I can’t find anything right now on what effect parents’ class (what does that mean? SES?) has on educational attainment for people of the same IQs. Someone else may want to look it up if they’re better at googling than me.
But it doesn’t matter. We already know that wordsum, IQ, and educational attainment are measuring similar things. Wordsum seems like a good proxy for IQ. It gives sensible answers in all the graphs, and it is said to correlate .71 with adult IQ.
Do you have a point, or some sort of theory about what I was saying? Do you disagree with the idea that Republicans are smarter (except at the top end) than Democrats, or that “liberals” are smarter than “conservatives”?
Do you disagree with the idea that Republicans are smarter (except at the top end) than Democrats, or that “liberals” are smarter than “conservatives”?
I don’t.
My point was that using a test that heavily relies on ‘learned’ knowledge such as Wordsum may have exaggerated the effect (compared to what one would see if one used a more culture-neutral test such as Raven’s progressive matrices) when some of the groups have historically been educated more than others for additional reasons besides IQ (even if said reasons correlate with IQ, so long as the correlation isn’t close to 1).
I can’t find anything right now on what effect parents’ class (what does that mean? SES?) has on educational attainment for people of the same IQs. Someone else may want to look it up if they’re better at googling than me.
But it doesn’t matter. We already know that wordsum, IQ, and educational attainment are measuring similar things. Wordsum seems like a good proxy for IQ. It gives sensible answers in all the graphs, and it is said to correlate .71 with adult IQ.
Do you have a point, or some sort of theory about what I was saying? Do you disagree with the idea that Republicans are smarter (except at the top end) than Democrats, or that “liberals” are smarter than “conservatives”?
I don’t.
My point was that using a test that heavily relies on ‘learned’ knowledge such as Wordsum may have exaggerated the effect (compared to what one would see if one used a more culture-neutral test such as Raven’s progressive matrices) when some of the groups have historically been educated more than others for additional reasons besides IQ (even if said reasons correlate with IQ, so long as the correlation isn’t close to 1).