More Schooling Might Raise IQ

MONDAY, Dec. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Children who have more schooling may see their IQ improve, Norwegian researchers have found.

Although time spent in school has been linked with IQ, earlier studies did not rule out the possibility that people with higher IQs might simply be likelier to get more education than others, the researchers noted.

Now, however, "there is good evidence to support the notion that schooling does make you 'smarter' in some general relevant way as measured by IQ tests," said study author Taryn Galloway, a researcher at Statistics Norway in Oslo.

Findings from the large-scale study appear in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

IQ, or intelligence quotient, is a widely accepted measure of intelligence. The IQ score comes from several combined, standardized tests.

In 1955, Norway began extending compulsory middle school education by two years. Galloway and her colleague Christian Brinch, from the department of economics at the University of Oslo, analyzed how this additional schooling might affect IQ.

Using data on men born between 1950 and 1958, the researchers looked at the level of schooling by age 30. They also looked at IQ scores of the men when they were 19.

"The size of the effect was quite large," she said. Comparing IQ scores before and after the education reform, the average increased by 0.6 points, which correlated with an increase in IQ of 3.7 points for an addition year of schooling, Galloway said.

"We are only able to study men, because we use data on IQ from the Norwegian military's draft assessment, which basically all men undergo around the age of 19. Women are not included in the draft," she explained.

Education has lasting effects on cognitive skills, such as those broadly measured by IQ tests, Galloway said.

"Cognitive skills are, in turn, related to a large range of social and economic outcomes. A large part of the relevance of the study derives from the fact that there has been some controversy related to the question of whether education has an independent effect on IQ or whether people with higher IQs simply choose, or are better able, to attain higher levels of education," Galloway said.

By looking at a reform which increased mandatory schooling and prevented people from dropping out of school after the 7th grade, it is fairly certain that the effects seen are an effect of schooling on IQ, not vice versa, she explained.

"One subtle point of our findings is that we use IQ measures at roughly age 19, which is three to four years after the additional education generally was received. Thus, we are not simply picking up a short-lived effect that peters out shortly after people leave school," Galloway said.

The findings suggest that education as late as the middle teenage years may have a sizeable effect on IQ, but do not challenge the well-documented importance of early childhood experiences on cognitive development, according to the authors.

Robert Sternberg, a professor of psychology and provost at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, said that "these results -- that schooling has a substantial effect on IQ -- replicate those of other, perhaps not quite as well-controlled, studies."

"I am aware of no serious studies that show the opposite result," he added.

He said the results are also consistent with the huge literature on the so-called Flynn effect showing that IQs are modifiable across as well as within generations and have been rising since the beginning of the 20th century.

"The results of this study are problematical for the chorus of psychologists and educators still locked in century-old thinking that IQ is genetic, stable and non-modifiable," Sternberg said. "As, for these individuals, the belief in the stability of IQ is more a matter of religious faith than of scientific inference, I doubt they will be persuaded."

More information

For more about IQ, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

 

12 comments

  • Foxtrot Uniform  •  4 months ago
    You mean the more you go to school the smarter you are. WOW
  • TerryD  •  4 months ago
    The ugly truth is, those who care about IQ are interested in nature, not nurture. You could separate them. Wisdom comes from experience and experience says, "Do you really want to silence the liberals?" Wisdom honestly trumphs IQ.
  • Grey Lady  •  4 months ago
    It's too bad so many Americans are anti-education. As a country, we need to set higher educational standards and have consequences for students who don't reach them. Norway has an excellent educational system. Both parents and the school work to make sure the student knows what is expected and can meet those standards. This study shows that it has an impact beyond the classroom.
    • Yahoo user 4 months ago
      They key words are that both parents and the school work to make sure the student knows what is expected. Americans aren't anti-education but pouring more money into an educational system in which the parents are failing by not mandating that their children do their homework and pay attention in class is ludicrous. It all comes back to the family.
    • sodagrrl 4 months ago
      And having more years of formal schooling enables people to do what, exactly, that they cannot do without a stupid piece of paper?
  • Larry  •  4 months ago
    Just like lifting weights, exercise you brain and it gets stronger. The financial elitists fight education for the masses because they don't want their sheep smarter then they are. The religious elitists fight education because they don't want their sheep know they are being lied to.
  • toonces8181  •  4 months ago
    CENSORED!
  • TTown  •  4 months ago
    Sounds like another hour or two everyday of classroom would be a good thing. I would like to see how well they do broken down into social distinctions of single parent vs 2 parent, parental involvement in the kids education, etc. Lots of factors to consider, but another hour or two in the class room wouldn't kill anyone...
  • Harry  •  San Jose De Guaymas, Mexico  •  4 months ago
    Did the researchers consider that people who take lots of tests become very good at taking tests? I took many tests in the Air Force and soon I became rather good at it and the Air Force decided to give me a test they use for pilots. I passed the test. Unfortunately, I was an elisted person and at best might fly a helicopter or be a loadmaster. Had I found the answer to dramatically increasing my IQ? Very doubtful, I just learn how to do well at tests.
    • Foxtrot Uniform 4 months ago
      A lot of IQ tests have similar / same questions, if you keep taking them you will do better on them.
  • sodagrrl  •  4 months ago
    Uhhh - maybe more schooling teaches people how to take tests better, too? No one really knows what the heck IQ tests are really measuring. They measure how well you can take an IQ test, and that's about all you can say. The definition of "intelligence" has been debated for many years, and will be for years to come.
  • OuterLimits  •  4 months ago
    I think all this study shows is that IQ is not a very useful measurement of anything.
  • 2012 America Loses. Again ...  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  4 months ago
    These liberal democrats are brilliant. Just brilliant I say. Amazing intellect. I'm always astounded!!!
  • anacrusis  •  4 months ago
    How much was spent reachng that brilliant conclusion?
  • Skeptic  •  4 months ago
    You can't live on high IQ, but you can live on low IQ. It's government money for life.
    • ILuvCats 4 months ago
      Most people with a high IQ have a good job, and most people with a very low IQ live below the poverty line. Way to kick people who are already down!
    • toonces8181 4 months ago
      Cats, you can have a high I.Q. and unless you are somewhat power-hungry, you don't necessarily end up with that "good job". Frankly, I never desired to be anyone's "boss".