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    Joined: Aug 2008
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    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-813718797291141718#

    I found this on Google Video last week & finally sat down to watch it. It reminds me of the "Seven Up" series, although focusing on a group of child prodigies.

    The other episodes are available at the Channel4 (BBC?) website, but they are not available outside the UK. frown
    http://www.channel4.com/programmes/child-genius/episode-guide/series-2



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    Ah yes, I watched some of these a while back. Incidentally when i go to that google video link, the related videos on the right also gives me links to the other programmes. (Channel 4 isn't BBC, btw, it's a private channel, but both it and the BBC seem to systematically try to stop their programmes being seen outside the UK. Not sure why, since the marginal cost would surely be very small.)

    I remember very mixed feelings about the programmes I saw; some of the children and families seemed very well adjusted, others much less so, and although it seemed that the programme makers were trying to be sensitive I did wonder, for example, about the filmed announcement to one of them of his IQ. Joan Freeman was advisor to the programme and while she's obviously an expert I've had inchoate reservations about her approach for a while: she comes up in the "two year old admitted to MENSA" type news stories and I tend to wonder what benefit she thought there could possibly be to anyone in that kind of stunt... but obviously, without knowing the full facts, it's little more than a feeling on my part. Still, gut feel is that I wouldn't want her having anything to do with my child.


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    I think Freeman is figured more prominently in Episode I, which I couldn't find elsewhere. I remember at least one story with Freeman featuring a toddler "genius." This story made it into the international press. I was still in relative darkness regarding GT, so I didn't follow closely... but I remember thinking that the poor child couldn't possibly benefit. I imagine that Freeman is trying to raise awareness, although I wish she could find another way to do it.

    This episode (#2) followed three of the kids from the first episode. There was only about a one-two year gap between episodes, but it was more than enough to demonstrate the incredible growth these kids experience.

    I think that the parents & families were just as interesting as the "genius" children. A couple seemed particularly overwhelmed by their children, and that hits awfully close to home (at times, anyhow). While I don't see an acclaimed composer or child-novelist in our son, I sure saw a bit of his anti-parental behavior in one of the boys.

    In the end, the show provided a bit of perspective for me. And reminds me that no matter the degree of challenge we face, it could always be greater.


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