Samuel Calmin Kohs (June 2, 1890 – January 23, 1984) was an American psychologist who spent his career in clinical and educational psychology. He was awarded a B.A. degree at City College of New York, an M.A. at Clark University. He developed, for his doctoral dissertation in 1919[2] at Stanford University, a set of small variously colored blocks (known as the Kohs blocks) that are used to form test patterns in psycho-diagnostic examination.[3]
Kohs was an active member of the Jewish community in the U.S. He served as field secretary of the Western States division of the National Jewish Welfare Board from 1941 to 1956, as executive director of the Oakland Jewish Welfare Federation in California and of the Brooklyn Federation of Jewish Charities, and as Chairman of the Department of Social Technology at the Graduate School of Jewish Social Work in Manhattan. He died at age 93 in San Francisco, and was survived by his son Ellis.[1]
Selected works
Kohs, Samuel C. (1914). "The Binet-Simon measuring scale for intelligence: An annotated bibliography. Part I". Journal of Educational Psychology. 5 (4): 215–224. doi:10.1037/h0070457.
Kohs, S. C. (1915). "The Practicability of the Binet Scale and the Question of the Borderline Case". Psychopathic Bull. No. 2, Chicago House of Correction: 23. JSTOR43894651.
Lidz, Theodore (1942). "Intelligence in Cerebral Deficit States and Schizophrenia Measured by Kohs Block Test". Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry. 48 (4): 568. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1942.02290100068007.