Online IQ tests

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Has any of you done one of these online IQ tests and if so what score did you get????

I've done an IQ test some years ago (not online) and got a score of 129, then this year I done one online as I was bored and it gave me a score of 138.

I'm no Sheldon,(Big Bang) but it's not bad. ;)
 
Done a few when bored. Highest I've reached was over 180 but I take that with a large pinch of salt.

Online tests are nothing more than a way to waste time.
 
I'm pretty sure that most of the online tests aren't official IQ tests. I always get high scores on them, but tbh they are as bad as those "can you spell words?!" quizzes on fb.
 
Done a few when bored. Highest I've reached was over 180 but I take that with a large pinch of salt.

Online tests are nothing more than a way to waste time.

:) Okay I see what you are saying, as I have also said I had one done some years ago as part of a selection process and I was given a score of 129. Have you ever had one done by other means. ;) If so what did you score?
 
:) Okay I see what you are saying, as I have also said I had one done some years ago as part of a selection process and I was given a score of 129. Have you ever had one done by other means. ;) If so what did you score?

I applied for Mensa many year ago and got 146 but I don't think for one moment it's a true representation of my intelligence. I'm very hands on practically but hate exams and most academic stuff... I'm just good at puzzles :D
 
I tested at Mensa at 152 (Cattell III iirc) but most online tests I get 160, so yes, they do seem a bit high/easier. Online tests obviously aren't conducted in the same environment as IQ society tests either.
 
There used to be a 'FREE ONLINE IQ Test!!!!!!' that was actually quite brilliant in that it was a never ending loop, it worked out how smart you really were by how fast you figured out it was never going to end. :cool:

It's a shame it's no longer available, I'm sure quite a few of the supposed intelligentsia here at OcUK would never be seen again if they went on it. :D;)
 
I applied for Mensa many year ago and got 146 but I don't think for one moment it's a true representation of my intelligence. I'm very hands on practically but hate exams and most academic stuff... I'm just good at puzzles :D

:(I guess that I am an Neanderthal then, as I am no book-worm and I never went to uni. ;) That's why I end-up mucking out stables each day. :(:(:(
 
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IQ tests show a person's current capacity for abstract reasoning. This is influenced by various things such as the person's diet, (lack of) education etc. which means it can significantly change over a period of time.

Online IQ tests measure a person's ability to answer typical questions found in IQ tests..
 
They're all pretty much nonsense, even the mensa home test is just a ploy to get you to pay for a "real" test. Although it's at least more credible than most other websites in terms of the quality of the questions.
 
:(I guess that I am an Neanderthal then, as I am no book-worm and I never went to uni. ;) That's why I end-up mucking out stables each day. :(:(:(

Mate I didn't go to uni either and hate reading in general (unless it's technical stuff).. My spelling is atrocious <-- thanks google spell checker and I have a fear of written tests. I do like practical/technical stuff which is why I'm IT consultant (with absolutely no related qualifications).
 
IQ tests show a person's current capacity for abstract reasoning. This is influenced by various things such as the person's diet, (lack of) education etc. which means it can significantly change over a period of time.

Online IQ tests measure a person's ability to answer typical questions found in IQ tests..

No, they don't, they measure a persons current capacity for IQ test taking.

It's amazing that if you take 5 tests in a short space of time, be that 5 mins or 5 days between them... you'd score higher.

An IQ test as a one off ONE time only event may test a certain amount of reasoning in individuals but as soon as you start taking more than one test it's a learned thing and your scores will(on average) improve.

When you have a word wheel, depending on the letters it could be a word you see constantly or a word you rarely see, the actual result of an individual test is pretty inaccurate in and of itself, you might get 5 version of a single question in 5 tests and you can answer 4 right but 1 wrong.

Ultimately IQ tests are meaningless because the only way to give a non learned result is a one off test, but the luck of the particular questions you get can't be quantified by a singular test.

Most people who score well take dozens of tests. Same way you can have one kid who has a massive and deep understanding of lets say mathematics while another kid has 10% of the knowledge but it's directed purely at one test and he's practised the test multiple times to get basically get a fairly accurate read on the type of questions being asked. A person with very little knowledge can recognise a similar question and change around some numbers without even understanding it well while another person who has vastly more knowledge can do poorly in a test due to time constraints, not being familiar with the format of the questions.

In all, IQ testing is worthless.
 
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