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2-Year-Old Prodigy Joins 'High IQ' Club Mensa as Youngest Member Ever

2-Year-Old Prodigy Joins 'High IQ' Club Mensa as Youngest Member Ever

Yahoo2 days ago

At an age most children struggle to make it through the alphabet, two-year-old British toddler Joseph Harris-Birtill can already read full books.
He's now moving on to Morse code and the Greek alphabet, as well as showing an interest in the periodic table of elements.
Recognizing their son's exceptional abilities, parents Rose and David reached out to the British branch of Mensa for advice on nurturing Joseph's potential.
Not only is Mensa now giving the family support, they've welcomed the young lad into their community, officially making him the youngest-ever member of the world's oldest and largest high-IQ organization at 2 years and 182 days.
In 2023, Isla McNabb from Kentucky was welcomed into Mensa at 2 years and 195 days, after her intelligence was estimated to be in the 99th percentile.
To qualify, applicants either need to pass an IQ test or provide sufficient evidence to convince Mensa's board they belong in the top 2 percent of the population's smartest individuals.
Joseph demonstrated his qualifications from a very early age.
"It soon became clear that he was an exceptional little being – he first rolled over at five weeks, said his first word at seven months, and read his first book out loud from cover to cover at one-and-three-quarter years," Rose told Vicki Newman at Guinness World Records.
"By two-and-a-quarter years old he was reading out loud fluently for 10 minutes at a time, could count to 10 in five languages and could count forwards and backwards to well over 100."
By contrast, most newborns lack the motor functions to build head and neck control until around four months of age.
Linguistic development means children tend to utter their first recognizable word at around 12 months. Reading in a single language of any kind isn't typically expected until a child is about five or six years old.
While Joseph's achievements are extraordinary, this doesn't mean life is expected to be smooth sailing. Education systems are often better resourced to support students who aren't meeting prescribed standards than those who are well above average.
Anticipating the challenges involved with tailoring their son's educational and developmental needs, Rose and David contacted UK Mensa for guidance.
"I searched online for any further support available, and saw that Mensa offers resources and membership for highly able children," says Rose.
"We hope that this accomplishment can give him a sense of pride when he is older – it's a very unusual accolade and the credit is all his!"
True child prodigies are rare, a one-in-5-to-10-million event by some estimates, with the skills contributing to general intelligence emerging from a mix of genetic and environmental factors.
Whatever head start Joseph has in his academic interests, it's evident he has love and support to continue exploring the corners of his remarkable brain throughout childhood.
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Elizabeth Day Tried Everything to Get Pregnant. After 12 Years, She Stopped — and Found Meaning in Failure (Exclusive)
Elizabeth Day Tried Everything to Get Pregnant. After 12 Years, She Stopped — and Found Meaning in Failure (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Elizabeth Day Tried Everything to Get Pregnant. After 12 Years, She Stopped — and Found Meaning in Failure (Exclusive)

After 12 years of trying to get pregnant, Elizabeth Day decided it was time to stop — and what she realized next was unexpected. The 46-year-old British podcaster and novelist, who hosts the podcast How to Fail with Elizabeth Day, says she always knew she wanted to have kids. Growing up in a heteronormative family with two sisters and two parents, Day believed she was going to be a mother from the very beginning. "I don't think I ever questioned the fact that I would have children," she tells PEOPLE. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Day, who grew up attending an all-girls school, explains that she went on birth control when she became sexually active and was on the pill for 14 years before she stopped taking it after getting married to her first husband. 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"So I just want to say that to the person who is walking that path right now, there will be a way that you can find meaning again if it's not conventional parenting, and if it is and you do end up with a baby in your arms, I'm so so happy for you, and that is your path," Day says. "And I realize now that it's not mine." Read the original article on People

What made Mount Etna's latest eruption so rare
What made Mount Etna's latest eruption so rare

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

What made Mount Etna's latest eruption so rare

MILAN — Mount Etna, the volcano that towers over eastern Sicily, has again captivated the world with a spectacular show, spewing smoke and high into the sky. But the defining event of Monday's eruption was the more rare pyroclastic flow from the southwestern crater not visible from a distance. The volcano is Europe's most active, and the continent's largest. Etna attracts hikers and backpackers to its slopes while less adventurous tourists can take it in from a distance, most stunningly from the Ionian Sea. Etna's latest eruption caused neither injuries nor evacuations, but sent a group of tourists on its flanks running, as captured by video posted on social media with smoke towering in the background. Authorities emphasized there was no danger to the population, and the pyroclastic flow — a fast-moving mixture of rock fragments, gas and ash — was limited to about 2 kilometers (more than a mile) and didn't go beyond the Valle del Leone, or Lion Valley, which forms a natural containment area. Etna has been active recently, and this was the 14th episode since mid-March. The most recent pyroclastic flows with significant reach were recorded on Feb. 10, 2022, Oct. 23, 2021, Dec. 13, 2020 and Feb. 11, 2014, Marco Viccaro, president of Italy's national volcanology association, said Tuesday. After a 19-day lull, Etna began to erupt with lively explosive bursts of gas and ash followed by a mild lava flow on the eastern slope followed by a smaller flow to the south. At around 10 a.m. on Monday, Etna exploded with its first major, violent eruption of the year: lava fountains and a column of ash and gas rose several or miles in the air. The event climaxed around 11:23 a.m. when the pyroclastic flow, triggered when magma mixed with snow, traveled more than a mile to the Valle del Leone within a minute. By late afternoon, scientists said the event had subsided. Etna towers around 11,050 feet above sea level and is 22 miles in diameter, although the volcanic activity has changed the mountain's height over time. Occasionally, the airport at Catania, eastern Sicily's largest city, has to close down for hours or days, when ash in the air makes flying in the area dangerous. An aviation warning was put in place during the latest event, but the airport wasn't closed. With Etna's lava flows largely contained to its uninhabited slopes, life goes in towns and villages elsewhere on the mountain. Among the benefits of the volcano: fertile farmland and tourism. Inspiring ancient Greek legends, Etna has had scores of known eruptions in its history. An eruption in 396 B.C., has been credited with keeping the army of Carthage at bay. In 1669, in what has been considered the volcano's worst known eruption, lava buried a swath of Catania, about 15 miles away and devastated dozens of villages. An eruption in 1928 cut off a rail route circling the mountain's base. Barry writes for the Associated Press.

Search Initiated for Madeleine McCann After Almost Two Decades
Search Initiated for Madeleine McCann After Almost Two Decades

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

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Search Initiated for Madeleine McCann After Almost Two Decades

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