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I'm sorry but to tell you this but 62 is a terrible IQ. You see when you take an IQ test the result depends on your age. I am thirteen and have an IQ of 109. The Normal IQ of a British Person above the age of 8 is 102. I think you should take it again, this time with a clear head and really focus this time. Use MENSA they are the official "IQ TESTERS".

http://wilderdom.com/intelligence/IQWhatScoresMean.html#LowIQ

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14y ago
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14y ago

149 is a high IQ score for any age group; however, it is important to consider how that score was arrived at.

To properly reflect the assessment of intelligence level the test must be professionally administered under appropriate conditions and supervision. Any score is worthless without these standards being observed; supposed IQ tests can be found in many forms but are not to be considered in any way reliable unless properly administered.

Casual self-administered tests are meaningless.

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13y ago

yes, but if the child took the test online it was probobaly rigged because Einstiens IQ was only 160

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14y ago

If it was an adult IQ test, yes,

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Q: Is the IQ 88 good for a 12 year old?
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Is an IQ of 88 good or bad for a 15 year old?

that's so terrible, omg im so sorry.


What is the difference between heredity and environmental personality?

There is no such thing as a "heredity personality" or "environment personality". However, there are hereditary and environmental factors that shape one's personality. It is a philosophical question of nature vs. nurture in which nature refers to the environment and nurture refers to genetic factors. Human beings are simply the sum of all the unique genes they inherit in addition to the environmental events that fine-tune that personality. [[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] 12:39, 7 Jan 2009 (UTC)[[User:Ysabelle 88|Ysabelle 88]] I believe this question is similar to the question about genes and environment. As far as I am concerned, these two are interacting factors as to human development. Actually, there is a debate about this issue which popularly known as nature vs. nurture or rather, nurture vs. nature. The proponents of nature vs. nurture adhere to the idea that humans are governed mostly by the inherent characteristics and not by the environment. And so the otherwise. As Thomas Hobbes believed that men are naturally born bad and the environment is good, Rousseau believed that men are naturally good and the environment is bad. However, according to recent studies, these two factors greatly affect the human development; we can't discredit the other.


What propaganda technique is used in Chamber's Chow has been in business for 88 years so we know more about making good chow than our competitors?

Cause And Effect


What to do if your bored and desperate?

