I hear a lot of people mention their IQ (particularly here and particularly when they are high!). I have no idea what my IQ is, and more to the point, I have no idea if it was ever tested.
Are IQ tests regularly given at some point in the course of normal education, and I just don’t remember it?
Standard IQ tests like the Stanford-Binet and The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children and Adults are individually administered generally by a psychologist, require several hours and cost hundreds of dollars a piece. So no, they have never been administered to most students. In schools, they are generally used to identify students suspected of having special needs on both the high and low side. The are sometimes used as a qualifier for Gifted and Talented programs as well as Special Ed curriculum for people with disabilities.
I have taken them and administered them a number of times because I took a lot of psychometrics courses in undergraduate and graduate school but that is somewhat unusual. Most people have never taken a true IQ test or really even understand what one is. They are usually referring to a conversion chart from some other test or just an online version that they took during lunch for kicks one day.
When i was in high school the entire school took the Lorge-Thorndike IQ test. This was a standardized test taken in a group setting (fill in the circle with a #2 pencil), so likely rife with cultural bias and other flaws. I went to a private high school, so I don’t know if it was common across all schools.
ETA: neither of my kids took a standardized IQ test in school, but they both had ones administered by Psychologists - one for special needs purposes (needed a measured IQ below a threshold to qualify for state services) and one for qualifying for the gifted program. If you average their results it comes out right around 100…
Most of the people bragging about their IQ got it from inaccurate online tests that skew high.
It is often tested in children but not always reported to them as a number. I’m sure I was given one (probably truncated) at some point but have no clue what number is associated except that I don’t have to worry.
If asked, I would say my IQ is high enough to realize that IQ is a BS measure (offline even).
They use to do IQ tests in schools. I believe this is a thing of the past. But in the early 70s they still were in public schools. Oh and I fully agree IQ tests show mostly that people excel at taking tests.
Given that the purpose of Mr. Binet’s test was to identify those who would excel at school (which often is measured by test-taking), that’s pretty much what one would expect.
But the Stanford-Binet test isn’t given like a “test” in the normal sense of the word. It’s the result of a one-on-one interaction with the person who administrates it. I have only one vague recollection from when I was tested for IQ (for purposes of determining if I qualified for what is now called a Gifted and Talented program): I recall having to determine how many diamonds would be cut into a sheet of paper when folded a certain number of times before a triangle was cut along the common fold line. The question was how quickly the subject picks up on the fact the number doubles with each fold. As I recall, I missed 4, but got 8. Nothing else from that testing sticks in my brain.
The whole concept of course, is dependent upon everyone agreeing upon what the desired outcome of learning should be…:dubious:
There are no IQ tests online. There are plenty of things online that claim to be IQ tests. On the most commonly-used one, last I checked, answering every question completely randomly still gives you a 104.
I had an IQ test as a middle-schooler (between 6th and 7th grade) as part of a large battery of psychological tests, and all I or my mom remember about the results is that my score was an unspecified “high”. One question that I remember was “What do the numbers 121 and 169 have in common?” (I answered that they were both the squares of prime numbers). Another question was “Draw a picture of your mother”, but I don’t know if that was part of the IQ test or some other test (you can test IQ with that question; the key is in how much detail the test-taker puts in).
Do IQ tests actually mean anything? Absolutely. There are many different kinds of IQ tests, using many different methods, which give results that are highly correlated with each other. That suggests that there really is some inherent quality, beyond just being “good at taking tests”, and that all of these different kinds of tests are measuring that quality. But is that quality that’s measured anything that’s worth worrying about? That’s harder to say, and depends on what you’re worrying about.
Online tests score you instantly. Real IQ tests (I have a WAIS IV sitting in my lap to check!) have an extensive interpretative book, as there are several subscales that don’t really have right answers. Even the most accurate test online is still covering a less holistic definition of IQ.
I took at least one IQ test (at least that’s what they called it) when I was in grammar school in the 1950s-1960s. They never told us our scores, though.
I’ve taken three IQ tests. I took the WISC when I was 13. I took two others as part of a general battery of psych tests. One when I was 18, another when I was 33.
My scores were in the high superior range, except for the math/visual part which was hampered by my learning disabilities.
It’s frustrating to be smart and stupid at the same time!
I think – could be wrong – that for an IQ test to be legitimate, it needs to be administered one-on-one by a psychologist licensed in the field of psychometrics. I would be very surprised if you could take one online that the experts would call legit.