I’d love to see your source for this. |
It is called a normal curve. |
Not saying the kids can't tell (possible) - but the tests can't tell. |
![]() It's ok. There are kids out there who are smarter, even substantially smarter, than your own smart kid. Smart kids need other smart kids. I am working on this with my oldest (who has never met anyone smarter - yet). It's a hard pill to swallow because, the smarter you are, the more it becomes your defining feature. And what difference is evident depends on the context. |
Well, you say it’s a normal curve, but where do you get your data? |
The data that IQ is normally distributed in a population? |
At the highest levels EQ comes into play. I grew up with a fellow who has an exceptionally high IQ. Career wise he has done everything from coding trading systems on Wall Street to loading packages at UPS. Presently unemployed and barely surviving off of money he earning in the early 2000s. His problem is a completely inability to deal with people who aren't as smart as he is. Over and over and over again he ends up laid off or fired by people who have the common sense he just doesn't understand. And, to be clear, he is endlessly resentful of the people who keep getting ahead despite not being as clever as he is. Don't get too excited of IQ in and of itself. hic sunt dracones |
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Not the test prep schools! Kumon and Kaplan would cease to exist if the put all their time and effort and marketing budget into recruiting kids who didn't actually need their services! |
and neither are you! ![]() |
Yet the top schools are filled with affluent, privileged, connected kids not those that really NEED to get into a top school to get a top job to lift their family out of poverty. So hopefully you can see how messed up the system is because it is rewarding the rich for their resources that can be spent on their children’s education. |
I’m no trying to give you a hard time nor do I disagree that a kid with a 99 percentile score probably has a high IQ. What I’m asking is have you found a study that shows that 90the percentile SAT kids have X IQs and 99.99 percentile kids have Y IQs? |
It’s far better in life to just be normal. They are usually happier than the exceptional kids who have a difficult time fitting in. |
Yes, absolutely true. But the 90th%ile presents as a larger gap in the context of college because there are many schools with a college pace designed to be doably-hard for the average student there(99th %ile) yet are not really possible for a 90th. There are no colleges designed for the average kid to be a 99.9 %ile kid. These kids do go through the hardest rigor classes at the top schools and get mostly or all As, almost always barring oddball classes, finishing above the mean easily. They are the top 10-15% there. The 90th %ile kids, the few that get in, are the bottom 5% at these schools. |
They do! This is why we strongly encouraged our 99.9th%ile but not 99.99Th to find top schools and select from those admissions: they needed the stimulation pf being around many other smart and also meeting smartER kids. They had never met anyone smarter, and only a couple were close /similar to them in the prep school. There are a few in their major who seem to be 99.99 types, and many peers who are 99.9. That has been a great experience, finally! Our 95-96%ile kid (testing since elementary confirms thats whwre they are and sure enough psat 9 was the same ) will not be encouraged to apply to ivies/T10 because they will not be a good fit! Almost everyone will be a little smarter and most will be a lot smarter. No way is that a good fit. 90th is even lower and would drown at these schools |