- Education. Students today are better educated than their ancestors, and education leads to higher test scores.
- Smaller families. In 1900, the average couple had four children; today the number is less than two. We know firstborns tend to have higher IQs than other children, probably because they receive more attention than their later-born siblings.
- Test-taking savvy. Today’s Children have been tested so often that they are test savvy: They know how to take tests and how to do well on them.
- Genes. Although smart couples tend to have fewer, not more, children, it’s possible that due to better education, tracking, and testing, those who do have the right genes are better able to exploit those advantages. Some genetics researchers also have argued that if two people of different intelligence mate, because the gene of the more intelligent mate is stronger, it wins out, meaning the child’s IQ will be closer to the IQ of the smarter parent.
- Do you believe people are really getting smarter? Why or why not?
- Which of the factors explaining the Flynn Effect do you buy?
- Are there any societal advantages of disadvantages to the Flynn Effect?
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