How To Increase Your IQ – It really works!!!

Want to know four easy steps that will help you increase your IQ? Read on…


STEP 1

Describe different words aloud

The Vocabulary subtest measures the degree to which one has learned, been able to comprehend and verbally express vocabulary. In short, it seeks to measure your ability to express yourself in terms of the accuracy and economy of your expressive vocabulary. Since this is largely based on prior knowledge and experience, it is said to measure your crystallized intelligence.

To increase your IQ, draw words from a dictionary and describe them as though you were speaking to someone with a reasonable amount of knowledge about the world, but very little understanding of it. For example, if you land on the word clarinet, a poor description would be musical instrument since this answer presupposes far too much. Rather, you might say a clarinet is a hollow handheld device powered by the lungs. By blowing into one end, we can produce a variety of sounds. Holes in the device allow us to modulate that sound into music.

This answer may be too wordy, but it serves as a reasonable example of how you should approach each word.

STEP 2

Extract ideas from objects

The Similarities subtest measures abstract verbal reasoning, meaning that it tests your ability to form and express concepts. It typically involves trying to identify a pattern within three or more objects and then deciding among a selection of objects that most appropriately follows that pattern.

To increase your IQ, pick 10 objects: DVD, cup, pillow, book, and so on. For each one, begin verbally describing it in as much detail as you can, and work outward until youve stripped it down to an idea. For example:
My DVD copy of the first season of The Facts of Life is on the floor in front of the DVD player
My DVD copy of the first season of The Facts of Life
The DVD of the first season of The Facts of Life
The Facts of Life
A TV sitcom
Entertainment

Abstract thought is crucial to being able to connect seemingly disparate things and to draw wider conclusions about them. Without the capacity to sum up certain things in an abstract manner, you lack the power of inference and deductive reasoning.

STEP 3

Organize your perceptions into concepts

The Block Design subtest measures spatial perception, visual abstract processing and problem-solving — in other words, it tests how well you can put your perceptions into conceptual form.

Consider this: Nobody can define intelligence; it is a concept beyond any formal, nicely framed terminology. We believe we can, however, make it understandable. Since youre clearly on a computer right now, think of the difference between two web pages: One is an archived web page without any links, and the other is an active Wikipedia page replete with hyperlinks. The archived page is similar to what weve learned — hard, immobile data. Intelligence is like the Wikipedia page — dynamically loaded with accessible avenues to a myriad of other ideas, and the agility to move in and out of them as if our minds were swinging on a vast web of interconnected vines.

In that example, we tried to organize our perception into a concept of how the brain works — you can decide whether or not we succeeded. Now, increase your IQ by doing it yourself: Examine your perceptions of nature, the internet, whatever you choose, and put it into conceptual form.

STEP 4

Look for symmetry

The Matrix Reasoning subtest measures nonverbal abstract problem-solving, inductive reasoning and spatial reasoning.

In A Beautiful Mind, John Nash (Russell Crowe) has a unique ability to discern symmetry in everything across every dimension. In the same vein, your final step is to walk around the block, taking no more than 10 minutes to make visible sense of what you see. Visually piece together order from the chaos in front of your eyes — the angle at which the gutter meets the pavement, how a windshield refracts the sunlight into forms, the way the distance between trees comes together like a curtain. For the time being, believe in the jagged reflection you see in a puddle of stagnant water more than you believe in the concrete youre walking on.

The grids or patterns on an IQ test will not resemble the outside world — at least, not yet. The aim is to increase your IQ by beginning the process of seeing with greater precision the lines, curves and cusps around you as a brand new design — one that changes with every move you make.

Resources: http://harcourtassessment.com

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