by The_Toecutter » Fri 13 Oct 2006, 16:08:00
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ctually, no. There seem to be quite a lot of people with University education in the site. There was another poll with that question recently. My understanding is that people that have gone to University have a higher average IQ, somewhere around 130. (Like I said, IQ correlates with academic ability more than anything else.) That would match roughly what we got here.
Education is a factor outside of the basic Gaussian distribution I was referring to. I fully understand that most here have some form of college education.
Although 130 for the university educated? Seems to be on the high side by at least whole standard deviation(at least in the U.S.), as 1/4 of American adults have a Bachelor's degree or higher. 110 or so would be more accurate for someone with a college education, perhaps higher for those in more difficult fields of study(engineering, medicine, science, ect.). For other countries where a college education is not as widespread, 130 may be accurate.
I remember a chart for a math problem in my Probability and Statistics textbook that listed the typical IQ distributions of various professions in the U.S. I was quite surprised that the graph depicted many professional fields as having typical IQ distributions in the 90-110 range! Sadly, I don't remember the specific source cited so that I may elaborate futher. I remember the engineers and nurses/other medical practitioners were around the 115-125 region having the highest scores on that chart. I don't remember if the ranges it used were for 75% of the population having degrees in those areas of study, or 90%... Many typical areas of study like english, business, finance, or communications were listed as being in the average range, in the upper 90s to low 100s.
If you've got an IQ above 85 or so, chances are, you have at least a high school diploma(only like 15% of American adults do not have one). Given that 60% of American adults have attempted college, then having 'some college' seems about average.
Mind you, I am only attempting to correlate education and intelligence. There exist intelligent people that don't even finish high school and dull people that miraculously manage to go on to a Masters degree or higher.
It would not surprise me if at least a third of respondents on this poll listed scores they retrieved off of some internet-based IQ test. Those tend to inflate your score by a standard deviation or two(or more). I've taken some of those at the urging of a few friends, and there is absolutely no way I have an IQ approaching 200. That notion alone is absurd. Their accuracy is definately suspect.
Tests I've had in real life, I have scored on both extremes depending on age and test taken(eg. one test in early childhood from which I was thought to be severely mentally impaired, and another at the other extreme as a teenager), but I've never approached anywhere near 200.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson