I'm new to Stack Overflow this month and I discovered PluralSight by creating my profile.
So I passed some tests and indeed we can ask the question of the validity and relevance of the results.
I think there is a misunderstanding about the nature of these Skills IQ tests.
Indeed, these tests that last a few minutes with 20 questions are not really tests of aptitude and knowledge in a technology strictly speaking.
These are intelligence tests in the area of the test theme, not ability tests.
For example, for C#, C++ and Java tests, it is not a matter of evaluating the technical level and the ability to be ready to program as a novice or an advanced in the language, it is in fact to measure the conceptual level and the ability to embrace the technology.
An IQ test will not measure knowledge itself in a field, it will measure the faculty of apprehending the concepts of this field. While a minimum of knowledge is required, the test will essentially measure the mind's ability to adapt its concepts and not to use in the real world the objects themselves.
For example, I never wrote Java code. I have already worked on a Delphi program generating Java code from a physical model of data, but I have never made a software in Java, no line of code. I did, however, get a higher score than the C# IQ test with which I'm working for many many years and my first reaction was to be confused.
So I think that PluralSight's Skills IQ do not measure the technical level but the level of the concepts, and that these tests are an indication not of the ability to use a particular technology in terms of operational level, but of the ability to immerse yourself in this technology thanks to the abstract knowledge of this field and of neighboring domains you already know.
So it is not a question here of a practice in the use of artifacts of a technology but of mastering the concepts of these artifacts.
So these Skills IQ can indicate whether you are in front of an ignorant in computer science and in a particular field of a discipline (0-50), a beginner (50-100), an initiated (100-150), an advanced (150-200), an expert (200-250) or a master (>250), not in a technology itself but in its abstraction.
Intelligence Quotient @ Wikipedia