How good is /r9k/ at pattern recognition?
http://teacherprobs.com/only-highly-intelligent-people-can-pass-this-test/
Top 4 percent. Whoopdee fucking doo, still spending Christmas alone.
Top 4 percent here too.
Does it say that for literally every result? Would be pretty funny if the experiment was meta like that.
This is one of those feel good tests right? that was way too easy.
>>25233593
Turn that frown upside down anonchristmas is irrelevant
Top 4% here too.
I know this is BS, though. I was tested heavily as a kid, first for IQ to get into the accelerated school program I went through and then later for a possible learning disability (which turned out to be a fine motor skill disorder), and scored extremely high on everything EXCEPT pattern recognition, in which I was below average.
I got top 4% also. Something is up
>>25233470
>a new test? might just--
>'Some of the greatest minds in the world have struggled with this pattern intelligence test.'
>ah never mind
I got top 4 and then answered randomly and it still gives you feel good bullshit, you can discard your results.
bullshit
that test is easy as fuck
>>25233622
How did you go from accelerated education to learning disability?
Not to rain on anyone's parade, but this is definitely BS. I got lazy and flat out guessed on the last like 5 and still managed to get Top 4%
That being said, it was pretty easy and didn't take too long of a look.
>>25233470
Randomly guessed at all of them and got top 4%.
Guessed again and got this.
You got 40% of the questions right.
Although you didn't solve them all properly, your determined nature will try again and again to solve the patterns properly.
While other people might give up and go solve something easier, you just won't let it go.
Your brain loves a good challenge and yearns for a good exercise. You will solve these patterns again and again until you get them all right. It's just in your nature!
i had to deliberately get the answers wrong for it to say anything, and it just said to try again. what a load of shit.
>>25233622
>accelerated learning disability
Some of the tests on this site are rigged. The geography ones are good though.
Apparently choosing the wrong answer on every question on purpose is the same as getting 60% of them right, and I'm a creative person :^)
Deliberately chose the wrong answer on every question and was told I got 60% right and that my brain isn't a disaster, but "creative".
>>25233614
of course it is its a buzzfeed quiz. completely guessed on all of them and still got top 4%
Sorry guys I probably should have tried to fail the test too before posting this thread
I'll kill myself tomorrow
>>25233661
>>25233700
So, basically:
>First grade
>Teachers decide I'm smart, school happens to be the one that has the gifted magnet
>Get tested
>Make it past the 145 IQ limit for magnet admission
>Years start going by, I'm good with verbal stuff and reading comprehension but my writing is terrible and I can't finish classwork
>Get tested in 4th grade
>Turn out to have a motor disability that makes my writing come out scrambled (dysgraphia)
>Get tutoring every week after school from specialist who teaches me an alternate way to write that works for me. (Basically learn to write individual strokes and not whole letters, which had the unintended side effect of making me good at learning non-latin characters later in life)
>Able to write decently, though slowly and painfully, by 6th grade
The confidence issues never went away, though. A childhood of being able to formulate complex ideas in my head but not being able to make them come out on paper, and having everybody around me ridicule and punish me when I was trying my hardest and failing has left me as an incredibly insecure, pessimistic, and defeatist adult.
I really bemoan the fact that I was born only a few years too early for computers to be common in schools, had I been able to type at that age I would have been at the top of my class. Things were still all handwritten and we were expected to learn and use cursive in those days, though. (I'm almost 30 BTW.)
What's funny is after computers became common and I learned to type, I actually got really good at writing, and now I'm a professional writer with articles published in print and a job doing PR writing.
>>25233641
when I tried a random one I got
>Although you didn't solve them all properly, your determined nature will try again and again to solve the patterns properly. While other people might give up and go solve something easier, you just won't let it go. Your brain loves a good challenge and yearns for a good exercise. You will solve these patterns again and again until you get them all right. It's just in your nature!
Bullshit quiz. Way too easy.
>>25233900
I'm a decade younger than you and they still expected us to write cursive and all that jazz in elementary school. Also, almost 100% of the time, we had to handwrite everything. We weren't allowed to type up our papers even though we had a computer lab and were learning to type.
>>25233470
There's actually people out there that are too stupid to pass this?
wew laddy
>>25234051
It's so stupid that they still did this. A minimum amount of printing skill, sure, but otherwise handwriting is a dead art and is something you pretty much only need to do for yourself and not for others to read.