What does sky-high SAT score mean for 12-year-olds? Bright, bright futures.

A study looked at adults who, at age 12, performed at the highest levels on the SAT and found they were very accomplished. (AJC file photo)

Credit: Maureen Downey

Credit: Maureen Downey

A study looked at adults who, at age 12, performed at the highest levels on the SAT and found they were very accomplished. (AJC file photo)

An underplayed benefit of standardized testing is the identification of remarkable intellectual potential. While many parents believe their children are academically gifted, we're talking here about the most rarefied ranks, the kids who score in the top 0.01 percent.

A new study looked at adults who met that criteria as 12-year-olds based on SAT scores and found, that by age 40, their life accomplishments were extraordinary. For example, 37 percent had earned doctorates, 7.5 percent had achieved academic tenure and 9 percent held patents.

Here is the release on the study:

Students who score extremely high on standardized tests as adolescents often become high achievers in adulthood, a new study has confirmed.

Researchers from Vanderbilt University who lead the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY) and the Duke University Talent Identification Program (TIP) looked at 259 TIP adolescent students who had scored in the top 0.01 percent (or top 1 in 10,000) for their age on above grade-level tests in the 1980s and 1990s.

This is approximately equivalent to scoring 700 or higher on the SAT-Math or 630 on the SAT-Verbal section, or both, before turning 13 years old.

They found that 37 percent of the students who met that criteria went on to earn doctorates, 7.5 percent earned tenure as college professors and 9 percent held at least one patent by the time they turned 40.

The researchers found that not only did the top .01 percent fare well against the general population, but also when compared to the top 1 percent of adolescent test-takers.

The research used Web-based search engines to collect information about the educational, occupational and creative accomplishments of these same individuals in adulthood.

“The findings here indicate that above-level testing at an early age is a helpful tool for identifying individuals with profoundly high ability who have the potential to make great contributions to society in adulthood,” the researchers concluded in their study. “Along with other factors (including opportunity, interest, etc.), the results of above-level tests can be used to identify individuals with great academic potential.”

The researchers say the study’s findings are a strong validation of prior studies conducted by SMPY, the longest-running study of gifted children in the world. Over the past 40-plus years, SMPY’s studies have shown that students tested and identified as gifted at an early age generally become high-achieving adults. Further, quantitative and verbal scores are predictors of the type of careers they are likely to pursue.

This latest study was authored by Matthew Makel and Martha Putallaz of Duke TIP, David Lubinski and Camilla Benbow of SMPY, and Harrison Kell of the Educational Testing Service, the world's largest private nonprofit educational testing and assessment organization.

“Duke TIP was an ideal partner for our most recent study because they have been collecting data since 1980 and they were able to pull comparable samples by age and ability,” SMPY’s Lubinski said. “Replication is so important and it’s not done often enough. I’m excited because this study confirms what we have learned about intellectual giftedness, and this makes our results that much more definitive.”

The full study is available for review in Psychological Science. APDF summary of study results is also available.

About SMPY: The  was founded by Julian C. Stanley in 1971 at Johns Hopkins University. Camilla P. Benbow and David Lubinski now co-direct SMPY at Vanderbilt's Peabody College of education and human development, where Benbow also serves as the college's dean. SMPY is near the end of a 50-year longitudinal study of five cohorts, consisting of more than 5,000 intellectually talented individuals, identified over a 25-year period (1972-1997). The aim of this research is to develop a better understanding of the unique needs of intellectually precocious youth and the determinants of the contrasting developmental trajectories they display over the lifespan.

About TIPDuke University Talent Identification Program (Duke TIP) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to serving academically talented youth. As a global leader in gifted education, Duke TIP works with students, families, and educators to identify, recognize, challenge, engage, and support gifted youth in reaching their highest potential. More than 2.8 million students have benefited from TIP programs and resources since 1980. TIP's talent identification, academic, and research programs now serve as worldwide models for the education of gifted students.

About Educational Testing ServiceEducational Testing Service is a nonprofit research organization affiliated with the College Board that focuses on advancing quality and equity in education for all people. Its team of researchers provides innovative and meaningful measurement solutions that improve teaching and learning, expand educational opportunities, and inform policy.