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![]() OzOne wrote in message On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 05:08:00 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: OzOne wrote in message On 10 Nov 2004 11:05:26 -0600, Dave scribbled thusly: To take an anecdotal example, my daughter attended an elementary school where the minimum criterion for admission was a very high IQ score, regardless of the parents' wealth. She then attended a private prep school where the parents' money was at least a significant admission factor for many students and the average IQ was much lower. The two groups were just about on a par in their college records of both admissions and performance. Yep, one group had brains, the other a work ethic passed from their successful parents. So how does this support your contention that SAT/ACT scores correlate with IQ????? Two groups with disparate IQ averages, and both scored roughly the same on the tests. Did the significance of this escape you? Max Has it escaped you that you don't need a high IQ to do well at school? It's all about application. I don't believe this. No, it has not escaped my notice, but that's not what this discussion is about. We're discussing the relationship between IQ and SAT/ACT scores, not extraneous factors that can mean success in school or on the tests. Jeez, let's start from the beginning: The website you provided has contended a direct correlation between IQ and SAT/ACT scores. But the anecdote related by Dave would indicate that IQ may have little or nothing to do with success on the exams. Two groups, one with a higher average IQ, the other with a lower average IQ, both scoring equally well on the entrance exams. That could conceivably be used as an example of why the Kerry states really might not have higher IQs, rather other extraneous factors leading to high SAT/ACT scores. Thus my contention is correct: the website purporting to show the relative IQs of the various states is bogus, if using college entrance exam scores as the basis of those state IQ ratings. (whew) Got it? Max |