Skip to main content

THE MOST INTELLIGENT TRIBE OF BLACK AFRICA: IGBO PEOPLE OF NIGERIA WERE RANKED AS THE MOST INTELLIGENT TRIBE OF BLACK AFRICA IN A US ACADEMIC REPORT.


THE MOST INTELLIGENT TRIBE OF BLACK AFRICA: IGBO PEOPLE OF NIGERIA WERE RANKED AS THE MOST INTELLIGENT TRIBE OF BLACK AFRICA IN A US ACADEMIC REPORT.

Intelligence Quotient (IQ) represents a person's thinking ability compared to the average for their age. IQ tests begin to assess this by measuring short- and long-term memory. They also measure how well people can solve puzzles and recall information they have heard and how quickly.

According To A US Academic Report In 2015, The Igbo Tribe From West Africa Were Ranked As The Most Intelligent Tribe Of Black Africa. Beautiful, Intelligent And Creative. A Rich Tribe With Immense Values. The Most Intelligent Tribe In Africa.  Assuming that they consist of a population of approximately 30 million people and are perceived to be more intelligent than neighboring populations in the African regions in which they are concentrated, I would wager that they should have an average IQ in the 90-100 range, perhaps in the low-medium 90-95.

God Bless The Igbo Tribe. Igbo people of Nigeria were ranked as the most intelligent tribe of black Africa in a US academic report in 2015.

Besides the recent report of a number of Igbo students in the USA and Europe excelling at spectacular levels in academics - such as the case of Augusta Uwamanzu-Nna and Harold Ekeh who both scored admissions into all the eight Ivy League Schools in the USA, the intelligence of the Ibos (Igbos/Ndigbo) of southeastern Nigeria has been a subject of many discussions. Below is a US Academic report that addresses the subject using facts, figures, numbers, and charts (see Images/Charts) below.

"If only environmental factors were responsible for the different IQs of different populations, we should expect to find some countries where Africans had higher IQs than Europeans. The failure to find a single country where this is the case points to the presence of a strong genetic factor.” Richard Lynn. "Regression would explain why Black children born to high IQ, wealthy Black parents have test scores 2 to 4 points lower than do White children born to low IQ, poor White parents.” Arthur Jensen.
 
The fact that black immigrants to the United States have shown achievements that are superior to native black Americans has been a phenomenon studied since at least the 1970′s. At first it was just the Caribbean blacks who were a subject of this unexpected outcome. As black Africans kept immigrating into the US, they showed even higher levels of achievement than the native blacks. Many scholars theorized on the reasons for these differences, from Thomas Sowell’s proposal that this disproved the validity of discrimination against native blacks as an explanation for their underachievement (Sowell, 1978), to other scholars who suggested that these immigrants were just the most highly driven members of their home countries as evidenced by their willingness to migrate to a foreign country (Butcher, 1990).
 
What most of these theories failed to predict was that the children of these immigrants would also show exceptional achievements, especially academically. It is only in recent years, as the immigrants have stayed long enough to produce a sufficiently high number of offspring, that it has been observed that they are over-represented among high academic achievers, especially when compared to native blacks, particularly at very elite institutions. What has been missed in the IQ debate is the full logical implication of these achievements: they have effectively nullified any arguments for a racial evolutionary explanation of the well-known IQ test score gap between blacks and whites.

Even more fatal for the racial hereditarian side of the debate has been the corroborating data of school children performance in the UK, particularly when the black Africans are divided into their respective nationalities and tribal ethnicities, as reported in the latter section of this article.

Comments