Harvard University does not have a specific IQ requirement for admission, as their selection process evaluates a range of factors beyond intelligence, including academic performance, extracurricular activities, personal essays, and recommendations. However, studies suggest that the average IQ of admitted students tends to be around 140, which is considered to be in the gifted range. It's important to note that many successful applicants also demonstrate exceptional talent, leadership potential, and unique personal qualities.
no, it's only average
According to the theory, the average IQ is 100 no matter how old you are. For a given individual, IQ is not something that you would expect to see go up (or down) with age as you would expect to see with things like height or weight, within certain age ranges.
Study More can help you get a high iq to go to Mensa.
My lay understanding of IQ tests is that 100 is considered the average, by clinicians, across age groups. I have also read that IQ scores can go up or down by, say 10 to 25, between testings and in different life stages. The conventional wisdom about IQ tests is that they measure generalized cognitive brain activity. For a typical individual free of brain disorders or brain injury, this "quotient" would not change very much no matter whether the subject was 5 years old or 75.
If you have an IQ of 1.45, you are severely mentally handicapped. In fact, scores do not go that low. On the other hand, if your IQ is 145, you are very, very intelligent.
Bill Gates went to Harvard University (dropped out)
yes, he graduated from Harvard in 1880
John F. Kennedy went to Harvard University (AB)
Harvard College, Wesleyan University
Harvard University
I mean how does she went to Harvard university by herself?
Lesley University, and if you go further north there is Tufts University.
Harvard University
Yes
Harvard university
no, it's only average
Michelle Obama attended Princeton University as an undergraduate, and then went to Harvard Law School.