19 votes, 41 comments. true. You’re utterly right, your IQ Score can fluctuate quite heavily during your pubescent years, meaning that your IQ-score and wisdom will most likely (not for all) grow parallel-like to your age, I’ve taken a couple of IQ-tests, and I’m 14, I’ve always scored between 128 and 149, the SACFT is the one that gave me the most remarkable score (149), which puts me
Average IQ is shifting all the time (usually going up, which may seem surprising; the book "Everything Bad is Good for You" addresses this) and the test, well, isn't. So things get wonky. 135 is canon, though. IIRC. This is a kinda old comment, but IQ tests do "go up" along with the average IQ, since they're graded on a curve. I'm not sure what A fish has a head 9" long. The tail is equal to the size of the head plus one-half the size of the body. The body is the size of the head plus the tail. How long is the fish? T = 9 + B/2, and B = 9 + T, then B = B/2 + 18. That leaves B = 36, T = 27. I think my math is correct, yet the test only gives multiple choice answers of: 27, 54, 63, 72 Despite feeling as intelligent as a rock, I managed to achieve a high score on the online Mensa test. This has led me to doubt the test's accuracy, implying that many individuals might be under the impression that they are highly intelligent, when in fact, the test may not be entirely reliable. qIMxbaD.