— Education & cognition
Some college (no degree) — average IQ
Published data on cognitive ability by educational attainment consistently places some college (no degree) at an average IQ around 104 — the 61th percentile of the general adult population.
People who attended college but didn't complete a degree average modestly above the population mean — selection effect for those who got into and started college.
What this average really tells you
Education-by-IQ averages reflect selection effects, not causation. Higher-IQ people are more likely to be admitted to and complete higher levels of education, so the averages compound through filtering at each stage:
- Completing high school
- Being admitted to college
- Completing a bachelor's degree
- Being admitted to graduate school
- Completing a graduate degree
Each stage filters more strongly on cognitive ability, which is why average IQ rises monotonically with educational attainment.
What it does NOT tell you
An education-level average is not a cap or a requirement:
- There are many some college (no degree) scoring well above 119
- And many some college (no degree) scoring well below 89
- Lifetime achievement correlates with conscientiousness, motivation, opportunity, and circumstance — not just IQ
Compare with other education levels
- High school dropouts — average IQ 87
- High school graduates (no college) — average IQ 97
- Bachelor's degree holders — average IQ 113
- Master's degree holders — average IQ 117
- PhD holders — average IQ 125