Learning about your cognitive profile

From Cognito

It's sometimes important to have your intelligence and academic skills assessed based on an objective standard.

Reasons for having your cognitive and academic skills assessed

Assessing whether you're meeting your potential

Extremely bright students sometimes get straight A's with little effort, while falling short of what they're capable of, because they're not being challenged or challenging themselves. In the other direction, less bright students sometimes hold themselves to unrealistically high standards, feeling demoralized that they're unable to get top grades despite putting an enormous amount of effort into doing well. Knowing whether your intelligence is at the 10th percentile or the 50th percentile or the 90th percentile or the 99th percentile or the 99.9th percentile can help you determine whether you're meeting your potential.

Assessing your relative cognitive strengths and weaknesses

Some people have unusually large discrepancies between their different cognitive abilities. For example, some people have a nonverbal learning disability, which is characterized by having much higher verbal skills than nonverbal skills.

By having your intelligence tested, you can determine what your cognitive strengths and weaknesses are, which can help you determine how to utilize your strengths and compensate for your weaknesses.

Assessing whether you're keeping pace with your future college classmates

Students who are among the strongest at an academically unexceptional high school, and who go to prestigious colleges, are often shocked to learn that they're underprepared relative to their college classmates. For example, Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg wrote:

I attended a big public school in Miami— think Fast Times at Ridgemont High— that was far more concerned with preventing fights in the halls and keeping drugs out of the bathrooms than with academics. When I was accepted into Harvard, many of my high school classmates asked me why I would want to go to a school filled with geeks.

Freshman year of college was a huge shock for me. First semester, I took a course called The Concept of the Hero in Hellenic Civilization, which was nicknamed Heroes for Zeroes. I didn’t have a burning desire to study Greek mythology, but it was the easiest way to fulfill the literature requirement. The professor began the first lecture by asking which students had read these books before. I whispered to my friend next to me, “What books?” “The Iliad and The Odyssey, of course,” she replied. Almost every single hand went up. Not mine. The professor then asked, “And who has read these books in the original?” “What original?” I asked my friend. “Homeric Greek,” she replied. A good third of the class kept their hands up. It seemed pretty clear that I was one of the zeroes.

A few weeks later, my professor of political philosophy assigned a five-page paper. I was panicked. Five whole pages! I had only written one paper of that length in high school, and it was a year-long project.

You may be getting A's in most of your classes. If you're in this position, you know that you're doing well relative to high school classmates. But you don't necessarily know how well you're doing relative to your college classmates. If you take opportunities to assess how well prepared you are relative to the country's best students, you can better determine whether you're on pace, or whether you should be taking extra measures to increase your learning.

Assessing your academic skills

Some resources that are available to assess your academic skills are:

  • ALEKS. This is an online math assessment and practice tool. You can sign up to use it for ~$20/month, and assess whether you've mastered the different topics of the high school math curriculum. Something to be careful about is that if you repeatedly do practice problems on a given topic, you may gain short term knowledge of how to solve them, without retaining it. So it may be a better tool for assessment from time to time than for practice.
  • SAT Subject Tests These can allow you to assess your knowledge of a given subject relative to students who are applying to colleges that require them. Be aware that if you take these tests, your scores will be reported to colleges, so you should probably only take the ones in your strongest subjects.

Intelligence testing

Consider having your intelligence tested by a psychologist, who can administer a test such as the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition. This can be very expensive, but is the most reliable way to learn what your intelligence level is, and your cognitive strengths and weaknesses.

A less informative, but much cheaper option is taking a practice SAT. Historically, SAT scores were strongly correlated with intelligence test scores. Nowadays, people put a lot of effort into preparing for the SAT, and this diminishes the degree to which the SAT is a measure of intelligence. Nevertheless, taking a practice SAT can give you some sense for your intelligence level. The College Board publishes a practice SAT online, as well as a book of 10 practice tests. The College Board publishes a conversion table that gives you the percentile rank associated with a given score for college bound seniors. If you're not yet a senior, your actual percentile will be higher than the percentile given. You can get a sense for the percentiles that scores from 7th and 8th grades correspond to by looking at material on the Center for Talented Youth website.