Anonymous wrote:Bill Clinton score around 1040 and George W 1200. Obama had an ACT of around 30.
Anonymous wrote:Bill Clinton score around 1040 and George W 1200. Obama had an ACT of around 30.
Anonymous wrote:Plenty of high scorers go on to live “mundane” professional lives and plenty of more modest scorers go on to live exemplary professional lives. Please stop starting threads like this. A 99th percentile SAT is not a guarantee of professional success.
Signed parent of DC who scored in the 99th percentile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious, and don't mean to be snarky, but are those folks with perfect 1600 just have that analytical brain and subsequent thought process to ace the SAT?
Therefore, how are you socially ? Awkward? Social anxiety? Introverted? Work best when you're alone ?
No?
Not sure why being smart and quick thinking on your feet would cause social anxiety or introversion?
EQ is a range but your assumptions are odd
PP was just noting that most of us went to school with some nerdy kids, and those are the ones that we expected to do well on the SATs (and they usually did). It's a stereotype, but they are nerds for being socially awkward, etc. We have all seen it. That is why we are always so impressed with an athlete or charismatic kids that gets a near perfect score. They are an anomaly.
AnonymousI am pretty normal in most respects, but extremely efficient, so I am a high performer at work while working much less hard than others/having plenty of time for life tasks. [/quote wrote:
This basically describes me. 1600 in the late 90s. I'm a fed because I value work/life balance and the stability of the job (eep).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a 1600 in 2003. I got a degree in computer science from a state school and teach middle school math.
Sibling had a 1580 in 2004. Got a degree in economics from a different state school and teaches high school social studies.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People think about the SAT too much. After you get accepted to a college....the end.
My junior has been asked SAT (math and erbw asked separately) on well-paid, selective summer intern applications this year and last year, as well as unweighted HS GPA and of course has to send a transcript from college.
This. Once you're smart enough, IQ ceases to be the constraining variable and what matters are your EQ, your executive function skills, and your motor.Anonymous wrote:Such an odd question.
Some 1600 kids go on to create the most valuable companies in the world...i.e., Mark Zuckerberg who scored a 1600.
Others live an average existence.
There was a study done several years back trying to determine what is the minimal level of intelligence to achieve essentially anything in life...they basically said a 1200+ SAT is the dividing line.
That anyone that scores this SAT score has the ability to become a Nobel Prize winner, billionaire, etc...it all comes down to interests and hard work at that point.
Supposedly the average IQ of successful entrepreneurs across all industries is 120 to 125...which translates into an SAT score of 1160 - 1230.