When Stanley was a young math and science teacher he became fascinated with intellectual talent while taking a "tests and measurements" course at the
University of Georgia. However, it was in 1969 that Stanley's interest with intellectually gifted youth was reignited when he was introduced to Joseph Bates, a 13-year-old boy from
Baltimore, Maryland. Joseph was outperforming all of his classmates in
mathematics. Stanley decided to test him using the SAT and found that it was a much more effective and reliable way to test for both advanced math and verbal skills and reasoned that such a method could be used to identify more of these high-ability students, especially if a systematic approach was taken. It began as a project designed to model the longitudinal study by
Lewis M. Terman in the "Genetic Studies of Genius" series. The project primarily included holding talent searches with the intent of identifying gifted youth, particularly in the area of mathematics; one such student was a future
Fields medalist from Australia named
Terence Tao. Stanley said that Tao had the greatest mathematical reasoning ability he had found in years of intensive searching. The study then proceeded to examine both short- and long-term results of the students identified through this method. Stanley was also invested in helping them to further their education by devising and offering many different acceleration programs and classes. The very first talent search was held in March 1972; 450 Baltimore grade 7 and 8 students took the SAT-M (School Aptitude Test-Math), which had previously only been taken by students in grades 11 and 12. This out-of-level testing method proved to be so successful in identifying intellectual talent and furthering the education of youths in ways that were deemed not to detract from social and emotional development, that the program continued with great achievement. Eventually, verbal capabilities were added to the searches (SAT-V), and the program expanded to other universities (Duke, Northwestern, Iowa, and Denver). The program was also deemed to have predictive validity, reasons for which this type of testing has now become a standardized method of identifying early intellectually precocious youth, both within the United States and internationally. To date, the program has identified and provided acceleration for millions of gifted youth. At Johns Hopkins University, the program is now called the
Julian C. Stanley Study of Exceptional Talent (SET). The
Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY) continues at Vanderbilt University today, with former colleagues of Stanley working to complete a fifty-year
longitudinal study of gifted individuals. Currently, there are 5,000 previous students involved who are now nearing mid-life. an editorial written by
Linda Gottfredson and published in the
Wall Street Journal, which declared the consensus of the signing scholars on intelligence research. == Other achievements ==