I got some things from a website. Here they are. 1. Look up urban legends, and/or ghost stories in your town. Investigate! 2. If you live in a city with public transport (bus, train, subway), plan a trip using the transit system. Take some friends along for company, or just enjoy the ride and people-watch! 3. Get yourself a roll of quarters and find a video arcade. 4. Strike up a conversation with a total stranger. 5. Learn to tie sailors' knots. 6. Volunteer. It's fun and you'll get good karma. :o) 7. Hang out with old people. They have great stories and sometimes need the company. 8. Perform random acts of kindness. 9. Find out all the great touristy places in your city. Now spend the day being a tourist! 10. Try geocaching. 11. Check out the local art scene. Attend a gallery opening. 12. Become a babysitter and have fun playing with a child - everyone needs to engage in an epic light saber battle every once in awhile! 13. Try to beat 20Q. 14. Go fly a kite. 15. Give yourself a facial. Or a total make-over. 16. Try brewing your own beer. Or make your own wine. 17. Google everyone you knew in high school. 18. If you like building, making, and/or creating things, find something on Instructables to make. 19. Check out a sketchy ethnic restaurant in your area. You might find a gem or you might get food poisoning. Either way, it's the stuff stories are made of. Plus, you'll be able to say "I know this great little _____ place." 20. Take all the cushions off your couch and some blankets from your bed and build a fort. 21. Be someone else for a few hours. Put on a hat, fake beard and eyeglasses and walk around town. 22. Go for a walk. Explore your neighborhood. You're bound to find gardens, shops, restaurants, art, or other random bits of wonderfulness you didn't even know were there. 23. Choose a movie to see based on the roll of the dice. Open a newspaper or web browser to your local movie listings. Roll the dice. If, for example, you roll a three, go see the third movie in the listings. 24. Read a book. Try one that someone has recommended but that you wouldn't normally choose for yourself. You might be pleasantly surprised. 25. Start a blog. 26. Learn to play a musical instrument. Take up the ukulele. 27. Spend some time browsing in the public library. 28. Have coffee in a bookstore. Sit in one of their super-comfy armchairs. Read one of their books. 29. Window shop. Or, shop for windows. Whichever. 30. Go to a gun range and try out some rental pistols. 31. Interview someone. Local history organizations often need people to conduct interviews and transcribe oral histories that might otherwise be lost. 32. Document your day in photographs. 33. Treat yourself to a manicure. Or a pedicure. 34. Grab a partner and hit the racquetball or tennis court. 35. Facebook-stalk people from your past. 36. Try the assignments at Learning to Love You More. 37. Release a book into the wild. 38. Get yourself a fake buddy. 39. Exchange postcards with a stranger. 40. Order something from The Something Store. 41. Wash your dog. Try washing your cat. 42. Cut out photos and paste them on Popsicle sticks. Have a puppet show. 43. Learn to peel a banana with your feet. 44. Have a movie marathon. Watch all the Lord of the Rings movies. Or all of the Star Wars films. Or the Indiana ... you get the idea. 45. Turn on the T.V., put it on mute and make up dialogue. Or mute the TV and play music. It's funny to see how the music "matches up" with what's happening on-screen. 46. Go dumpster diving and see what you can find. 47. Make faces at strangers to make them laugh. 48. Take your TV outside. While you're at it, take your favorite comfy chair or couch outside too! 49. Watch kids play - and then join in. 50. Sit in your parked car with sunglasses on and point a hair dryer at passing cars. See if they slow down. 51. Skip rather than walk. 52. Join the summer reading program at your local library. Who cares if it's just for kids? 53. Plant a garden. Or some potted plants. 54. Pack a fun lunch and go to the park. Play Frisbee. 55. Decorate blank t-shirts. 56. Set up a Slip 'N Slide in your back yard. Invite the whole neighborhood! 57. Spend a day at the beach. 58. Make lemonade from lemons. 59. Set up a hammock in your yard. Use it! 60. Make your own ice cream. 61. Create a masterpiece on your driveway with sidewalk chalk. 62. Have a water balloon fight. Or a sponge ball fight. 63. Help produce the 1 Second Film. 64. Watch presentations on slideshare. 65. Write a one-sentence story. 66. Learn how to make raspberry jam, how to make fortune cookies, how to fix a bicycle chain, how to start a small business, and more! 67. Visit a museum. Or visit an online museum. 68. Go bowling. 69. Blow bubbles. 70. Build a campfire and make s'mores. Or banana boats. 71. Decorate a pair of flip-flops. 72. Gather some old dry bread crusts and feed the birds. Or go to a lake or pond and feed the ducks. 73. Go on a hike. 74. Research your family tree. 75. Go to a farmer's market. 76. Start a scrapbook. 77. Learn to crochet. Or knit. 78. Star gaze. Or visit a science center or planetarium. 79. Lie on the grass and look at cloud shapes. 80. Build a sandcastle. 81. Plant a tree. 82. Bake cookies. Put them in pretty containers and deliver them to your friends. 83. Rent a projector, hang a white sheet in your backyard and have a backyard movie night. 84. Have a pillow fight. 85. Clean up trash in a local park. Or pick up trash on your block. 86. Paint your bedroom a new color. 87. Learn to juggle. 88. Start a collection. 89. Record a funny new greeting for your voice mail. 90. Buy part of the moon. 91. Make cookies! 92. Glue money to the floor and watch people try to pick it up. 93. Go into a building and set all the clocks ahead one hour (or behind, if you're really bold). 94. Write a novel. 95. Build things out of cans of food. Donate them to a food bank afterwards. 96. Watch a familiar DVD dubbed in a foreign language. 97. Learn a new language. Or learn sign language! 98. Write a letter to a friend. On paper! Don't forget to mail it. 99. Clean out your closet. 100. Rearrange your furniture. 101. Make a list. (Maybe a list of things to do when you're bored!) Here are somethings now that I like to do. 1. Do prank calls. 2. Have fun with friends. 3. Go to the park. 4. Catch up on homework. 5. Make your teacher happy and do more homework. 6. Study for an upcoming test. 7. Help mom oout with something. 8. Make your siblings breakfast 9. Go outside and play with a neighbor. 10. Have a pajama day. 11. Talk on the phone. 12. Call a loved one. 13. Write a letter to a loved one. 14. Have a relaxing bubble bath. 15. Text your friends. 16. Give yourself a spa day. 17. Make the day extra special for a younger sibling. 18. Go shopping! 19. Play balloon darts. 20. Go see a movie.


