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Home » Categories » Education » Study Aids » Do You Need to Have a High IQ to Be Successful? » Printer Friendly

Do You Need to Have a High IQ to Be Successful?

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Submitted Wednesday, July 27, 2005
Royane Real (1,335)
Royane Real
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You have probably heard the term “IQ" many times, and you probably know it has something to do with measuring intelligence.

The letters “IQ" stand for “intelligence quotient", and an IQ test is widely used as a way to measure intelligence.

IQ tests are often used by educational institutions to segregate students into categories such as “normal", “gifted", and “challenged". Children and young people are scored relative to each other on a variety of factors, including verbal and logical understanding, vocabulary, arithmetic and spatial orientation.

The test most frequently used today to measure intelligence is called the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test. The earliest version of it was developed in France in 1905.

The original test has been revised several times over the years, with a major revision completed at Stanford University in 1960. The Stanford-Binet test is not the only intelligence test, but it is probably the best known.

A person with an IQ score of 100 is deemed to be of average intelligence, while a person with an IQ above 130 is deemed to be intellectually gifted.

Do you know your own IQ? Do you know what it means?

Although the IQ test is very widely used, and the results are almost synonymous with our idea of intelligence, there has also been a lot of criticism of the test, and of the way the results are used.

Does having a high IQ score guarantee success in later life? No, it doesn’t! It doesn’t even guarantee success in school.

A Canadian television program recently tracked down some of the people with the highest IQ scores in North America. One man who has an extremely high genius IQ works as a motorcycle mechanic, hangs out with biker gangs, and is frequently in and out of jail.

Another man interviewed on the program has the highest IQ recorded in North America. He has worked as a bouncer in a bar for ten years, earns minimum wage, and lives in a tiny garage. Clearly, a high IQ is not enough to guarantee success in life.

What IQ tests measure is a certain type of potential. That potential still needs to be developed and nurtured by the person who has it. That person may not have the inclination or desire to do so. Not everyone who has a potential talent also possesses the desire to do something with it.

One person may have a wonderful God-given singing voice, but may have no interest in music, and no desire to perform. Another person may have the perfect physique to be a high jumper, but may hate sports. You can probably think of other examples. Having potential is just a beginning.

The IQ tests we have now may predict which people have a certain type of intellectual potential, but they don’t necessarily predict who will become a good teacher, a good manager, a good president, or a good parent. Some critics say that the only thing IQ tests can really predict is who will do well on IQ tests.

Qualities such as determination and vision can be more important to your ultimate success in life than the IQ number you started out with. Being creative, optimistic, and flexible are important hallmarks of many successful people. Common sense, the ability to get along with other people, and knowing a good idea when you see one, may be more useful qualities than having a genius IQ.

Don't let your IQ score keep you from having the success you want.

This article is taken from the downloadable book by Royane Real titled "How You Can Be Smarter - Use Your Brain to Learn Faster, Remember Better and Be More Creative" Sign up for the free newsletter at http://www.royanereal.com





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Comments on this article:


» left by Peter D Rodgers from Australia (3 years 138 days ago.)
To a normal IQ100 person, a person with IQ170 is as strange as a person with IQ30. The normal person cannot identify with either of the IQ30 or IQ170 person. They consider the IQ30 person harmless, and the IQ170 person as a danger. Geniuses need love
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» left by Peter D Rodgers from Queensland, Australia (2 years 185 days ago.)
I am Peter D Rodgers, of Australia, in July 2006. My physics papers have been improved.
See my paper Unified Physics Beyond Einstein's Relativity. Then see my paper
New Blackhole. These are on the internet.

Please do not pretend I am stupid. I am a genius. Two weeks ago, a government psychologist found that, now I am 52 years old, my iq is too high to be assessed by the WAIS III Intelligence Test with an upper limit of iq 155.
Yours truly, Peter D Rodgers

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Article added to SearchWarp.com on Wednesday, July 27, 2005
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