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Education United States

American IQ Scores Have Rapidly Dropped, Proving the 'Reverse Flynn Effect' (popularmechanics.com) 391

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Popular Mechanics: Americans' IQ scores are trending in a downward direction. In fact, they've been falling for over a decade. According to a press release, in studying intelligence testing data from 2006 to 2018, Northwestern University researchers noticed that test scores in three out of four "cognitive domains" were going down. This is the first time we've seen a consistent negative slope for these testing categories, providing tangible evidence of what is known as the "Reverse Flynn Effect."

In a 1984 study, James Flynn noticed that intelligence test scores had steadily increased since the early 1930s. We call that steady rise the Flynn Effect. Considering that overall intelligence seemed to be increasing faster than could be explained by evolution, the reason increase became a source of debate, with many attributing the change to various environmental factors. But now, it seems that a Reverse Flynn Effect is, well, in effect.

The study, published in the journal Intelligence, used an online, survey-style personality test called the Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment Project to analyze nearly 400,000 Americans. The researchers recorded responses from 2006 and 2018, in order to examine if and how cognitive ability scores were changing over time within the country. The data showed drops in logic and vocabulary (known as verbal reasoning), visual problem solving and analogies (known as matrix reasoning), and computational and mathematical abilities (known as letter and number series).
Not every domain is going down though, notes the report. "[S]cores in spatial reasoning (known as 3D rotation) followed the opposite pattern, trending upward over the 12-year period."

"If all the scores were going in the same direction, you could make a nice little narrative about it, but that's not the case," says Elizabeth Dworak, a research assistant professor at Northwestern University and one of the authors on the study. "We need to do more to dig into it." She adds: "It doesn't mean their mental ability is lower or higher; it's just a difference in scores that are favoring older or newer samples. It could just be that they're getting worse at taking tests or specifically worse at taking these kinds of tests."
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American IQ Scores Have Rapidly Dropped, Proving the 'Reverse Flynn Effect'

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  • by zendarva ( 8340223 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:11PM (#63439762)
    the constant demonization of intelligence in the US.
    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:20PM (#63439784)

      the constant demonization of intelligence in the US.

      Always has been [tumblr.com].

      • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:39PM (#63439820) Homepage

        Harvey Danger has also been saying this since at least 1997.

        Been around the world and found
        That only stupid people are breeding
        The cretins cloning and feeding
        And I don't even own a TV

        If the last couple of years hasn't made it blatantly obvious, we're clearly living in the Idiocracy timeline. Humanity created the greatest communication network the world has ever seen and what do people use it for? To complain that their beer is now too "woke".

        • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:59PM (#63439874)
          Do not worry. This is all totally normal. Idiocracy was a good prediction of our society though, not our civilization. All empires devolve into a civil war with challenges to sexual morals, family structure, gender, and creed of one kind or another. It has happened to the Greeks; the Romans, the ancient Egyptians, the Qing, the Mongols, the Assyrians; and it will happen to us.

          I personally suspect it has to do with our conflict driven root of ambition. Life gets comparatively too easy due to too much success, and we start to ear ourselves apart. Our bonds of unity are driven apart by our search for conflict. This is what we define today as outrage culture, cancel culture, race baiting, etc etc. These are just incarnations of our desire to find conflict. We dont have a scary USSR out-competing us in space or trouncing us in Vietnam. So, we are here, at the twilight of our hegemony. The part Idiocracy gets wrong is that the whole world doesnt get stupid. We just fall onto hard times and will struggle while another power accents, to repeat the same fate a few centuries later. This is all, I am sorry to say, very normal. It is how super-hegemonic powers like Rome die.
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            All empires devolve into a civil war with challenges to sexual morals, family structure, gender, and creed of one kind or another... I personally suspect it has to do with our conflict driven root of ambition. Life gets comparatively too easy due to too much success, and we start to ear ourselves apart.

            "Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times." -- G. Michael Hopf in his novel 'Those Who Remain'.

