Boy Genius, 12, Has Higher IQ Than Einstein, Developing His Own Theory of Relativity
Filed under: In The News, Amazing Kids
Kristine Barnett won't soon forget the "most devastating day in the life" of her son.
Jacob, called "Jake," her then 3-year-old, had recently stopped talking and had been diagnosed with autism. One day, she dropped him off at a gymnastics class, and, when she returned to pick him up, Barnett, 36, says she found all the other students sitting in a circle, while Jake was curled up and cowering in a corner.
"It was the day I knew Jake would never do sports or be like other kids later in life," the day care provider and mother of four tells ParentDish. "My heart broke, thinking he would be trapped inside this forever and never be able to talk to us."
But today, 12-year-old Jake is studying electromagnetic physics at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and has an IQ of 170, higher than that of Albert Einstein. And he's astounding university professors by developing his own theory of relativity -- they're lining him up for a Ph.D research role, Barnett, of Noblesville, Ind., says.
When Jake was 8, he jumped from fifth grade to college after teaching himself all the high school math classes -- calculus, algebra, geometry and trigonometry -- in one week and testing at college-level mathematics, Barnett recalls.
Recently, the boy has embarked on his own expanded version of Einstein's theory of relativity. Barnett sent a video of his theory to the renowned Institute for Advanced Study near Princeton University.
She tells ParentDish she fears that because Jake "learns differently than traditional students," he will become bored with university-level courses and says she hopes "someone will take him on as an apprentice."
Barnett, married to Michael Barnett, a store manager for T-Mobile, says she drives her pre-teen son 50 minutes each way to the university. He calls her from his cell when it's time to pick him up at the end of the school day.
"We knew he was gifted, but we never realized to what a degree," she tells ParentDish.
Jake's classmates also marvel at the scrawny little kid in the front row of the calculus-based physics class he's taking this semester, the Indianapolis Star reports.
"When I first walked in and saw him, I thought, 'Oh, my God, I'm going to school with Doogie Howser,' " Wanda Anderson, a biochemistry major at IUPU, tells the newspaper.
Barnett says the journey has not been an easy one.
By the time Jake was 1 1/2, he was reciting the alphabet backwards and forwards and calculating the volume of his cereal box in his head, she tells ParentDish.
But soon after, at 18 months, she says he completely stopped talking and withdrew emotionally. A battery of physicians diagnosed him with autism, and later Asperger's syndrome.
Barnett says it was then that the family settled on a mission: "to help our son and to help other kids like him." The Barnetts held a small fundraiser in a friend's garage and founded MyJacobsPlace.com.
The Barnetts and MyJacobsPlace supporters have turned a dilapidated building into a recreation center, where children with autism and their families gather for movie nights, parent support groups, social gatherings and other events. The foundation has helped hundreds of families across Indiana and Ohio through its awareness and sports programs.
"We were so afraid Jake would be withdrawn from us forever, and so we set out to find out what was the spark that could light him up," Barnett recalls.
For Jake, that spark turned out to be astronomy. As a 3-year-old, Barnett says, he loved looking at books about stars, and so the family spent a lot of time at a nearby observatory and planetarium.
"He could teach himself to read, but couldn't answer a simple question like 'What did you do today?" she says. "But he loved the planetarium and astronomy, so I knew I had to figure out how to build on that. I called the university and practically begged a professor to let Jake audit a class and sit in the back. I was so afraid that he would lose himself in the autism. I was desperate."
That determination paid off.
So far, Jake is the only member of his immediate family to have these rare abilities, Barnett says.
"But my family and my husband's extended family all are quirky," she tells ParentDish. "My grandpa was an inventor and my sister was a child artistic prodigy, and everyone is entrepreneurial on my side of the family. We've never had normal desk jobs."
Looking ahead, Barnett says she doesn't know what the future holds for Jake, but she has learned some valuable lessons for other parents when it comes to focusing on "what your child can do, instead of what people tell you he can't."
"I'm thankful that Jake has become the person he is and feel that, for all children with autism, we need to find the place where there is a little spark inside them," Barnett says. "If we had listened to all the people that told us our son would always be in special ed, and would probably never escape the isolation of autism, how sad would that be?"
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ReaderComments (Page 2 of 10)
3-30-2011 @ 9:53AM
Stephen Turner said...But Gregg, what is "real life" but what we make of it as creative and dynamic beings? What is real for you and I may be complete hogwash for someone with a different set of cultural and spiritual values. We need to be very aware and careful to remember that all people are not living the same tried and true reality and lifestyle. Thank God for that diversity. All peo[ple contribute something important to the whole. We need appreciation for everyone of them who are born to us here on planet earth.
3-30-2011 @ 9:55AM
warrencoons said...I wish the best for the kid but what good is super intelligence if you can't function in the normal world?
3-30-2011 @ 10:15AM
Carl Johnson said...Gregg --
What do you consider "real life"? I hope it goes beyond animals just eating and having sex.
3-30-2011 @ 10:53AM
Marc said...Actually Ben, I read elsewhere that Jake has a girlfriend, and so probably functions quite well socially. _ And gregg, I would hardly describe his exposition of 'Itegration by Parts' as "rambling". _ Just because you may not fully appreciate his work, or because you may feel intimidated by his genius is no reason to assume that his life is lacking in any way. _ That smacks of petty jealousy.
3-30-2011 @ 11:46AM
Jude said...It is a lonely life, but his family is helping him be part of the outside world. Not an easy task. Parents have to make it happen. I am the mother of 2 autistic sons ages 22yrs and 23yrs. We (as parents of autistic children) have to continue to find the doors to open for our kids.
3-30-2011 @ 1:24PM
ice said...Greg
It is rather apparent that you are extremely below this child's level. I would bet you are nothing but a body with no purpose. This child has a gift he was performing Calculus at 8 years old I bet you still can not spell that at your age.
DK
3-30-2011 @ 4:09PM
thadea said...Who knew, engineers, doctors and lawyers lead lonely lives. This kid will be a success
4-02-2011 @ 12:44PM
Heidi said...Most children with Aspergers don't care about social lives. People need to start thinking differently about them. The rate of Autism is 1 in 110. People need to get used to the fact that these kids think differently then neuro typicals....they have a different set of needs.In the end these kids will be the ones who find the cure for cancer, the energy crisis etc.
3-30-2011 @ 9:39AM
Bill said...I was disappointed that the article didn't give Einstein's IQ, so I tried to find it. All I could find was that IQ tests are a relatively recent development, and that Einstein never took one. So how does anyone know that this very gifted young man's IQ is higher than Einstein"s?
Reply
3-30-2011 @ 10:44AM
Rae said...I just found a site that listed it at 160. Who knows how valid the site is.....can't always believe what you read online.
3-30-2011 @ 10:46AM
mikekojima1 said...Einstein had a remarkable memory and recall ability plus several planes of sub-conscience thinking capability, which allowed him to analyze and hypothesize off the data he absorbed. This child appears to have a very strong memory and recall plus several conscious levels of thought above the evident sub-conscious ones. The conclusion that he has an IQ higher than Einstein is an assumption but a logically accurate one.
I wish him all the best in life, which will be difficult as there are many out there who would love to capitalize on his abilities and may his parents and friends have the wisdom to help in the social areas where his hyper-intelligence can often be a drawback.
3-30-2011 @ 9:40AM
DUANE said...My son has aspergers also. We have the same fears that Jacob's mother has/had. Our son, Jake - 12 also, isn't a prodogy but is a smart kid. When he is tought in a style that works for him, he gets "A"s. When taught traditionally, he barely passes. Public schools, although they have really done their best to help, are crushing him. We have finally found a state funded school in MN that specializes with kids on the spectrum. Please, oh please let this be the ticket that will let him be who he can be and be comfortable and confident while finding himself.
Reply
3-30-2011 @ 11:21AM
Debra said...Can you possibly tell me the name of such a program? I have a son with Asperger's or so I have been told who tested out at 159 IQ but is having the worst time getting the grades he needs to pass high school because of his attention issues.
Thanks so much.
3-30-2011 @ 3:19PM
JJ said...I don't think the boy in this article has asperger's. I think he has Einstein Syndrome. The children with Einstein Syndrome are ALWAYS mis-dignosed with different types of Aspergers. People claim that if they have a high IQ with Aspergers they have Einstein Syndrome, but new studies have shown that isn't the case. Einstein Syndrome is not a form of austism at all. The different is the delayed speech, problems with toilet training and being very strong willed. The delayed speech tends is from the brain being overwhelmed with the amount of information being processed in the part of the brain that deal with the "math/artistic" functions. Very few Doctors know what Einstein Syndrome is and do not have the background to dignose it or to understand it
. Einstein syndrome is the following:
Close relatives in analytical occupation (engineer, scientist, mathematician)
Close relatives who are musicians, sometimes professionally
Close Relatives Who talked late
Parents have high education level (59% four years of college)
Individual Pattern
Majority are boys
High IQ
High analytical and/or musical abilities
Extremely good memory (to photographic)
Unusual concentration and absorption in what they are doing
Highly selective interests with achievement in some areas and ineptness in others
Precocious ability to read and/or use numbers and/or use computers
Late in socializing with their peers
Delayed Speech Development (Two years and up for full sentences)
27 % of boys dislike meeting new people
Late in being toilet trained
Fascinated with mechanical things
Like building things
Like putting puzzles together
Strong-willed
Thomas Sowell wrote a great book about this called; The Einstein Syndrome and Late talking children. The 2nd book shows more case studies. There are recent studies by neutrologist whose research seems to be backing his theories.
3-30-2011 @ 9:40AM
Stephen Turner said...I have a cousin who is autistic but very intelligent as many autistic and Asperger's children are. I remember before, back in the 60s, these children were properly diagnosed with special needs they were hustled around like cattle with the so called normal children in our fast pace herd mentality and lost forever. Now with newer techniques and methods we are able to identify them early on and engage them so that their talents can emerge as opposed to becoming lost in the shadows of mental breakdown and decay within a system that both misunderstands and rejects them as strang, nerdy and unacceptable.
Reply
3-30-2011 @ 9:42AM
Sunday said...His mother is doing the right thing - allowing her son to expand on what he CAN do. She's focusing on the positive. And oh, what a positive it is!!!! Everything happens for a reason.
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3-30-2011 @ 2:57PM
CWII said...Interesting. Einstein, aside from being a brilliant physicist and mathematician, was incompetent socially and entirely unable to perform many everyday tasks that the average person takes for granted. Mr. E held a driver's license for less than 6 months before it was revoked permanently due to his inability to operate and navigate a vehicle. He just couldn't do it.
Still, being gifted at math would be nice.
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3-30-2011 @ 9:48AM
Sunny said...Whether Einstein ever had an IQ test or not, may have been an error on "AOL 'news' ", but to me this is incidental. This 12 year old is a wonder. To have accomplished what he has since he was an infant is a true wonder. [Maybe he's a reincarnation of Einstein. (that was only meant in humor, NOT disrespect)]. This boy has an unimaginable future. Good Luck and may God continue blessing you Jake.
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3-30-2011 @ 9:54AM
Stephen said...Why think of his being a reincarnated being seen as offensive by anyone. In some cultures if you don't understand the principle of rebirth you are the outsider.
3-30-2011 @ 9:54AM
Roberta said...This is a wonderful story, not only of a gifted chjild, who might have "been lost in a typical school system, but of an amazing MOTIVATED MOM!!! I expect that this child was cowering in a corner, because he needed a teacher all his own, like his motiveated MOM!!! Horray for the Bennet Family. They teach us all so much about "early learners." Some see these didderently-abled learners as gifted, some see them as a pathology!!! As an art therapist, I find we have to find the golden key to open the potentials of every child.... May every child be a wanted and loved child, living to her/his fullest potentials!!!
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