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Grille De Cotation Dessin Du Bonhomme Goodenough __link__ May 2026

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Grille De Cotation Dessin Du Bonhomme Goodenough __link__ May 2026

Test du Dessin du Bonhomme de Florence Goodenough est un outil classique utilisé pour évaluer le développement intellectuel de l'enfant

Originally published in 1926 by psychologist Florence Goodenough, the Draw-a-Man Test (later revised to the Draw-a-Person test) was one of the first non-verbal intelligence tests. It moved away from language and culture-heavy questions, instead focusing on what a child knows about the human body.

Today, the most common clinical successor is the Draw-A-Person: Intellectual Ability (DAP:IQ) by Naglieri (1988). While the scoring grid has been modernized, the foundational logic—presence, proportion, and detail—remains identical to Goodenough’s original grille.

The Core Philosophy: "What" over "How"

Before diving into the grid, it is crucial to understand Goodenough’s premise. The test does not measure artistic talent. A child who draws a beautiful, expressive portrait does not necessarily score higher than a child who draws a stiff, geometric figure. The grid ignores aesthetics (shading, grace, action poses) and focuses solely on logical accuracy and the presence of specific body parts and details.

Test du bonhomme de Goodenough | PDF | Dessin | Coiffure - Scribd

  1. Materials: A4 white paper (vertical orientation), No. 2 pencil with eraser (no pens or markers, as erasures matter).
  2. Instructions (Verbatim): "I want you to make the best picture of a person you can. Take your time and work carefully. Draw the very best person you can. When you are finished, I will ask you some questions."
  3. No help: Do not say "Don't forget the ears."
  4. Observation: Note the sequence (did they start with legs?) and erasures (excessive erasing may indicate perfectionism or motor difficulty).

Test du Dessin du Bonhomme de Florence Goodenough est un outil classique utilisé pour évaluer le développement intellectuel de l'enfant

Originally published in 1926 by psychologist Florence Goodenough, the Draw-a-Man Test (later revised to the Draw-a-Person test) was one of the first non-verbal intelligence tests. It moved away from language and culture-heavy questions, instead focusing on what a child knows about the human body.

Today, the most common clinical successor is the Draw-A-Person: Intellectual Ability (DAP:IQ) by Naglieri (1988). While the scoring grid has been modernized, the foundational logic—presence, proportion, and detail—remains identical to Goodenough’s original grille.

The Core Philosophy: "What" over "How"

Before diving into the grid, it is crucial to understand Goodenough’s premise. The test does not measure artistic talent. A child who draws a beautiful, expressive portrait does not necessarily score higher than a child who draws a stiff, geometric figure. The grid ignores aesthetics (shading, grace, action poses) and focuses solely on logical accuracy and the presence of specific body parts and details.

Test du bonhomme de Goodenough | PDF | Dessin | Coiffure - Scribd

  1. Materials: A4 white paper (vertical orientation), No. 2 pencil with eraser (no pens or markers, as erasures matter).
  2. Instructions (Verbatim): "I want you to make the best picture of a person you can. Take your time and work carefully. Draw the very best person you can. When you are finished, I will ask you some questions."
  3. No help: Do not say "Don't forget the ears."
  4. Observation: Note the sequence (did they start with legs?) and erasures (excessive erasing may indicate perfectionism or motor difficulty).