I don't know how much help we're supposed to give for these questions here, but here's the general method I would employ if I were solving this:
Get out a piece of paper and draw the situation, labeling distances, times, velocities, and accelerations. If you don't do this, you may find that you don't use consistent labels throughout the problem and everything will get messed up.
Next, draw a table with 3 columns. In the first column, write all values that you know (essentially constants in the scope of this problem). For you, these would be the 1 second of fall (whatever you decided to label that time period), and g=9.8m/s^2 (standard gravity, it gets written in this column for nearly every question). In the second column, you write what you need to find out: h in this instance.
For the last column, write every equation that you know that could potentially link these values (the 'what you know' and 'what you want to find'). Basically, these four here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinematics#Equations_of_uniformly_accelerated_motion
Then, start figuring out which equation you'd like to use and plug in the variables you created. Put enough of it together and most variables should drop out.
Here, you would know h if you knew h/4. You know that the person traveled a distance of h/4 in time=1 second at acceleration=g=9/8m/s^2 at an initial velocity of some variable. You could put all this into an equation and solve for h, but you still have another variable. Use more equations and everything and it will work itself out.