Anonymous wrote:Anyone going to fess up to having an iq ~100?
Anonymous wrote:I specifically recall being pulled out for GT testing in third grade to take some quick test on shapes that was over my head. I recall my mom saying the cutoff was 120 and I got 110. Wasn't a big deal, the other smart girl in the class didn't make it either. 30 years later I'm assuming it was some sort of IQ test and that was my result but who knows. This came up again when I had my son take a WISC for AAP. He scored much higher than me fwiw. My mom has no recollection of me being tested or my score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These tests have got to be BS. if 100 is average, where are all the people who get below 100?
It's a bell curve -- most people are clustered around 100, very few at either end. 70% of people are between 85 and 120. Below 70 (two standard deviations below the mean) is considered cognitively impaired (less than 2% of people), while 130 and up are considered cognitively gifted (also less than 2% of people).
Anonymous wrote:I know, roughly. Psychologist family member tested me and my two siblings. Like a PP, my parents didn't want us to compare so I know the three of us all fall in the 130 to 140 range but not my exact IQ.
Anonymous wrote:These tests have got to be BS. if 100 is average, where are all the people who get below 100?
Anonymous wrote:These tests have got to be BS. if 100 is average, where are all the people who get below 100?
Anonymous wrote:133. tested into GATE(?) in elementary school in the 70's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These tests have got to be BS. if 100 is average, where are all the people who get below 100?
There's some confirmation bias. Those of us who scored well don't mind answering the question. But also, let's not forget the demographics of the DC are and DCUM. We are more highly educated than the average, and the IQ test definitely shows privilege bias.
Is IQ something you were born with? Or is it increased with education?
I’ve often wondered that. My mother has minimal education due to her circumstances growing up, but she’s much more intelligent than any of her children. We’ve all had far more education than her.
There are many types of intelligence of course. I’m not sure how useful these scores are. I would guess they are far too simplistic.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe this happened, but I know I’m remembering right that in a socialscience class I took in middle school in the late 1970s the teacher actually read out loud the IQs of the people in the class. I don’t know why that happened or how it was allowed.
That’s the only way I know what mine is, 125. The lowest one was 90 and I felt bad that everyone then knew it.