Not PP. Second sigma refers to two standard deviations, which is way above average. |
Geek here. Assuming that IQ of kids follow a Normal Distribution (bell-shaped and well behaved). Then 2 sigma away from mean, or 2 standard deviation above mean would mean that the kid is at top 2.5 percentile of the IQ distribution. |
You would be wrong. It was 2 years ago. It was low though. I know it was single digit. But I saw all his GBRS from K-2 and can't recall which one was from 2nd grade. |
So then why does AAP reject kids with 130+? I know no one here is on the selection committee. It's rhetorical and the essence of OP's question, I think. No? |
| CoGAT can also be used to qualify for Mensa. |
| Mensa tells you more about a person self esteem then it does a person's "genius". Its a useless organization that gives you zero benefits except for the ability to brag at a cocktail party. To get into Mensa there are SEVERAL test you can take |
And yet according to others it is way too bloated. Can't please anyone. |
Totally agree. I had a college friend once that bragged about being in MENSA. In the past few years I looked up the requirements and realized it is nothing special. |
| Mensa has its benefits. We use it for discounts on prep courses for our kids. |
Historically, the cut off was at 10% of the local FCPS students taking the exam, which equated to between 130-134 on the CogAt -depending on the year. Fairfax County has more than its share of smart kids- so many do not need a special program as there are already plenty of peers in the base school. |
Oh the irony. |
you're a fool if you don't think smart people use prep courses. Familiarity and comfort level on a test can mean the difference between 5 or 8 points. |
| We find Mensa to be beneficial but other than this thread we don't talk about belonging. |
Then call me a fool. NP here. But have to say that none of my kids have every prepped for a standardized test and they've all done great. |
Would you like a cookie? No one said kids couldn't do great without prep. But prep could be the difference between 2380 on the SAT and 2260. |