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Genius
2 year old girl smarter than Stephen Hawkings
« on: 06/23/07, 18:04 »
Two-year-old 'Matilda' becomes youngest ever girl in Mensa
By DUNCAN ROBERTSON - More by this author »
Last updated at 23:01pm on 21st June 2007
Source: dailymail.uk
Her parents knew Georgia Brown was bright. After all, she could count to ten, recognised her colours and was even starting to dabble with French.
But it was only when their bubbly little two-year-old took an IQ test that her towering intellect was confirmed.
Georgia has become the youngest female member of Mensa after scoring a genius-rated IQ of 152.
This puts her in the same intellectual league, proportionate to her age, as physicist Stephen Hawking.
According to an expert in gifted children, Georgia is the brightest two-year-old she has ever met.
Parents Martin and Lucy Brown have always regarded their youngest child as a remarkably quick learner
She was crawling at five months and walking at nine months.
By 14 months, she was getting herself dressed.
"She spoke really early - by 18 months she was having proper conversations," Mrs Brown said.
"She would say, 'Hello I'm Georgia, I'm one'. She was also putting her shoes on and putting them on the right feet."
Georgia was so perceptive that after one outing to the theatre to see Beauty and the Beast she solemnly informed her parents: "I didn't like Gaston (the villain). He was mean and arrogant."
Struck by the similarities between her daughter and Matilda, the title character in the Roald Dahl story about a gifted child, Mrs Brown began to worry about Georgia's future education.
Originally posted by dgtempe
I wonder what kind of IQ test they would give a baby?
Just wondering,
Originally posted by johnsky
I seriously doubt the education system has anything lined up that could keep this one challenged...
Originally posted by masterp
baaah, I was speaking as an adult at 12 months old...this means nothing, we have to see how it will develop.
[edit on 28-6-2007 by masterp]
Originally posted by uberarcanist
I had 154 at age five, it's easy to be smart when you're young, now it's a mere 140.
I had 154 at age five, it's easy to be smart when you're young, now it's a mere 140.
Originally posted by KTK
No doubt she will sit somewhere neatly on the autism spectrum.As usual the parents will go out of their way for the child not to learn any social skills. Ive seen it time and time again with pushy "baby genius' parents. The children end up information regurgetators,unable to think for themselves with inept social and living skills.
Conditioning at its finest,let the babies be babies.