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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 3 of 10)
3-30-2011 @ 1:05PM
Sean said...This is not amazing by any stretch of the imagination. Having a natural gift is great and all, and kudos to him for having it, but being naturally gifted requires far less effort than someone who has to WORK to get to that level. Now THAT’S impressive.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:01AM
Tuula said...Fantastic, I can barely make a square root of a thing...
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3-30-2011 @ 10:05AM
Nathan said...This is a great story. Perhaps you should interest him in politics and help Obama do his job. And then after that, perhaps give him a star trek video to watch and help us travel at the speed of light. No I'm not being sarcastic. Do it!! :)
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4-02-2011 @ 7:27PM
websteroma said...more jewish lies, gotta love them jew psychopaths.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:07AM
cinismax said...Bill, I found Eistein's IQ to be 166
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4-09-2011 @ 8:23PM
caddopecan said...Which would make Einstein no smarter that 2 average persons, or about 100,000 goldfish.
5-13-2012 @ 4:11AM
Alazae Diamond said...; This really really amazes me.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:12AM
JB said...God Bless you Mrs Barnett,never let anyone tell you what your Child will be or do,that is for our Craetor and our craetor alone to know. God has a special road for all of us to travel. and he and he alone knows what is at the end of that road, God Blessed Jake with his gift an let no man interfer with that.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:14AM
J.C. Davis said...Ask your son to figure out away to separate Hydrogen out of water economically and save the world.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:12AM
phoenix said...another young prodigy heathen see if he can top jesus when he was 12 giving widom to the elders
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3-30-2011 @ 10:50AM
leojazzles said...Boy, are YOUR thinking skills twisted....sheesh....
3-30-2011 @ 10:16AM
Tom said...Let me tell you from personal experience, it isn't easy.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:27AM
Elton said...I think his IQ has been guesstimated at 200 or above. Half the students at MIT probably have IQs of 170.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:26AM
Michael said...My daughter is 6 years old, and she was diagnosed at a very early age of having Aspergers form of Autism. She is the smartest person in her kindergarten class here in Fishers In. Except for her hands sqeezing together rapidly when she gets excited, she's a normal little girl. I do wonder what she will be like in her teens and pre-teens, wil she be straight A's through school, or maybe even a leader throughout her school years, that seems to be the route she's going.
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3-30-2011 @ 4:05PM
sara christy said...Have you tried the Montessori method of education?
3-30-2011 @ 10:27AM
charles said...iam neptune i know who you are
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3-30-2011 @ 10:31AM
Angele said...I think humans still don't understand, that there is nothing wrong with these children, they simply are different and view the world in a different way to us, we just don't quite understand them. But they are truly amazing in what they can do with their brains. I think we should support these children and their parents and try to find more understanding in the way they are and how they see the world, not just feel sorry for them. Gosh I wish I could learn all those subjects in a week, and speed through highschool and university level work so quickly. I hope that children in the world like this are surrounded by love and support during their lifetimes.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:32AM
rogan1968 said...He can't be that smart his hats on backwards..Titsoon style!
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3-30-2011 @ 4:01PM
Lexi said...As a mother with a 10 yr old boy with Autism, who is non-verbal, I understand the emotional pain the parents must have been through. For all the parents with children with autism, look at Jake we should be proud.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:41AM
Linda said...As the mother of an adult child with Asperger's Syndrome I can tell you the real world is over-rated. Einstein was brilliant, but needed to be reminded to zip his pants and often got lost on the way home.With gifts like these, there are often problems. It's amazing that this mother was able to find a focus for her son, and find a way for him to pursue it. Very little is available for adults in our area, so my daughter has turned to writing and drawing.
As was noted in the article, our extended family is glitchy and eccentric. We have writers, artists, master wood craftsmen and some intreresting hobbyists.
Good for this family, maybe we'll see some amazing advances in mathmatics, hello space travel?
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