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Top 30 Genius Kids Who Beat the System

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Top 30 Genius Kids Who Beat the System. You might be astonished to hear about the smartest kids in the world who have gone against all the odds and rules to do some of the things that are only perceived […]

Top 30 Genius Kids Who Beat the System. You might be astonished to hear about the smartest kids in the world who have gone against all the odds and rules to do some of the things that are only perceived to be expert affairs, and they have got the attention of the world. They are beyond normal. This 2020, get ready to know about the top 30 genius kids who beat the system:

 

Video: Top 30 Genius Kids Who Beat the System

 

 


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Phoebe Cai

A 15-year-old high school genius, Phoebe Cai is already engaged in research at a collegiate level, assisting in the data analysis of a research project at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. This past fall, Cai placed eighth in the Math Prize for Girls at MIT and was a bronze medalist at the Math Prize for Girls Olympiad.

 

Video: Top 30 Genius Kids Who Beat the System

 

 


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Isha Jain

By sixth grade, this kid tackled college-level work. At 16, Isha was challenged to know more about how human limbs and growth spurts developed. Isha approached the problem by studying bone growth in zebrafish fins. The journal Developmental Dynamics published with a cool win of $100,000 scholarship prize.

 

Eric Delgado

Instead of working with dangerous pathogenic bacteria, he focused on the common E. coli. One of Eric’s teachers helped Eric contact researchers for supplies and advice. Researchers were generous: One suggested lab techniques to avoid hazardous chemicals; another offered a plant compound known to disable pumps in other bacteria.

 

 


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Tadewos Abiye Getachew

This 17-year-old teenager and his teammates recently placed 1st in his sub-city’s science fair for developing Cognitosoft, a software program that aims to introduce students to local Ethiopian languages. The bright side is Getachew scored in the 99th percentile of Ethiopia’s National Examination and placed 1st in the Gibson School Systems World Math’s Day competition.

 

 


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Inderjit  Kaur

She led a team in several successful robotics competitions, including winning the gold medal in the International Symposium on Robotics and Intelligent Sensors in 2012. Her team’s nanny robot was designed to monitor a baby’s status using sound and temperature sensors, which would activate functions such as rocking the baby in a swing or contacting parents based on the child’s cries. The ultimate fact is she just beat the education system and done something to be amazed at! Really a true Reddit story.

 

 

Saheela Ibraheem

She was accepted into Harvard University, which makes her among the youngest students ever to attend that school. Also, she was accepted at 12 other colleges, including MIT, the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, Brown, Princeton, Columbia, and the University of Chicago. In the end, Saheela chose Harvard, based on her seven-year-old brother’s advice.

 

 


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Joey Hudy

At only 16 years of age, this genius child has already won a number of awards for his engineering creations, the most recent of which was for creating a solar-powered computer in the Sun Valley Solar Ultimate Challenge. Hudy is currently completing his high school math and science track at Herberger Young Scholars Academy at Arizona State University.

 

 


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Nur Muhammad Shafiullah

He holds the record of being one of the students from Bangladesh to compete in the International Mathematical Olympiad and in the International Olympiad in Informatics. Outside of Olympiads, 15-year-old Shafiullah works at math camps in Bangladesh and is a moderator of a Bangladesh Mathematical Olympiad online student forum. This is hilarious!

 

 

 


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Kensen  Shi

The most amazing kid won the top individual prize for the national Siemens Competition in Math, Science, and Technology in 2012. Shi placed 6th in the Intel Science Talent Search, has competed in a number of US mathematical Olympiads, and has a passion for playing the piano, twice winning the National Piano Audition from the National Guild of Piano Teachers.

 

 


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Raghav Sood

Raghav Sood taught himself HTML, CSS, and JavaScript at the age of and focused on web development before transitioning to mobile platforms. He has been invited to attend Google’s Annual Developer Conference. 15-year-old. Sood is the founder and CEO of Appaholics LLC, and in July 2012 he published “Pro Android Augmented Reality.

What if a creepypasta story comes to your mind but the reaction is not up to par? You will be astonished to know the next number.

 

 


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Lawrence Sun

is a 16-year-old junior from Oregon who will matriculate to MIT this fall, forgoing his high school graduation; this is not anything funny. Yes, MIT! Not only that, Sun captained his team in the 2013 Winter Online Math Open, which placed first out of 119 competing teams. Sun plans to major in either physics, computer science, or mathematics at MIT.

 

 


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Farrell Wu

Wu’s insatiable thirst for knowledge led him to read through the encyclopedia while waiting for his parents to pick him up from school. The interesting fact is that last fall, Wu placed third in the Philippines Mathematical Olympiad at the age of 12. Brilliant.org matched Wu with a mathematics professor from the University of Michigan for private tutoring sessions to study undergraduate-level linear algebra.

 

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Jack Andraka

He designed a sensor that searches for a chemical in blood to help doctors easily and quickly detect the disease. Close to 200 scientists rejected his request for lab space until he convinced a researcher at Johns Hopkins University to be his mentor. Jack earned a handful of awards at the Intelntel International Science and Engineering Fair, a win of $75,000.

 

 


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Marian Bechtel

She invented a device, a repurposed land mine detector, which uses sound waves to determine where explosives are located. Marian said the invention surfaced in her mind when she hit certain notes on the piano and observed the strings of a nearby banjo would vibrate. The amazing fact is her project earned her a spot as one of Popular Science magazine’s Top 10 High School Inventors of 2012.

