Marty, you are right. IQ tests are limited generally to only two scales: (1) verbal ability and (2) abstract reasoning & math. They do not check for musical ability, artistic ability, athletic ability, social ability, or leadership. IQ tests are limited and biased along language and cultural lines.MartyNeilan wrote:Sorry, but to me a score in the 95th percentile (1 out of 20) is not very "exclusive." MENSA membership does little to impress me. Seems to me, to win a big orchestral job these days, you have to be 99.5 percentile (1 out of 200) or higher.Unlike most tests, the qualifying score for the GMAT is based on the percentile of the total score. There are three columns on the score report, each with a numerical score and a percentile. You're looking for the percentile next to the score in the "total" column — if it's 95 percent or greater, the score qualifies you for Mensa.
The two times I took an IQ test I scored a 148 and a 144. In the real world, that means absolutely JACK.
95th percentile on the GMAT (standardized with grad school hopefuls) correlates with 98th percentile in the general population. Mensa accepts the top 2% of the general population.
Check out Intertel, accepting only the top 1%. http://www.intertel-iq.org/" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank
Intertel's site lists other high-IQ societies.
http://www.intertel-iq.org/links.php" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank