• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

6 years old with 176 IQ!

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
geniusx.jpg

Boy with 176 IQ is 1 in a million
By Cindy Kranz, The Cincinnati Enquirer
LOVELAND, Ohio — Pranav Veera can recite the names of the U.S. presidents in the order they served in office. He can say the alphabet backward. Give him a date back to 2000, and he'll tell you the day of the week.
He's only 6 years old.

VIDEO: Pranav knows his numbers
At first glance, Pranav is a typical young boy who is highly competitive at playing Wii video games and likes to play outside. A closer look reveals he's anything but typical.

Pranav has an IQ of 176. One person in 1 million has an IQ of 176 or above. Albert Einstein's IQ was believed to be about 160. The average IQ is 100.

When Pranav was 4-and-a-half, his parents noticed he seemed unusually intelligent while playing with alphabet sets. He could even recall which letters were certain colors.

"That kind of puzzled us," said his father, Prasad Veera. "You have to have not a normal memorization, but some other means of recall."

Now, he loves all kinds of alphabets.

"He loves to collect them, like different colors, different sizes, different materials," said his mother, Suchitra Veera.

The Veeras decided to have Pranav tested three months ago at Powers Educational Services in Hyde Park, Ohio.

"I said, 'Let's try it out, because he seems to do a lot of stuff kind of not quite normal for his age,' " his father said. "He tested 176."

He seems to have a photographic memory, so keeping Pranav engaged and learning is a big challenge for his family.

His mother and grandmother, Shanta Sastri, work with him at home.

They're guided by his focus and interests.

"The way to get him interested is to associate something with numbers, like presidents' birthdays … and when they came into office," his mother said.

"Once we introduced him to the idea, he was asking more and more questions, so we created a spreadsheet for him in Excel, and he keeps on asking us to add more types of information to it, like sort them in the order that they came into office, sort them in the order when they were born," she said.

In prekindergarten, his teacher had him do more challenging work, such as division and telling time. In kindergarten, his classmates are learning the alphabet and numbers up to 100. He's counting over 1 million.

"He's an amazing child," said Marci Taylor, his teacher at McCormick Elementary in the Milford School District. "He knows so much, yet he's probably more excited about learning than any child I've ever seen. He shakes with excitement."

Pranav knows so many incredible things, she said, but what's also impressive is that he's still a 6-year-old boy.

"He loves to go play at recess and climb on the monkey bars," Taylor said.

It's possible that Pranav might eventually have his learning accelerated, even by skipping grades, but his father said they would have to consider that with his social needs. "We want him to be as normal as possible," his father said.

"Right now, it's kind of early, and we can do a lot at home," his mother added. "We have to figure out what works best, because I think it's different for each child."Pranav draws his intelligence from both sides of the family.

His father has a Ph.D. and his mother has two master's degrees.

What does Pranav want to be when he grows up?

"An astronaut," he said without hesitation.

Truly, for Pranav, the sky's the limit.
 

takcheksian

Alfrescian
Loyal
We should invite this FT to Singapore to take the job of our million dollar ministars.

We only need to pay him peanut candies and he'll be happy, taking good care of our money.
 

po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
We should invite this FT to Singapore to take the job of our million dollar ministars.

We only need to pay him peanut candies and he'll be happy, taking good care of our money.

make sure he dun get his education in sg ...
 

Royston46

Alfrescian
Loyal
We should invite this FT to Singapore to take the job of our million dollar ministars.

We only need to pay him peanut candies and he'll be happy, taking good care of our money.

I beg to differ, high IQ doesn't mean one will do a great job of running a country...

Look at the people running SG now, high IQ maybe but low EQ confirmed...

All the losses from GIC and Temasek... I say they really outsmarted themselves this time round...

Hokkien saying: Kiang jiu ho, mai kay kiang...

:biggrin:
 

DerekLeung

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sometimes you get chopped first for being too smart !

People feel threatened and remove you first !

If one is too smart, one has to work alone !

Sometimes have to act stupid like Khaw Boon Wah to stay on the job !
And even spot a stupid hairstyle to keep his job !
 
Top