Did the monkey banana and water spray experiment ever take place?

The Monkey Banana and Water Spray Experiment The experiment is not real. A vaguely similar experiment by Stephenson (1966) is often quoted as if it supports the story, but it does not. The results of that real experiment do not in any way support the "herd mentality" moral of the story; in some cases, they actively contradicts it. This is how it is commonly told: "The Experiment- Part 1 5 monkeys are locked in a cage, a banana was hung from the ceiling and a ladder was placed right underneath it. As predicted, immediately, one of the monkeys would race towards the ladder, to grab the banana. However, as soon as he would start to climb, the researcher would spray the monkey with ice-cold water. but here's the kicker- In addition, he would also spray the other four monkeys. When a second monkey tried to climb the ladder, the researcher would, again, spray the monkey with ice-cold water, As well as the other four watching monkeys; This was repeated again and again until they learned their lesson Climbing equals scary cold water for EVERYONE so No One Climbs the ladder. The Experiment- Part 2 Once the 5 monkeys knew the drill, the researcher replaced one of the monkeys with a new inexperienced one. As predicted, the new monkey spots the banana, and goes for the ladder. BUT, the other four monkeys, knowing the drill, jumped on the new monkey and beat him up. The beat up new guy thus Learns- NO going for the ladder and No Banana Period- without even knowing why! and also without ever being sprayed with water! These actions get repeated with 3 more times, with a new monkey each time and ASTONISHINGLY each new monkey- who had never received the cold-water Spray himself (and didn't even know anything about it), would Join the beating up of the New guy. This is a classic example of Mob Mentality- bystanders and outsiders uninvolved with the fight- join in 'just because'. When the researcher replaced a third monkey, the same thing happened; likewise for the fourth until, eventually, all the monkeys had been replaced and none of the original ones are left in the cage (that had been sprayed by water). The Experiment- Part 3 Again, a new monkey was introduced into the cage. It ran toward the ladder only to get beaten up by the others. The monkey turns with a curious face asking "why do you beat me up when I try to get the banana?" The other four monkeys stopped and looked at each other puzzled (None of them had been sprayed and so they really had no clue why the new guy can't get the banana) but it didn't matter, it was too late, the rules had been set. And So, although they didn't know WHY, they beat up the monkey just because " that's the way we do things around here" There is no evidence that that this experiment ever took place. An experiment was done in 1966 that involved pairs of monkeys but the results are irrelevant to the above story. Some of the results actually contradict the story: in some pairs, the new monkey behaved so fearlessly around the object that the first monkey learned to lose their fear of it altogether. Sources: Stephenson, G. R. (1967). Cultural acquisition of a specific learned response among rhesus monkeys. In: Starek, D., Schneider, R., and Kuhn, H. J. (eds.), Progress in Primatology, Stuttgart: Fischer, pp. 279-288. Mentioned in: Galef, B. G., Jr. (1976). Social Transmission of Acquired Behavior: A Discussion of Tradition and Social Learning in Vertebrates. In: Rosenblatt, J.S., Hinde, R.A., Shaw, E. and Beer, C. (eds.), Advances in the study of behavior, Vol. 6, New York: Academic Press, pp. 87-88: