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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 100
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 100 |
I'd like to start a thread discussing the educational paths of intellectually accomplished people, especially those who were accelerated. Hoagies has a list of grade skipped notables that might be of interest. It includes several more Nobel Laureates... http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/grade_skipped.htm-chris
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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,691 Likes: 1
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Posts: 1,691 Likes: 1 |
I was read Einstein's bio a while ago but I remember his verbal was not strong, average performance in those skills. I believe his scores, like Feynman were lopsided in his academic life.
And like Einstein, Feyman was a late talker also. Why is this an issue? I find it very interesting.
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Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 1,390
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Let me just say that as a chemist, this is SO not what I thought that thread title meant.  Me, too!
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Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 683
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Posts: 683 |
Don't know if being an occasional NPR Supreme Court commentator counts as "famous" but it did remind me of him this morning. Here's another example of someone who seems to have done just fine for himself after radical acceleration: UCLA Consitutional Law Professor Eugene Volokh. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eugene-volokh/
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Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 2,641 Likes: 3
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Posts: 2,641 Likes: 3 |
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/08/b...f-permanent-press-renown-dies-at-97.htmlRuth Benerito, 97, Is Dead; Made Cotton Cloth Behave By MARGALIT FOX New York Times October 7, 2013 Half a century ago, working quietly in a New Orleans laboratory, Ruth Benerito helped smooth the fabric of modern life. In so doing, she helped liberate people from hours of household drudgery.
A chemist long affiliated with the United States Department of Agriculture, Dr. Benerito helped perfect modern wrinkle-free cotton, colloquially known as permanent press, in work that she and her colleagues began in the late 1950s.
Widely available since the mid-1960s, wrinkle-free cotton is considered one of the most significant technological developments of the 20th century. For her role, Dr. Benerito was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2008.
Dr. Benerito died on Saturday at 97.
[...]
Ruth Mary Rogan was born in New Orleans on Jan. 12, 1916. At 15, she entered H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, then the women’s college of Tulane University. She received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry there in 1935, followed by a master’s in the field from Tulane. She taught at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College in Lynchburg, Va., and at Newcomb and Tulane, before earning a Ph.D. chemistry from the University of Chicago. RIP.
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 2,856
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Posts: 2,856 |
Boo.
I saw the thread title and thought it would be about explosions.
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Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 2,641 Likes: 3
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Janet Yellen will be the first woman to head the Federal Reserve (upon confirmation). She was born in August 1946 and graduated from Brown in 1967 (I assume in May), when she was not yet 21 and earned a PhD in 1971 (at age 24 or 25). Apparently she skipped a year of junior high school by participating in a "special progress" program. http://www.businessinsider.com/janet-yellen-teenage-years-2013-10Janet Yellen's High School Friends Remember Her As Interested In Everything And Imperturbable ROB WILE Business Insider OCT. 9, 2013 Born in 1946, Yellen (who kept her name after she married) attended Fort Hamilton High School in the Bay Ridge neighborhood of Brooklyn.
We tracked down two of her high school classmates to talk about what it was like growing up with her.
"A classic '60s liberal," said Charles Saydah, a retired journalist who served with Yellen on the school paper (Yellen was editor in chief), and also ran in the same social circles. "She has great faith in education as an answer to a lot of societal problems."
Susan Grosart, a retired school committee chair in Massachusetts, said she met Yellen in 7th grade when they were both "special progress" students, a program that let gifted youngsters breeze through junior high in two years.
[...]
Grosart recalls seeing Yellen after they'd completed their first semester at college— Yellen attended Pembroke, the then-women's section of Brown University — and she mentioned she'd taken an economics class.
"She was like, on fire," Grosart said.
"She just loved economics from the first minute she started studying it. She lectured me continually about different economic topics, and you could just tell she'd found her passion."
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Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 2,641 Likes: 3
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Martin Karplus, who shares the 2013 Nobel Prize in chemistry, was born in 1930, graduated from Harvard in 1950 (age 20), and earned a PhD in 1953 (age 23). From http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev.biophys.33.110502.133350"Spinach on the Ceiling: A Theoretical Chemist’s Return to Biology" by Martin Karplus My junior high teachers [in Newton, MA] soon realized that I was bored with the regular curriculum, so they let me sit in the back of the classroom and study on my own. What made this experience particularly nice was that another student, a very pretty girl, was given the same privilege, and we worked together. The arrangement was that we could learn at our own pace without being responsible for the day-to-day material but had to take the important exams. Several dedicated teachers at Warren Junior High helped us when questions arose, particularly with science and mathematics.With this freedom, we explored whatever interested us and, of course, did much more work than we would have done if we were only concerned with passing the required subjects.
"To see what is in front of one's nose needs a constant struggle." - George Orwell
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Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 5,181
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Bostonian beat me to it! 
Schrödinger's cat walks into a bar. And doesn't.
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