For the Mensans, how long after the test did you get your results?
I took the test Saturday. The first was the Wonderlic (50 questions, 12 minutes) I think I did well. The 2nd test was the Reynolds (RAIT). I did well on every section except the first; it was literally a pop culture test of sorting famous figures by category (actor, comedian, scientist, religious figure).
>he fell for the meme pseudo metric business complex
how much did you pay?
>>8857722
It took me 2 hours and $40. Light years quicker than going to college for a 4 year degree (which is a pseudo IQ test).
People still actually pay for this pseudo-intellectual masturbation?
am surprised
also..
>>8857722
>how much did you pay?
>Light years quicker than going to college for a 4 year degree (which is a pseudo IQ test).
That actually made me laugh out loud.
You're saying an IQ test prepares you better for the world in terms of education and preparation than a bachelors degree does?
>>8857746
can't really take their test results seriously when they're a business.
>>8857763
>piggot
Atleast you can know that your result won't have 3 digits
>>8857781
I hear you can take a "better" test for 140$
*cough* *cough*
and an even better one for 699$
>>8857762
I'm saying that unless you need a degree to enter a specific field (doctor, engineer) college is a scam designed to put you hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt. It's completely worthless and won't aid you in getting a job.
>>8858105
Yeah, you tell us liberal arts majors on /sci/ what a scam we fell for
>>8858105
>unless you need a degree to enter a specific field (doctor, engineer)
well isn't that obvious you idiot?
>>8858105
University is a place to learn you retard.
>>8857746
I wish you godspeed with using IQ test results in place of a 4-year degree, but I'm curious to know: which people use a 4-year degree in place of IQ test results?
>>8857716
just pay for a WAIS and ask for the percentile you fell in. They generally won't tell you your exact scoring.
MFW im top 2% but MENSA is for autists
>>8858105
I think it'd be easier to list the only ones that are useful.
>STEM
>medical practice
>economics
>law
>business/management
>education (only if supplemented with another major so you can teach at a good college)
Any degrees outside of these stand to cost you more than you stand to gain.