          • by garyisabusyguy ( 732330 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @09:24PM (#63439938)

            Funny thing about the dark ages [wikipedia.org] coming around after Rome adopted Christianity [nationalgeographic.com], eh?

            Mixing religion and politics has always been a bad idea, rulers need to operate on facts, not on beliefs, and we are going to destroy the last thousand odd years of progress with a few decades of religious authoritarianism taking the reigns

            • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @02:21AM (#63440376)

              Don't single out Christianity. The Middle East was the bleeding edge for technology and science throughout the times we tend to call the Dark Ages (i.e. when Europe descended into religiosity). Just google where our word algorithm comes from.

              And then we taught them religious fanaticism during the crusades...

              • by blahabl ( 7651114 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @06:39AM (#63440664)

                Don't single out Christianity. The Middle East was the bleeding edge for technology and science throughout the times we tend to call the Dark Ages (i.e. when Europe descended into religiosity). Just google where our word algorithm comes from.

                And then we taught them religious fanaticism during the crusades...

                Ummm, hello? "We taught them"? Historical fact check: before crusades even started the Muslim have taken over about 2/3 of the known world, and not by preaching convincing sermons, let me tell you. The ancient world was 3 continents: Africa, Asia, Europe. They conquered all of known Africa, all of mediterranean Asia. We were left with just Europe, in crisis, under siege, and missing parts too, like Iberian Peninsula. We had the choice of either uniting and stopping them, or letting them continue picking off European states one by one. But yeah, daring to resist being slaughtered and forcibly converted, what a show of Christian supremacism and fanaticism.

                • You don't build empires with fanaticism - you build them with sound military doctrine and advanced technology. The sort of technological advances you get when you're the global center of intellectualism who welcome all faiths among both visitors and citizens.

                  The crusades on the other hand *were* fanaticism - there was no practical, empire-building advantage for Europeans to claim Jerusalem - then as now it was a bunch of worthless desert.

                  Instead the goal was explicitly to bring about the end times, to brin

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              I can tell you and whoever upvoted you didn't read the links you provided, or bothered to do much research on the dark ages and the collapse of the Roman empire.

              Regardless, most historians in general agree that Constantine managed to salvage at least part of the classical Roman Empire to create the Eastern Roman Empire. Prior to that, Rome was already on the decline, with or without Christianity thanks in part to endless wars, political corruption, and over-extended borders. Turns out picking a fight with e

            • Mixing religion and politics has always been a bad idea

              You need to read more history. The notion that religion even could be separated from politics is less than 500 years old, and actually attempting it is an even more recent phenomenon. The United States was the first country to claim to try it, but arguably still hasn't really done it. The Soviet Union claimed to try it, but really just replaced it with a secular religion (and that incompletely).

              Moreover, for all but a tiny slice of very recent human history, religion wasn't just part of politics, it was e

          • All empires devolve into a civil war with challenges to sexual morals, family structure, gender, and creed of one kind or another. It has happened to the Greeks; the Romans, the ancient Egyptians, the Qing, the Mongols, the Assyrians; and it will happen to us.

            Maybe, but "America [will be the first] country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between".

            And that's not just my opinion, Oscar Wilde pretty much said as much a long time ago already.

        • I can't disagree that we are heading towards Idiocracy, however the main problem with the internet is not people complaining about dumb things, but it has been taken over for the purposes of selling us stuff and information as opposed to what I hoped it would be as a way of everybody sharing (useful) information.

          As for beer being too woke, never heard that, but I am sure someone has said it on the internet. I do have a problem with the paragons of virtue that are corporations /sarcasm telling me what is rig

          • ...I do have a problem with the paragons of virtue that are corporations /sarcasm telling me what is right and wrong. If you are a recreational drug manufacturer (alcohol) perhaps you are on shaky ground preaching about ethics.

            If you are a corporate person repeatedly and purposely breaking laws, ruining lives, and damaging the environment because the penalties are less than the profit, and because no real person does jail time as a result, then definitely you are on shaky ground preaching about ethics. Especially when you subvert democracy by purchasing influence and favourable legislation.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            A beer company hired a trans actor, and the hinterlands are working themselves into a frenzy [youtube.com]

            Yeah, you could have lived without that

        • by cstacy ( 534252 )

          Harvey Danger has also been saying this since at least 1997.

          Been around the world and found
          That only stupid people are breeding
          The cretins cloning and feeding
          And I don't even own a TV

          If the last couple of years hasn't made it blatantly obvious, we're clearly living in the Idiocracy timeline. Humanity created the greatest communication network the world has ever seen and what do people use it for? To complain that their beer is now too "woke".

          And take pictures of their cats, and pick online fights with strangers.

    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:29PM (#63439794)

      Were number one, were number one!

    • by Fuck_this_place ( 2652095 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:35PM (#63439804)

      ..along with the constant glorification of violence. Why be smart when you can be emotional and get results right now.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Leadership is important. Most people follow the example. Remember when Reagan was president and everyone took to wearing cowboy boots*?

      Well, ... [thebullelephant.com]

      *That was a creation of his PR team BTW. Reagan used to ride horses wearing more of a "gentleman's" riding outfit. But the PR people told him that cowboy boots, jeans and a cowboy hat would be a better sell.

    • by denzacar ( 181829 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @03:36AM (#63440452) Journal

      Cause that's what the study is - bullshit.

      The values they got are in standard deviations.
      So, mean scores between 2006 and 2018 for 18 to 60-year-olds are something like -0.023, -0.014, -0.007 and -0.019, depending on the kind of test administered, in standard deviations.
      In this case, the standard deviation used was 15 IQ points.
      They measured a decrease between 0.007 and 0.023 of THAT.

      I.e. Their results are showing a decrease of 0.105 to 0.345 IQ points, over a decade.
      Just as a reminder, average IQ is 100. Half the people have IQs ABOVE that.
      And if you believe that a decrease of 0.345 of one single part of that number, OVER A FUCKING DECADE, is in any way relevant... well I guess you're not the part of the above 100 crowd.

      For extra understanding just how much bullshit is in this study...

      Starting in 2006, 35 ability items, that would become part of the International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR; Condon and Revelle, 2014, Condon and Revelle, 2016; Dworak, Revelle, Doebler, and Condon, 2021; Revelle, Dworak, and Condon, 2020), were administered.
      These items were used to form a composite cognitive ability score or domain scores for matrix reasoning (11 items), letter and number series (8 items), and verbal reasoning (16 items).
      Starting in 2011 an additional item for letter and number series and 24 three-dimensional rotation items began to be administered, with the original items, to allow for a 60-item composite score. Unlike previous Flynn effect studies, participants were disproportionately female identifying (65.03%) and between the ages of 18 and 90.

      Five years into the study, in 2011, they changed how they measure the thing they measure by adding things they measure to the set of things they measure.
      Scores jumped in that year [els-cdn.com] across the board. And the effect actually lasted for a year or two, then it dived in 2014. By about the same amount it jumped up in 2011.
      Prior to 2011, the trend was basically flat. From 2014 on, scores are actually rising across the board, indicating that the curve is regressing back to that original, flat, mean.

    • What about the intentional degradation of the educational system by people who claim to be intelligent? The people who decided self-esteem was more important than learning, then that what was important was sending kids to college, even if they couldn't read at a 12th grade level. Now, what's important is that they learn to be racist in order to fight racism. And since math, objective facts, and the written word are all racist, well, are these findings surprising?
  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:15PM (#63439772)
    Cut the lead, cut the performance.

    This post brought to you by Lead Miners Of America Inc. proud members of MAGA and sponsors of the NRA.
  • Not really new (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:16PM (#63439776)

    It's a flaw in the test/methodology. All these sorts of tests are inherently linked to specific assumed responses, and building the test requires an assumption on the part of the test developers on how intelligence can be expressed. This has always been a flaw with IQ testing and why it really doesn't mean what they want it to mean.

          Intelligence could mean a lot of different things depending on context, and intelligence testing is a largely unsolved problem. You can probably just assume that the issue is with the way the test is configured being out-of-step with how people process information and take the test.

      The human race capabilities have not consequentially changed for thousands or tens of thousands of years. How someone responds to any particular test is heavily dependent on their experience and environment and only a little on their innate learning ability.

    • Re:Not really new (Score:4, Insightful)

      by znrt ( 2424692 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:40PM (#63439822)

      tfa already says that much: "It doesn't mean their mental ability is lower or higher; it's just a difference in scores that are favoring older or newer samples. It could just be that they're getting worse at taking tests or specifically worse at taking these kinds of tests."

      so not a flaw in the methodology but rather no need to rush to conclusions. the authors of the study didn't, why do you? it could be a lot of things. there is a consistent pattern, though, and that surely has an explanation that would be interesting to find.

      then again first you dismiss the very possibility of measuring intelligence ("these tests don't mean anything"), but at the same time attribute the errors to a flaw in the process, probably because you don't like these particular results. which prompts 2 questions:

      1. so what is it going to be?
      2. what does the fact that a post which is basically a misunderstanding of the topic spiced up with a fundamental contradiction is moderated 4-interesting tell us about slashdot's collective intelligence?

      we need to test more ...

    • Re:Not really new (Score:4, Insightful)

      by quintessencesluglord ( 652360 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:48PM (#63439850)

      Fair enough (and I tend to agree in specific instances of IQ test), but...

      How do you explain the consistent drop? If methodology is flawed, I'd expect a more broad fluctuation over time.

      Not to mention mediocrity seems the new standard-bearer. Look at political debates from the 70s compared to now, and it is glaringly obvious.

      • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:58PM (#63439872)

        How do you explain the consistent drop? If methodology is flawed, I'd expect a more broad fluctuation over time.

        Narrator: He can't.

      • Fair enough (and I tend to agree in specific instances of IQ test), but...

        How do you explain the consistent drop? If methodology is flawed, I'd expect a more broad fluctuation over time.

        If the testing methodology didn't change between 2006 and 2018, that alone might explain the drop. I know that sounds backwards, but hear me out.

        The way people absorb and process information has changed dramatically even over the last decade. I think it's fair to say that in the last 10 or 15 years we have developed a markedly different culture. And one of the perennial failings of IQ tests is that they are very culture-specific, and will give falsely low readings for subjects from other cultures.

        Maybe 10-y

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      IQ scores are the most objective and accurate measurement in all of psychology. If you take any of it seriously and don't take IQ seriously that's a clear sign of mental issues.
      • Re:Not really new (Score:4, Informative)

        by noodler ( 724788 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @07:19AM (#63440726)

        IQ scores are the most objective and accurate measurement in all of psychology. I

        Fuck that. Differences between different IQ tests can vary by staggering amounts ( http://www.iapsych.com/iapap10... [iapsych.com] ). On one test you could score 100 and on another you could score 125. For another person this may be the other way around for the same tests.

        So even if you say that they are 'the most accurate' (a relative term) that means nothing because they are not very accurate in an absolute sense.

        If you take any of it seriously and don't take IQ seriously that's a clear sign of mental issues.

        Ad Hominems are also a clear sign of mental issues.

        • by Hodr ( 219920 )

          IQ tests literally adjust the score based on your age and your sex. There's no way that's an accurate measurement of intelligence if it changes based on non-intelligence characteristics.

    • I agree with the top half of your post. The methodology of testing has clearly not adapted to big changes in how humans use their intelligence to navigate the world.

      The bottom half is a riff on the old trope “humans aren’t evolving any more”. Nothing could be further from the truth. Anything that affects human reproduction by more than a percent will cause evolution, but that kind of small effect takes a cool thousand years to manifest. But some of the events in the past several hundre
      • I didn't say we weren't evolving, I said human capability - from the context, human reasoning capability - hasn't changed consequentially. Your counter examples don't suggest any reasonable relationship to human intelligence, even the various egregious cases of genocide or ethnic cleansing are unlikely to have any effect.

