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 5 of 10)
3-30-2011 @ 11:32AM
LES HENDRICKSON said...It's too bad he'll never get laid. Probably end up like Stephen Hawkings. Sad.
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3-30-2011 @ 1:36PM
Sally said...I'ts a known fact that the higher the intelligence, the less interest in sex, the lower the intelligence the more interest in sex.
He'll do just fine. He'll have other interests and not find the animal instinct that interesting at all times.
3-30-2011 @ 11:33AM
Mary Hares said...This lad is a gift from the Great Spirit to Its universe, with a mission to help explicate the ineffable algorithm of existence. I am grateful, and thankful that the parents are proving to be so excellent as nurturers of this gift.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:35AM
hank said...Somebody should slap that kid for scribbling inside the house. And if that is Autism, sign me up. There is no doubt he is very advanced- his parents should receive a gold star for seeking out his passion and running with it. Could it also be that people are so stupid now adays that anyone who is this smart is labeled as having a disability? NOW THAT IS BACKWARD.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:37AM
alexus said...i think it is amazin at leaast he is using his intellagence unlike some of the people in the world.
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3-30-2011 @ 11:47AM
Elyse said...The people on here who are asking if he is well rounded, etc, are kind of entertaining. How many engineers have you hung out with? Most of them are not well rounded. My fiance just finished his masters in Mechanical Engineering. He is incredibly educated, and extremely good at mechanical systems, advanced mathematics, and is a self proclaimed "spacial genius." Yet, I will use vocabulary that he is convinced I am making up, he thinks art is boring, and most liberal arts useless. Other than that he is pretty normal, athletic guy. But he is definitely on the more social and normal side of engineering. And ME's are more normal than electrical engineers, computer science, and math PhD's for sure. I think because their work isn't all theory.
The fact that this kid was able to find something he loves and excels at is everyone's dream! Good for him!
This video is giving me flashbacks to high school and college calculus, but I have yet to be super impressed. Sure he is 12. But anyone can memorize the f(x) and Udv notation. Show me some actual integration of complex functions, and not the simplified example.
That is the problem with professors! They show you these simplified examples using the shorthand notation, then give you an insanely complex function to actually integrate. When the integral of f(x) is three lines long it doesn't end up so nice and neat. Of course, I am sure they only showed the simplified version so most AOL users wouldn't be completely lost, but I want to see the good stuff! :)
From what I have seen so far, get this kid on a research grant and make him teach a few higher math courses, and he is good to go. He is honestly just as clear and well spoken as my calculus, linear algebra and differential equations professors. The latter of which was about 90, spoke directly to the board, and had handwriting that was impossible to read.
Plus you get to hear stuff like "We have Igor, we have the window, and we have 'back of the house' calculations!" :)
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3-30-2011 @ 12:48PM
Joe said...Liberal arts is pretty useless. Next time you eat out, as your waiter how their liberal arts degree worked out for them.
3-30-2011 @ 11:57AM
Richard Busic said...So with all this in print why was his theory of relativity not explained?
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3-30-2011 @ 11:50AM
Daniel E Conway said...Are you sure this boy is really autistic? An IQ score so elevated requires a broad and sophisticated ability to communicate (with a Psychologist), hardly an Autistic characteristic.
What was called Autism, in his case, may have been a passing phase of being "overwhelmed" by all that he could sense and grasp, all at once.
With greater acceptance by peers (creatively defined), his interactive skills may blossom considerably.
Have faith and patience!
DEC, EdPsych (Ret)
Glendale CA
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3-30-2011 @ 1:27PM
Kodiak said...Daniel, it is fairly typical of Aspergers. I have it, and I communicate very well in print, but verbally I am a mess. My ex-husband used to joke that I gained 50 IQ points in print! He was often amazed at the analytical papers I had written, because verbally I just didn't seem very coordinated. Aspergers is poorly understood, and composes a large spectrum of ability and behavior, but it is not uncommon to find very high IQs buried under a ton of social inadequacy. I grew up in the 1960's and the educators in my community were at a total loss as to what to do with me. Standardized testing put me off the top of the charts, but behaviorally I was out of control. Looking back, I would advise parents of children like me to emphasize small "obvious" behavior for their children to mimic. People like me will never really understand why people behave the way they do, but we can be taught to mimic that behavior, and that helps us interact socially and be more accepted by 'normal' people.
3-30-2011 @ 11:53AM
Wilson said...The Bible tells me all i need to know, thats what he should be reading if he wants to know all about anything. What he is saying is nothing but a theory, and thats, that.
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3-30-2011 @ 12:04PM
Richard Busic said...Come on Wilson, wake up! As an American you can stick your head in the sand as you wish but to imply someone else should makes you look like an idiot (with a slight possibility of being embarrassingly misguided).
3-30-2011 @ 1:03PM
ljsurf322 said...Are you KIDDING? Wake up and take a look around you! That computer you are using? Did your Bible give that to you? What about advances in medical science, to cure YOUR diseases and keep YOU alive, or the HOUSE you are living in...did your bible give all that to you? Would you prefer living in a cave? People had to go to school to learn how to provide you these things! Your comment PROVES what many of us sensible people believe...religion encourages stupidity and the uselessness of intelligence. What a incredible, blinded world you live in!
3-31-2011 @ 11:59AM
Wilson said...The Bible explains all about computers,medical science, and anything else you want to know, for instance in Job chapter 26 ver 7 it tells us God stretches out heaven over empty space and hangs the earth upon nothing etc, had you have read the Bible you would know all this. Read it, you will learn more than tou think.
3-30-2011 @ 12:10PM
lu said...There are alot of kids out there in Public schools whom are brilliant in one way or another; Unfortunately "Public Schools" Fail at educating or accomodating These types of kids! How do I know? My 10 yo son has been unchallenged in Public school since 1st grade; Until recently after years of talking to teachers about his needs were unwilling or care to excell him into the subject's he is very good at which is Science and mathmatics. As a 5th grader doing algebra he is still unchallenged. There is no system around here that helps those kids out! A parent can only do so much in a public school. Either public schools don't care or are restricted to how and what they can do for students; or maybe all they care about is getting a paycheck. Either way I feel "Public Education" Fails all children. It is definatley a disappointment to me
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3-30-2011 @ 12:05PM
kim said...Trippy..........maybe he should be in the Whitehouse!
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3-30-2011 @ 12:06PM
VimalaNowlis said...Many autistic kids are geniuses in other areas. They don't live in our world, that's why they can't function here. They live somewhere else, that's why they excel at things in their world.
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3-30-2011 @ 12:11PM
RonMor said...i give Jacob's parents tremendous credit for their insight, courage and patience for finding ways to help their son. Any child that has gifts, social problems, etc require all the help they can get. And I know that it is not easy but never-the-less requires a huge amount of effort to help their children find their place in society. My daughter is Down's and never will be able to make the same type of contribution Jacon can, but we value her gifts of compassion, unconditional love and infectious smile just as much as those gifts that Jacob was blessed with.
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3-30-2011 @ 12:15PM
Silgarno said...I have found that when people state pity for a person of remarkable abilties (such as saying they will have a lonely life, or that they will surely suffer other serious deficits in their life, presumably to "make things fair" and to bring that special person down to a level beneath your average person), that they are really just jealous.
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3-30-2011 @ 1:14PM
ljsurf322 said...You are right on. Truly sad. These people forget and take for granted the remarkable accomplishments mankind has made, and the fact that they were made by the few blessed ones like this kid. We need more like him in our world.