The world has seen a few true geniuses over time. Some of the best-known brains are, of course, Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking. Could a third emerge from today’s young generation of thinkers?
A good memory is important for children to learn and retain new information in school and at home. In fact, according to psychologist and author Tracy Packiam Alloway, “working memory is linked not just to learning (from kindergarten to college), but to decision-making in everyday activities.”
Thanks to the largest and oldest high-IQ society in the world, Mensa, it has become possible to know the IQs of many children and trust me, African American kids are not left out.
As a non-profit organization, Mensa is open to people who score at the 98th percentile or higher on a standardised, supervised IQ or other approved intelligence test.
According to the organization, which provides a forum for intellectual exchange among its members in more than 100 countries around the world, these are the Black kids geniuses with the highest IQs:
Ramarni Wilfred
A British teenager, Wilfred’s IQ score is higher than Einstein’s, Hawking’s, and Bill Gates’. He scored 162 on his intelligence quotient test.
The 16-year-old East London schoolboy is one of the 50 world’s smartest teens and was only 10 years old when he wrote a paper on the philosophy of fairness. His unusually high essay score qualified him to take an IQ test at Birkbeck University.
Ramarni Wilfred has been invited and accepted into Mensa and hopes to attend Oxford University and become an astrophysicist.
Anala Beevers
At just four years old, New Orleans native Anala Beevers possessed an IQ of over 145. By 10 months old, she could identify and point to each letter of the Alphabet.
Reportedly, by 18 months, Anala was reciting numbers in Spanish and English, and by her fifth birthday in 2014, she could recite the names of every North American state on the map and every capital.
The names of planets and dinosaurs are her current preoccupation, says the Daily Mail.
Alannah George
Four-year-old schoolgirl Alannah George is the UK’s second youngest Mensa member with an IQ score of 140.
She is obsessed with words and numbers and taught herself how to read before starting school.
George, a class pupil from Iver, Buckinghamshire, prefers reciting the alphabet and times tables to singing nursery rhymes.