
Two-hundred-and-fourteen Zulus rated their own and their children's overall and multiple intelligences. Parents gave similar ratings: highest for verbal, intra- and inter-personal intelligence and lowest for musical and bodily-kinaesthetic intelligence. Female first-born children received higher ratings than male first-born children. The strongest predictor of the children's overall estimated IQ was the parents overall estimated IQ and the age of the child. Results are compared to other similar studies in the area.
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