 

 


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Marko Calasan

He currently holds 12 Microsoft certificates and one Cisco certificate, receiving his first certificate at the age of six. After he’d passed the exams, Microsoft presented Marko with DVDs and games. In 2010, Marko wrote a book for the pre-installation, installation, and post-installation process of Windows 7.

 

 


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Jacob Barnett

Jacob is a top master’s student, working towards a Ph.D. in quantum physics. The wonder boy graciously tutors fellow college classmates after class hours; he is a popular guest at study & review sessions. Jacob’s mother Kristine Barnett jokingly notes, “I flunked math. I know this did not come from me.”

 

 


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Shree Bose

She performed important research on the cancer drug, Cisplatin. This outstanding achievement won her first prize at the 2011 Google Science Fair and gave her the opportunity to present a TED Talk about her work. Shree has also been recognized as one of Glamour magazine’s “Young Amazing Women of the Year.”

 

 


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Colin Carlson

If you are Colin Carlson, you’re 16, and you’ve earned two bachelor’s degrees, a master’s degree, and you’re working on a Ph.D. Oh, and now, you’re interning in the Office of Policy for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The teen prodigy won the Truman Scholar, a $30,000 scholarship toward graduate studies.

 

 


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Moshe Kai Cavalin

Working hard must be part of his mantra because Moshe enrolled in college at eight and earned his first of two Associate of Arts degrees by age 11, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade point average. Now 15 years of age, he’s a UCLA graduate along with graduates ten years older, with a bachelor’s degree in math.

 

 


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Ainan Celeste  Cawley

At seven years and one month of age, he passed O-level chemistry exams normally taken during the latter high school years. In 2008, he became the youngest student to study chemistry at tertiary level at a polytechnic school. In 2010, Ainan’s family moved to Malaysia for a less-rigid higher education for the young whiz kid.

 

 


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Sitan “Stan” Chen

The 2011 win followed Sitan’s win in 2010 at the same competition. Sitan managed a team that shared the $20,000 prize for solving a math challenge that reportedly stumped mathematicians for 70 years. His double win set a record for Sitan as the first student in the 13-year history of the event to receive back-to-back Siemens Competition national awards.

 

 


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Nick D’Aloisio

Nick, a programming and algorithm whiz kid, started coding at age 12. Now one of Yahoo’s youngest employees, he was not even born when Yahoo started up in 1994. He instantly became one of Britain’s richest teens after he sold his news-reading-and-summarizing app, Summly, to Yahoo for an estimated purchase price of $30 million.

 

 


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Kathryn DiMaria

At 12 years of age, Kathryn convinced her parents to let her buy and begin restoring a 1986 Pontiac Fiero, using $450 in babysitting money. With her dad and uncle as her restoration partners, she’s even learning how to rebuild a car engine. Kathryn’s work earned her an invitation from General Motors to attend the 2013 Detroit Auto Show and hang out with two female engineers from the original Fiero team.

 

 


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Kelvin Doe

At just 11 years old, he started scouring trash containers and collecting scraps of metal and electronic parts. Eventually he gathered enough pieces to create mini generators. Totally self-taught, he fashioned together an amp, a mixer, and enough auxiliary equipment to launch a one-person radio station. In fact, his first trip from his native Sierra Leone took him to MIT.

 

 


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Tim Doner

English, French, Wolof, Hausa, Arabic, Russian, German, Yiddish, Hebrew, Pashto, Italian, Farsi, Chinese, Turkish, Indonesian, Swahili, Dutch, Xhosa, Hindi. He now speaks 23 languages, in varying degrees of excellence. They all take a certain amount of effort and motivation. Every language has its own aspects and beauty, he mentioned. One infinitely talented person to be in the top chart list.

 

 


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Santiago Gonzalez

At age 12, while in the sixth grade, Santiago became a full-time college student. As a junior at the Colorado School of Mines, he is expecting to earn his bachelor’s degree in computer science and electrical engineering by age 16 and his master’s by 17. Luckily, they developed a course of study to nurture his gifts.

 

 


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Hou Yifan

Born in Xinghua, China, in 1994, Yifan is a chess prodigy. Today, she is the Women’s World Chess Champion—she first won in 2010, at the age of 16, making her the youngest World Champion of either sex in history. Today, she rates as the strongest female player in the world according to the FIDE scoring system and is the youngest player in all of the top categories, male or female.

 

Adam Holland

In 2008, Adam Holland, together with his younger brother Jonathan, brainstormed moneymaking ideas that would help pay for their little sister’s tuition at a private school. He decided to launch a business they both would enjoy. After some informal market research, Adam founded AJ’s Hawaiian Iceez, a shaved ice dessert company.

 

 


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Nolan Gould

When most 14-year-old teens are moving from middle school to high school, Nolan Gould has not only starred on a hit TV show but has graduated from high school and is starting college. With an IQ of 150, this rare young actor is a member of Mensa; he’s also earning popularity and praise for his role on the award-winning show.

 

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Jason Li

He won the top award and $4,000 in prize money from a San Francisco-based email, social media, and event-marketing company. Online viewers were asked to vote for their top 10 favorites. Business and tech executives, including Vertical Response CEO Janine Popick, judged the top videos. As part of his win and based on his free time, Jason also got a trip to New York City to attend 2013 TEDxTeen.

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