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dannyboy
25 Jun 2007, 07:27 AM
link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/britaineducation;_ylt=AsTPSvpIRzGJqCCyEGOhRLLtiBIF )
Fri Jun 22, 3:25 PM ET



A two-year-old girl with an intelligence quotient of 152 has become the youngest current member of British Mensa, the international society for highly-intelligent people, it said Friday.

Georgia Brown, aged two years and 10 months, was welcomed into the exclusive club after an assessment by a child psychologist, who was said to be "elated" as the findings were what would be expected for a five or six-year-old.

But the little girl, from Aldershot, in southern England, is still not the youngest member ever to join British Mensa. She missed out by six days to Ben Woods, who joined in the 1990s.

The previous youngest current member was a three-year-old boy with an IQ of 137, who joined in 2005.

Mensa normally only tests people over the age of 10 and a half but accepts younger children who are found to be within the top two percent of the population.

The girl's mother, Lucy, was quoted by the BBC News website as saying that she called in the child psychologist to test her daughter's IQ after spotting that she was a quick developer.

"It's fantastic. We're so proud as a family," she said.

Mensa, which is Latin for table, seeks to identify and foster human intelligence for the benefit of humanity, according to its website.

It also seeks to provide a stimulating intellectual and social environment for its members as well as to encourage research into the nature, characteristics, and uses of intelligence.

REMgirl
25 Jun 2007, 09:40 AM
"Georgia Brown, aged two years and 10 months, was welcomed into the exclusive club after an assessment by a child psychologist, who was said to be "elated" as the findings were what would be expected for a five or six-year-old."

Well, so what? She's almost three and she was assessed as being at a five or six-year-old's level? :rolleyes:

Unless she's composing sonatas or solving mathmatical equations, color me unimpressed.

Duemellon
25 Jun 2007, 09:55 AM
It's a shame she won't get to develop at her own pace & will probably have all this information poured into her so she's filled with other people's knowledge instead of getting it herself.

We get so excited about the possibility of the next Einstein that we down him before he's born.

lutz
25 Jun 2007, 10:14 AM
The previous youngest current member was a three-year-old boy with an IQ of 137, who joined in 2005.I'm sure you had to have an IQ of 148 or over to join...

Mensa, which is Latin for tableAye, that it is, but "mens" is also Latin for mind...

Anyway, aside from those quibbles with the article, good for her. I just hope she grows up into a down-to-earth, well-rounded individual.

Donyo
25 Jun 2007, 12:38 PM
I was tested at 156 when i was 4 years old, but I don't remember Mensa banging down my door to become a member. Maybe they hate Vermonters.

Kruschev
25 Jun 2007, 03:16 PM
I was tested at 156 when i was 4 years old, but I don't remember Mensa banging down my door to become a member. Maybe they hate Vermonters.

Well if I were on the Mensa board, I'd ask you to join. I love Vermont.

djudge79
25 Jun 2007, 03:21 PM
I'm sure you had to have an IQ of 148 or over to join...

i've read somewhere that you've got to be in the 98th percentile, or something like that, to qualify. that's 130-something by most test standards, which is nice and all, but not what most people would think of as 'genius.' and, for the record, i think a 2-year-old being the intellectual equivalent of a 6-year-old is pretty impressive (and probably obnoxious). put your average 2 y.o. next to your average 6 y.o. and behold. then think about how much development occurs during those 4 years.

Homsar
25 Jun 2007, 10:48 PM
This reminds me. I must apply for Mensa.

Duemellon
26 Jun 2007, 06:44 AM
This reminds me that IQ tests are bullshit indicators of the ability to understand culture than a measurement of capacity. And further reminds me that society is so fixated on intellegence but, ironically & predictably, don't leverage it in novel ways.

dannyboy
26 Jun 2007, 06:52 AM
Intelligence and wisdom are completely seperate things.

lutz
26 Jun 2007, 07:17 AM
i've read somewhere that you've got to be in the 98th percentile, or something like that, to qualify.Yeah it is. I just checked, and 132 on one scale is the same as 148 on another. When I was tested 5 years ago, I got 148, which was the lowest you could get and still be accepted. Ended up not joining anyway because I was only 13 and much happier hanging out with my friends than being "intellectually stimulated".