The document discusses issues with cultural bias in IQ tests. It begins by using an analogy of giving different animals the same test of climbing a tree, which would clearly favor some over others. It then provides background on the origins of IQ tests in 1904 when Alfred Binet created the first intelligence test to help identify students struggling in France. The test was later expanded by Lewis Terman into the Stanford-Binet intelligence test used in the US. However, the document notes that IQ tests may be culturally biased as they often reflect the cultural experiences of their creators rather than being a fair assessment of intelligence across different cultures.