    • Re:Not really new (Score:4, Interesting)

      by SmaryJerry ( 2759091 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @11:25PM (#63440196)
      The tests generally don't test memorization though. They test logic and very basic math. If you can't assume logic or basic math is at the heart of intelligence then there is no hope as that is the basis for every single other field.
  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:18PM (#63439780) Homepage Journal

    The systemic racism we're looking for is the dominant monopoly on public education dominated by a monopoly employees' union.

    But kudos to Notch for teaching kids how to do 3d modeling. I know one former player who took quickly to WorldEdit and now does CAD/CAM work like it's second nature.

    • Actually, spatial reasoning isn't something that can be taught or improved on.

      It's the most accurate measure of intelligence, and is not limited by barriers of language or prior knowledge/education.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by Xenx ( 2211586 )

        Actually, spatial reasoning isn't something that can be taught or improved on.

        Many studies almost say the opposite, that it's incredibly easy to improve.

    • One is voxel based, and the other is vector based. They use completely different paradigms.
    • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @09:00PM (#63439876)

      The systemic racism we're looking for is the dominant monopoly on public education dominated by a monopoly employees' union.

      What? Teachers make shit wages and have to put up with nonsense from parents to legislators who want felony charges if the wrong material is taught. Can't imagine why they would want a group to protect them.

      • by Shaeun ( 1867894 )
        There used to be this thing back in the day, like 15 years ago, called "Local Control"

        Our entire education system was built upon it. Teachers taught what the communities that paid them wanted them to teach. Now teachers teach what they feel is best and want everyone to just trust their judgement. But that is not really how government spending works. People want to have a say in the education of their spawn, and the worst thing that could have happened was the pandemic where they sent the children home.
      • by Jhon ( 241832 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @10:46PM (#63440138) Homepage Journal

        "What? Teachers make shit wages and have to put up with nonsense from parents to legislators who want felony charges if the wrong material is taught. Can't imagine why they would want a group to protect them."

        Cute narrative. I have one, too:

        LAUSD has about 500k students (k-12) as of 2023. It also employees over 75k staff (mix of teachers, administrators, etc).

        20 years ago the only difference was the number of students was over 750k.

        As the student population has decreased, so did their testing (which reflects the quality of education).

        We have schools which are empty (or nearly so) while we lost 1/3rd of the population. We're not reducing our costs in anyway to reflect the reduced number of students. We should be downsizing both property and employee costs to reflect the massive decline in student population. Or at least see a bump in education quality (spending more per student).

        When you include all ballot approved bonds and spending, we spend more per student that most public schools in the nation and provide some of the most generous benefits to LAUSD staff. And we're doing this with far greater staff-to-student rations than 20 years ago -- and we're STILL producing weaker and weaker high school graduates.

        https://www.latimes.com/califo... [latimes.com]

        In math, 73% of 11th-graders earned A’s, Bs, and Cs. Tests scores showed only 19% met grade-level standards.
        For eighth-graders, 79% earned A’s, Bs and Cs in math. Test scores showed 23% met grade-level standards.
        In English, 85% of sixth-graders earned A’s, Bs and Cs, while 40% met grade-level standards.
        For seventh-graders, 82% earned A’s, Bs and Cs in English. Test scores showed 43% met standards.

        Apparently the solution to failing our K-12 children is to just cover it up with "good grades".

        In our best category, we're pushing out less than half our students who perform at their grade level every year. And math is embarrassing -- not even 20% performing at grade level.

        Maybe, just maybe, the "nonsense" from parents is justified.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @03:12AM (#63440434) Homepage Journal

          Cute narrative. I have one, too:

          LAUSD has about 500k students (k-12) as of 2023. It also employees over 75k staff (mix of teachers, administrators, etc).

          20 years ago the only difference was the number of students was over 750k.

