I went into the article thinking the guy would have a freakishly high IQ (160+) where I could maybe see the point, but instead was 125. The judges most likely scored higher than that—aren’t they feeling even slightly belittled at the suggestion that they’d be ineligible for law enforcement work because they’d find it too boring?
The weird part is that after being rejected as a police officer he goes off to work as a prison guard. The latter is way more boring. If he’s able to put up with that, he should be able to cope with the boredom of law enforcement.
Their explanation is that he would get bored and leave. I’m not surprised—I’ve been rejected for jobs more than once due to being too smart. (I’m not just boasting, it does seem relevant)
Court OKs Barring High IQs for Cops
An aspiring cop got rejected for scoring too high on an IQ test.
I cannot begin to understand why they would do that.
It may be worth mentioning that the article appears to be from 14 years ago. (Or it may not; for all I know the same policy is still in place.)
I went into the article thinking the guy would have a freakishly high IQ (160+) where I could maybe see the point, but instead was 125. The judges most likely scored higher than that—aren’t they feeling even slightly belittled at the suggestion that they’d be ineligible for law enforcement work because they’d find it too boring?
The weird part is that after being rejected as a police officer he goes off to work as a prison guard. The latter is way more boring. If he’s able to put up with that, he should be able to cope with the boredom of law enforcement.
Their explanation is that he would get bored and leave. I’m not surprised—I’ve been rejected for jobs more than once due to being too smart. (I’m not just boasting, it does seem relevant)