Not old enough for the real thing. My score at Duke that was for preperation and guaging was a 1580. I took it before the 2400 scale was implimented. IQ is 178. My ratio IQ is higher. EQ is 113. IQ was professional and EQ was online.
Oddly enough, almost all the questions I answer have something to do with IQ.
2006-11-05 09:36:37
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answer #1
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answered by Professor Sheed 6
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I took the SAT and ACT once in 1985 at the end of my junior year in high school. And, I didn't prepare for it short of the practice test in the application booklet.
SAT: 1320 Math 710; Verbal 610
ACT: 29 with a low score of 22 and a high of 33
GRE: 760 Quantitative; 750 Qualitative; 650 Verbal (1999)
IQ: 134 in 8th grade
2006-11-05 09:38:05
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answer #2
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answered by Your Best Fiend 6
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*SAT: Tests are a fact of life throughout our school careers, but one of the most important, and, to some, the scariest, of them all is the SAT -- that three-hour exam that's supposed to measure a high school student's chance of academic success in the first year of college.
First of all, SAT no longer stands for Scholastic Aptitude Test, the original name of the test when it was introduced in 1941. Although you may still see that name occasionally, the College Board, the not-for-profit educational association that sponsors the SATs, decided to let the acronym stand on its own as a way of addressing controversy about the meaning of the word "aptitude."
The SAT I measures verbal and math reasoning abilities that you've developed throughout your school years. The multiple-choice test, developed by the not-for-profit Educational Testing Service, is intended to let students demonstrate their verbal and math abilities without regard to the kind of schooling they've had. According to the College Board, the test looks for a student's ability to understand and analyze written material, to draw inferences, to differentiate shades of meaning, to draw conclusions and solve math problems -- all skills that are necessary for success in college and the work world.
*IQ: IQ testing is used not primarily for children, but for adults. Today we attempt to write tests that will determine an adult's true mental potential, unbiased by culture, and compare scores to the scores of other adults who have taken the same test. So today we compare an adult's objective results to the objective results of other adults, and determine how intelligent each test taker is compared to all other test takers, instead of comparing test takers to an arbitrary age related standard.
*EQ: (Emotional intelligence):arch suggests that a person's emotional intelligence (EQ) might be a greater predictor of success than his or her intellectual intelligence (IQ), despite an assumption that people with high IQs will naturally accomplish more in life.
Emotional intelligence is a person's ability to understand their own emotions and those of others, and to act appropriately using these emotions.
2006-11-05 09:45:26
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answer #3
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answered by Philly Heat 2
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1250, I took the SAT back before there was a written part, I would probably score lower now.
2006-11-05 09:34:01
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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