          Nope. You can't just lump teachers in with all the other staff and expect the metric to be a good measure of educational outcomes. Having more administrators and security staff and network techs and lunch staff and other people who aren't involved in the actual teaching might be necessary to keep the school running (or they might not be), but they aren't teaching your kids.

          So is the mix the same as it was 20 years ago, or, as one might suspect from the lower test scores, does LAUSD have far fewer teachers and far more support staff now?

          I couldn't find data as far back as 20 years ago, but in the 2007 to 2008 school year, LAUSD had 45,473 [wikipedia.org] teachers and 694,288 students, or 15.27 students per teacher, and a total of 83,967 employees, or 8.27 students per staff member. LAUSD now has 24,769 [wikipedia.org] teachers for 565,479 students, or 22.83 students per teacher, and a total of 74,000 employees, or 7.64 students per staff member.

          So even though the student-to-employee ratio is similar — even slightly better now — the student-to-teacher ratio got worse by about 50%. There are way, way more non-teaching staff in LAUSD per student, and only two-thirds as many actual teaching staff per student as there were just fifteen years earlier.

          Teacher-to-student ratio is the primary metric that matters. If education quality in LAUSD is deteriorating, the increased number of students per teacher is likely the main reason why. LAUSD has simply become too big to function efficiently, and as a result, more and more money is being diverted away from education towards non-teacher staffing, resulting in worsening student-to-teacher ratios. Until that problem is fixed — probably by breaking up LAUSD into a few dozen districts and letting each district trim the heck out of its support staff — the system's educational performance is unlikely to improve.

        • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @05:05AM (#63440560)

          Maybe, just maybe, the "nonsense" from parents is justified.

          I'm reminded of the comic about all the managers sitting around watching the one person work and saying "why aren't we performing better after all our efficiency drives".

          No the "nonsense" from parents isn't justified. The parents protect under performing children and blame everyone but themselves.
          The "nonsense" from legislators also isn't justified. We used to have experts teaching kids, now we have congressmen dictating how kids are taught, -not only no longer by experts but also the dredges of society.

          Teacher used to a noble profession, it is now a bottom tier choice done by people who often fail to find an alternate career (at least in America).

          The "nonsense" is precisely what is causing the problem in the first place. Thank Christ I live in a country where my wife gets to decide what and how to teach without government intervention, where she was required to have a masters degree in the subject matter, for a school that tells parents they either need to control their kids or they will be booted out. Incidentally our education system well and truly outranks that of the USA on every list except for the "Best Countries Report" compiled by ... US News. I guess they probably have US taught students working there so probably couldn't add up the results correctly.

          • White conservatives are so fragile that they rewrote the history books to remove any mention of Rosa Parks being black. The entire point of why she was arrested! Not giving up her seat for a white person. https://www.snopes.com/fact-ch... [snopes.com]

            They changed it back after it made national news but talk about being a snowflake.

  • Dworak is a moron. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:30PM (#63439796)

    Video games ranging from the 3d Marios to Quake to Minecraft account for increased 3d rotation scores, and the utter farce that is the US public education system guided by the Dept. of Ed. and NEA explains the drop in all the rest.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @06:51AM (#63440686) Homepage Journal

      A similar thing was seen with Lego improving 3D visualization capabilities. It even worked when girls were encouraged to play with the bricks and their scores rose to match those of the boys.

      For a long time it had been claimed that males simply had different brains that were better at 3D stuff, probably due to historically being the hunters, and that was why women couldn't park a car properly. Turns out it's simply down to boys having more experience in that area.

