Analytics wrote:Yes, I think it is possible to increase your ASVAB score by studying for the test.
The above comments are two quotes from people who have more expertise in the area than I do about what the scientific literature says on the issue. Love them or hate them, they do have their fingers on a body of research to back up their claim.
If I understood what they were talking about in that God-forsaken webcast, Murray and Harris were talking about how if somebody studies for a particular test it will give them a boost, but that boost will wear out over time and their score will revert. It's also possible that studying for one particular format of IQ test will give little-to-no advantage for a different format.
Sam Harris, being Sam Harris, feels the need to argue that there is no better supported ideas in psychology than the bullet points he wants to say. He gives you a higher bar than "um, some research seems to back this up."
That said, the AFQT in particular is very strongly associated with educational achievement. This should be obvious because the ASVAB asks you questions that depend heavily on how well your schooling prepped you to answer them. Schooling, the depth and quality of it, is going to exert a very large influence on IQ if your measure of IQ is the AFQT. In this thread I've cited some research to back up that point. That's a separate question from, "how do differences in schooling in the actual sample explain differences in performance?" A lot of statistical games can be played depending on how you ask the question "does education improve IQ," so you should be really careful about what questions you are asking of the data, but I think there is a broad academic consensus that IQ can be made better by exposing people to practice on the mental tasks IQ tests, especially one that is scholastic, measure. This is intuitive. The contrary is an exotic claim. Since most people get
some schooling; however, you have to think about what you are measuring when you are measuring differences.
You're unwittingly making a case for massively defunding education, though. Look at an actual practice ASVAB test and think about what it means if educational exposure isn't a major determinant of how well a person does. What does that say about the value of an education? In addition to you citing noxious racists popular among white supremacists to back up your points, I think it's only a matter of time before you look like this:
