- 4,996
- 2,519
The last thing I would want to do is discourage people from studying something they find interesting because or their results on an arbitrary test.
Choppy said:The last thing I would want to do is discourage people from studying something they find interesting because or their results on an arbitrary test.
Frion said:IQ matters.
Geezer said:I wish I could remember which book it was I read this tidbit in...
When researchers look at those most successful in academia, what they find is that, to be capable of success, you only have to be smart enough. Once you're sufficiently smart (say, about 120 IQ), no additional IQ points will improve your chances of success. Once that minimum IQ level has been attained, what makes one more successful is work ethic, persistence, creativity, etc. A physicist with an IQ of 180 isn't necessarily going to be any better a researcher than his colleague down the hall with an IQ of 130.
I believe you're assuming there is an even distribution of IQs at prestigious schools. My guess would be that it is the opposite, with a very strong bias towards higher IQs.TMFKAN64 said:According to http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d09/tables/dt09_106.asp, there are roughly 2.8M graduates in a year. Let's say 3M to keep the numbers nice. If 2% of them have IQs above 140, we are talking about 60,000 people. If we take a look at http://collegeapps.about.com/od/choosingacollege/tp/ivy-league-schools.htm, we find that the ivy league schools have a total undergraduate enrollment of about 66K, of which roughly one quarter would be freshmen, or about 17,000. This list leaves off non-ivy league schools such as Stanford, Cal Tech, MIT, etc, so let's say that there are roughly 25,000 openings in the most prestigious schools.
Therefore, we conclude that most geniuses do *not* go to prestigious schools.
No he did not, he did a very generous estimate that 100% of the people at the prestigious schools had over 140 IQ and he also assumed that college students aren't smarter than average people.TylerH said:I believe you're assuming there is an even distribution of IQs at prestigious schools. My guess would be that it is the opposite, with a very strong bias towards higher IQs.
Klockan3 said:No he did not, he did a very generous estimate that 100% of the people at the prestigious schools had over 140 IQ and he also assumed that college students aren't smarter than average people.
Oh! I see, now. I misread.Klockan3 said:No he did not, he did a very generous estimate that 100% of the people at the prestigious schools had over 140 IQ and he also assumed that college students aren't smarter than average people.
That may be true, but the point of what most people are saying here is that it's not impossible for someone with an IQ of 100 to get in. Even the usefulness of IQ is questioned by some. By the theory of multiple intelligences(which I believe), it's possible you are a complete idiot in some fields, but a genius in others. Go with a field you're a genius in.FishmanGeertz said:Top-tier colleges like Yale, MIT, Stanford, and Harvard, require SAT scores of over 2200 and GPA's of almost 4.0
I would imagine most of the pupils there have staggeringly high intellects.
Geezer said:I wish I could remember which book it was I read this tidbit in...
When researchers look at those most successful in academia, what they find is that, to be capable of success, you only have to be smart enough. Once you're sufficiently smart (say, about 120 IQ), no additional IQ points will improve your chances of success. Once that minimum IQ level has been attained, what makes one more successful is work ethic, persistence, creativity, etc. A physicist with an IQ of 180 isn't necessarily going to be any better a researcher than his colleague down the hall with an IQ of 130.
FishmanGeertz said:Top-tier colleges like Yale, MIT, Stanford, and Harvard, require SAT scores of over 2200 and GPA's of almost 4.0
I would imagine most of the pupils there have staggeringly high intellects.
TylerH said:I'm a good example of this. Try to talk math with me and you can come to no other conclusion but that I'm a bumbling fool. Allow me the time to express my thoughts in writing and it's much more likely you'll see I'm not a fool, IMNSHO. This in analogous in how it shows that in communication skills, I have an "IQ" of ~80 but a math "IQ" of >100. I use the term "IQ" informally.
TylerH said:This in analogous in how it shows that in communication skills, I have an "IQ" of ~80 but a math "IQ" of >100. I use the term "IQ" informally.
This is a reason I hate the SAT. I want to go to a math school, so, if I can take (and excel in) calculus of a single, of many, and diff eq, all while in high school, why should they care I can't write a great essay about [insert stupid prompt I can't talk about here] in 20min?.
Geezer said:I got a perfect 800 on the Verbal section of the General GRE (something around 3 standard deviations above the norm). However, if you had to have a face-to-face conversation with me, I'd totally come off as a moron. I fumble for words, I mess up idiomatic expressions. I'm not succinct or articulate when I have to speak.
However, I have a great vocabulary--what the GRE actually tests--but having a strong vocabulary says nothing about how good a communicator one is.
FishmanGeertz said:Do you have to take the SAT as well as the ACT? Or one or the other depending on state requirements?
TylerH said:The GRE he's talking about is an entrance test for graduate programs. You won't need to take it until after your first 4 years in college, if you need it at all.
I don't think any [public] high schools actually require you to take either the SAT or ACT. That said, just because it isn't required to graduate, doesn't mean it's colleges will even consider you without one or both of them. I'm only taking the SAT, but some colleges want the ACT or both.
You could call it "choosing," but your hand is forced, IMO. Most colleges require the SAT to even consider you. Some prefer the ACT. It really depends on where you want to go.FishmanGeertz said:Do you get to choose? Which test is easier?
TylerH said:You could call it "choosing," but your hand is forced, IMO. Most colleges require the SAT to even consider you. Some prefer the ACT. It really depends on where you want to go.
FishmanGeertz said:Just a question, but what are the GPA/SAT requirements of schools like Harvard, Yale, MIT, and Columbia?
Geezer said:Or they were legacies, or had tutors in high school, or used medication (e.g. Adderall) to make it through busy high school schedules with large numbers of AP courses, or they cheated/plagiarized, or they simply worked their butts off.
I think too many people put too much focus on IQ or "intellect." A kid with an average or above average IQ but with a strong work ethic can accomplish a lot.
elfboy said:All else being equal a higher IQ person will accomplish more
Leptos said:I think of it like I would a step function...
The probability of achieving goals goes rises as iq increases up until around 120 where the probability of achieving goals remains the same for iq increasing to infinity.