vandygrad11
I think there are serious flaws to both tests in terms of their ability to measure a person's intelligence. That said, they will obviously have a significant correlation. I'm not too familiar with IQ tests, but the GMAT certainly measures innate intelligence and critical thinking ability to an extent - however, it's also an exercise in discipline. Are IQ tests the similar in that respect?
Dear
vandygrad11,
I agree that, as measures of intelligence, both are flawed. As I argue in that blog post, I have my doubts that human intelligence, in its full splendor, is something that
can be adequate measured and summarized by a single number. It is tantamount to saying that a human being's full worth could be summarized by a single number, a single "score" --- that's patently absurd.
Just as you can study for the GMAT, so, if you so chose, you could study for specific IQ tests --- to that extent, neither is measuring pure innate ability. I believe it's actually a very good question whether intelligence, properly, is measured at all in an out-of-context test. Intelligence is part of who we are, and we are most who we are in the flow & context of Life itself, not sitting for an isolated test.
I am very familiar with the GMAT, but not nearly as familiar with IQ tests. I know a little about the WAIS --- it does measure a wide variety of verbal and spatial abilities. Insofar as a subject walks into it cold, without knowing anything about the test (as, I believe, it is designed to be taken), then I would say it does an OK job of measuring innate abilities. In some sense, that's the big difference between the GMAT and IQ test. There's a whole industry around preparing folks for the GMAT --- this website & many others, my company & many others, a whole shelf of prep books at the book store, software packages, etc etc. By contrast, few people actually study for an IQ test or prepare for it in any methodical way. To that extent, one could argue that, not because of anything inherently better about the tests but simply
de facto, IQ tests such as the WAIS do a better job of measuring innate ability than does the GMAT.
That's my two cents.
Mike