themusecalliope: Vulpes Vulpes (Default)
themusecalliope ([personal profile] themusecalliope) wrote2004-08-31 04:44 pm

Um...I told you so...

Ravenclaw
You are a RAVENCLAW!

As a Ravenclaw and as an NTJ, you are intellectual,
independent, and value excellence in yourself
and others. You are naturally curious, and can
usually see many sides to the same argument or
issue. You are driven to acquire knowledge and
set very high standards for yourself and
others. You excel at and enjoy strategizing,
planning, and focusing on the big picture. You
enjoy being challenged, and can accept
constructive criticism without taking it
personally. You are excellent at organizing
yourself and others.


Hogwarts Sorting Hat: Based on Myers-Briggs Personality Typing
brought to you by Quizilla

Odd Test

[identity profile] the-vig.livejournal.com 2004-08-31 06:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I also came out RAVENCLAW!

Have no idea why you have to answer all the identical questions, but it seemed to work

Yeah, Still Slytherin...

[identity profile] keeperofquills.livejournal.com 2004-08-31 06:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Slytherin. Although, I know one thing was rather off. Slytherins are NTPs it says. I am an NFJ with NFP leanings. Never a "T". Then again, maybe years of h*** can change a woman. :}

Slytherin
(NTP)You are a SLYTHERIN!

As a Slytherin and as an NTP, you are ambitious,
independent, and driven to achieve excellence.
You excel at strategizing and planning to
accomplish your goals, and set very high
standards for yourself and others. You are
confident, intellectual, and can be fiercely
competitive. You may not be concerned about
harmony or the importance of feelings, and you
often challenge authority and can be deeply
skeptical. You are sometimes seen as elitist,
and can be impatient with others who you
consider less competent than yourself.
However, you are also flexible, open-minded,
and ingenious, and you can be charming company.


Hogwarts Sorting Hat: Based on Myers-Briggs Personality Typing
brought to you by Quizilla

[identity profile] eucharistcrunch.livejournal.com 2004-09-01 05:41 pm (UTC)(link)
So why do you have to pick all identical answers, and why for a given question Q are there X number of questions for X1 answer and Y number for Y1, where X and Y may or may not be equal and X and Y are greater than 0? Are they making some kind of personality assumption based on the idea that if answer X requires you to pick twice, but answer Y requires 5 picks, that you will pick X because it's easier, unless you truly believe in Y--in otherwords you're using a perception of amount of work to try to weight the test.

By the way, I always suck at these tests and come out funny because I'm always curious about how the test works. I'm not the guy you want in a double blind study, 'cause I'll screw up the results because I'll try to figure out how it works.