  • IQ test is a myth (Score:2, Interesting)

    by fermion ( 181285 )
    The IQ test measures uniformity of thought. The increases in the mid to late 20th century in the US was a result in the mass relatively uniform education of the time. Not actually educating people,but preparing them for factory jobs and the like. The SAT was basically the same thing. To determine who had an education consistent with attending a ivy university

    About twenty years ago a group of researchers gave a geometry test to western educated people and aboriginal people. On concepts the scores were simi

    • by SmaryJerry ( 2759091 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @11:28PM (#63440200)
      The concepts tested typically require no memorization at all. It is incredible you could believe that to answer what's next in the pattern 1, 2, 3, __ is something that is an attempt at uniformity. Its about logic and the ability of recognition more than a specific way of thinking.
  • I think the fact that the spatial reasoning scores went higher, and spatial reasoning being one of the few if not only purely cognitive test that doesn't involve prior knowledge or understanding of language, indicates that people are getting more intelligent, but with poorer education.

    We have access to a wealth of information, far more than any time in history. People are using their brains now more than ever. The issue is our education system has been getting systematically worse and worse. People aren't b

  • by ClueHammer ( 6261830 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:37PM (#63439816)
    In this particular case: Every new thing 'we' create we dumb it down so the simplest of individuals can operate it without thinking. This is extremely detrimental to society as a whole. If you never try and work out something you remain a simpleton.
    • Actually, this is a bad study. Spatial reasoning is the only proper way to measure intelligence because it doesn't require prior knowledge.

      This study just shows that our education system is getting worse, despite our intelligence getting higher (which is probably because in today's modern world, people constantly need to be learning to keep up).

      • While spacial reasoning might not require prior knowledge practice can help. Also prior knowledge is important in intelligence, important in creating new things.

        Also I have a problem with your statement that spacial reasoning doesn't require prior knowledge from here https://www.sesp.northwestern.... [northwestern.edu] if it doesn't require prior knowledge then why are they trying to teach it? I can believe that spacial reasoning is something we develop just as living in the world.

        Some proof would be good, and your example of

    • Every new thing 'we' create we dumb it down so the simplest of individuals can operate it without thinking. This is extremely detrimental to society as a whole.

      ... or you've deluded yourself into thinking that understanding what all the blinky lights on a router mean is a sign that U R SUPAR SMAR as opposed to just finding it interesting.

  • Hasn't IQ testing been discredited anyway?

    • by higuita ( 129722 )

      yes, that is what people that usually have lower IQ scores say
      they may not be perfect, but for most people, talking with a 80 IQ and a 140 IQ, you will see a difference (even less educated high IQ ones, like the highest IQ women)

  • by DarmokandJalad ( 10147593 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:49PM (#63439856)

    Daily practice on sample SAT problems in Algebra II helped boost my score for admission into top schools. Today, states like California believe the SAT is racist and it can't even be evaluated in admissions decisions at my alma mater.

    I see the results of this deemphasis on millennial applicants to the open headcount on my team. Most don't even read the job description and over 95% fail to complete simple arithmetic during the interview process.

    The most educated of my friends are not reproducing or have single children, while deeply uneducated states are prohibiting birth control and encouraging large families. I don't see this trend reversing anytime soon. The only silver lining is that those who are still motivated to educate themselves can be assured of a career when algorithms replace menial workers.

    • Well we are in a world where the job description has little to do about the job you will have and what skills you actually need. If you are getting people threw recruiters, than chances they never got the job description, but just sent a copy of their resume to as many companies as possible.

      Why do you put someone who is already stressed into an arithmetic test. Do you also ban calculators? While I have a minor in Mathematics, I also have dyslexia, which often makes arithmetics a bit more difficult to

    • SAT tests were always rigged towards those that took (and could afford to pay for) SAT practice and prep courses. All it did was prove you could afford to have someone teach you the answers ahead of the test. Those courses even teach how to guess the right answer, for which proves that providing answers right in a multiple choice on a knowledge test is DUMB.

      SAT type tests should by like hunting, where one side doesn't even know it is playing. Alas that isn't really possible though.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        My high school honors algebra II teacher coached her students every morning and we all got accepted into college regardless of race and income. I scored top 2% in verbal despite moving to the states just 8 years ago because I read everything within reach. I was raised in a brown skinned, minimum wage, first generation immigrant family and can confidently say poverty and racism is just an excuse from people who do not want to put in the effort to fix their situation.

