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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 4 of 10)
3-30-2011 @ 10:39AM
BUDZAN66 said...If you watched the video, the indefinite integral of xcosx is actually xsinx+cosx+C, not xsinx-cosx+C.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:42AM
Bernard G. Lyford said...I have to ask this for myself. Was the test given this and others the exact same test Einstein took in his day?
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3-30-2011 @ 10:46AM
tractor said...Not so fast ! A new Theory ?
What was wrong with the old one ?
They are good in math, as a model for reality.
But , put him to find something about cancer and then become no smarter than a tractorist. Ask if he can tell us about global warming !
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3-30-2011 @ 10:49AM
susie said...My question is how is he in the parts of his life that do not involve math? Is he at all well rounded in his academics? How is he socially with children his own age? Most child prodigys have real problems in the "real world" because they cannot socialize as "regular" people do. Being smart is awesome but it can be rather lonely.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:51AM
Don Ruppel said...This kid is terrific, who knows what scientific breakthroughs he might accomplish in his lifetime that will improve all our lives. My only problem with this article is that maybe the author should go back to math class. She said "By the time Jake was 1 1/2, he was reciting the alphabet backwards and forwards", then in the next sentence says " But soon after, at 18 months, she says he completely stopped talking ..." . 1 1/2 and 18 months are the SAME !
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3-30-2011 @ 10:54AM
John Aviles said...Einstein NEVER took an IQ test! So, how can you write that? Secondly, ALOT of Einstein's theories are starting to prove to be INCORRECT!!!
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3-30-2011 @ 1:43PM
Neil said...Please, please please, just name one. Just one. Please.
3-30-2011 @ 7:00PM
Len Robertson said...Hmm. Twelve year genius old devising his own theory of relativity. Two points: currently there is only one bonafide genius in the United States: Bert Rutan.
Second: we don't need a second theory of Relativity, especially since the current one denies the obvious. UFO's are real and they aren't from anywhere in our solar system.
Why evidence do I have for each point I make. Simple enough. Bert Rutan has turned the problems of space reentry and aircraft. Metallurgy on their heads. Hundreds of thousands of aircraft engines have spent untold billions on space craft reentry, making the spacecraft slam through the atmosphere like missile war heads.
Rutan said, "you all have it wrong" and proved it in October of 2004. Many are still in shock seven years later while the smarter remainder wait breathlessly for his next work: the VSS Enterprise.
Second point: John B Alexander in his book UFOs: myths, conspiracies and realities begins his definitive tome with the brief sentence "UFO's are real" and backs it up with 273 pages of footnotes drawn from various government agencies. If the boy genius could pinpoint where Einstein got it wrong, that would be one thing, but I don't think that's what the author of this bogus blog meant.
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3-30-2011 @ 10:55AM
chckpope said...What kid isn't a genius at 12? We don't get stupid until we get over 30, just ask any 16 yr old. These people are obviously new parents.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:09AM
Julie said...Actually, I think it is sad. He has completely skipped his childhood and can't possibly relate to regular people.. I wouldn't wish that on anyone.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:00AM
colleen said...He says "you can do integration by parts in many scenarios" but he is dead wrong!! I can't do itegration by parts in any scenario.
That is one thing I know that he doesn't! lol
Smart kid.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:01AM
bob said...Bet he likes the show The Big Bang Theory.
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3-31-2011 @ 11:37AM
Maria Rosalia said...To all this comments that people said about this genius boy, is only one word " JEALOUSY " Please, It's always healthy for our state of mind to read about positive things like this.
BRAVO JACOB.!
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3-30-2011 @ 11:07AM
ileney said...His symptoms were very typical of children with autism and all the people on this board thinking something else was at play are simply wrong. Both Bill Gates and Einstein are believed by manyh to b on the Spectrum, though they were never diagnosed. Children with autism are both more prone to being intellectually gifted, particularly in math and science, AND, when autism is severe, more likely to be mentally retarded. This may seem like a direct contradiction but it is not. Many autistic children develop aphasia, where they are unable to express what they are thinking. At the same time that the centers of the brain that involve facial recognition, speech, motor planning, muscle tone, and social functions may shrink, other parts of the brain sometimes grow larger- sometimes much larger, making them quite gifted in one or more areas. As for practical application, those making the comments here that nothing he does will make a difference in the real world are simply wrong. Computers in every home have made an enormous difference in people's lives. There are mathematical equations that, if they are solved, offer a million dollar prize to the solver. Why? Because believe it or not, solving them is expected to lead to much faster computers. Appreciating diversity means appreciating it in all its forms, not just religious and ethnic diversity.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:12AM
Mrs. E said...every now and then, a human will be born with a greater capacity to use their brain than the majority of humans who only use a very small portion and many, even smaller than that....it is akin to turning on a light and illuminating a broader spectrum....if scientist could understand how to stimulate this process in babies and perhaps before, the world wouldn't be riddled with so many idiots engaging in idiotic behavior...right now, war, drugs, violence, poverty, gangs, rape, etc..etc.. exist because of inferior people, with inferior minds..
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3-30-2011 @ 11:56AM
Lou said...This kid sounds like a savant...reminds me of the movie (forgot the name) of the "retarded" university janitor who was a mathematical savant.
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3-30-2011 @ 12:07PM
183 IQ said...In my humble opinion this boy's IQ is higher than 170, especially when viewed along with his ability to retain new information. I would be interested to see if he could equally learn new languages quickly which is my own specialty.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:20AM
Linda said...Just watched the video of this kid doing marth. I totally understood it. No seriously, what if he is just making it all up and its al just math gibberish?
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3-30-2011 @ 11:29AM
Melissaem said...This boy is doing remarkably well to have autism/asperger's. If all he can do is talk numbers the rest of his life, as a Mom that would be enough for me, knowing he has a passion to feel for something. I can see him teaching or being a research scientist, nuclear physicist, etc. Sweet boy.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:48AM
J. Lane said...I have a small library on Einstein, by himself and others. As I recall, Einstein as a child was considered backward and did not speak until age 4 or 5. Being "out there" in the world of genius often requires a connection to the physical world that, judged against normal interactive psychological tests, turns up Aspergers or autism. I have engineer friends who joke that to be an engineer is to be a functional autistic. Thus we "normals" bray our fears as criticism. Bravo to the parents, whose parental management of a monumental genius was not deterred by testing "norms". So much for normal.
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