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      What makes the SAT so special that our education system is ruined without it?

      I see the results of this deemphasis on millennial applicants to the open headcount on my team. Most don't even read the job description and over 95% fail to complete simple arithmetic during the interview process.

      This IQ drop is a 2 point drop https://thehill.com/policy/tec... [thehill.com]. Your experience there is either incredibly bad luck or the ol' "When I was young we were all amazing but now kids suck" shtick as it can not be explained by a 2 point drop in IQ.

  • by rcb1974 ( 654474 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @08:55PM (#63439864) Homepage
    We are headed towards Idiocracy, thanks to policies based on DEI, which punish intelligent hard+smart working people in order to reward less intelligent people with fewer natural abilities and lower aptitude. Diversity is only a strength if its components are actually good. Otherwise, diversity is a weakness overall, as evidenced by this and other IQ studies that factor very controversial things like race and national origin.
  • Norway too ... (Score:5, Informative)

    by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @09:07PM (#63439890) Homepage

    Reverse Flynn effect was observed and studied in Norway.

    They did it on conscription age males, and traced back families too ...

    Here is the paper at PNAS [pnas.org].

    They conclusively say that it is neither genetics nor immigration ...

    They narrow it down to "environmental", but nothing more specific than that.

    Take your pick: Lead in gasoline (but that was stopped in the 1990s)?
    PFAS?
    PM2.5?

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @09:24PM (#63439942)
    I'm a member of my local astronomy club, and I am amazed at some of the things kids know. I had an 8 year old explain Hawking Radiation, including the fact that is is generated by virtual matter-antimatter pairs coming into existence, and one falling into the black hole, and its partner escaping. An 8 year old. At 8 I'm not sure I knew astronomy was a science. Another time, I showed a little girl, who was not even old enough to speak in sentences, Jupiter's Great Red Spot. She told me it was a hole. I tried to explain it was a storm, but she knew what she meant. She knew it was an anti-cyclone, and finally got this across to me in toddler talk. How she knew that I have no idea, but she knew exactly what she was talking about. Maybe "Babies first astronomy book", or "Planetary science for infants?" Then, I have had adults try to explain the flat Earth to me, so maybe the current generation needs some help, but the next one is doing good.
  • AGI is the solution to all of civilization's problems, might be a solution which does not include humans ... but oh well, small price to pay.

  • n/t
  • Back in the day relying on a calculator in math class was bad because it would 'make you lazy and not really learn to understand the underlying concepts'. Looks like the modern smartphone/widget has accomplished exactly that but with everything - except spacial reasoning which is needed to figure out how to flip on or off that annoying notification or thumb someone up or down on social media.
  • The Flynn Effect is and has always been bullshit and it's easily proven. Since the inception of the IQ test, the average score has always been 100 and therefore has never increased!
  • A comedy becomes documentary.
  • by Yo,dog! ( 1819436 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @11:40PM (#63440216)
    People who watch Fox know less about world affairs than people who don't follow the news.
  • by null etc. ( 524767 ) on Monday April 10, 2023 @11:48PM (#63440222)

    It's funny how the decrease in American IQ scores corresponds proportionally to the rise in Republican reproductive rates.

  • by KlomDark ( 6370 ) on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @09:52AM (#63441056) Homepage Journal

    Pretty sure IQs started dropping right after they stopped pumping lead into the air on a massive scale. People keep getting smarter, then they removed lead from gasoline, then IQs started falling. We need to start adding lead to our gasoline again, and just think how much smoother your car engine will sound!

  • by whitroth ( 9367 ) <whitroth@5-BOHRcent.us minus physicist> on Tuesday April 11, 2023 @02:29PM (#63441876) Homepage

    US diets improved, and intelligence went up. Less lead paint everywhere, intelligence went up.

    So, what crap is in your diet, given this, and US life expectancy dropping, and the percentage of people becoming obese going up....

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny ..." -- Isaac Asimov

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