DOWNEY — With the end of another school year approaching, college sophomore Moshe Kai Cavalin is cramming for final exams in classes such as advanced mathematics, foreign languages and music. But Cavalin is only 10 years old. And at 4-foot-7, his shoes don't quite touch the floor as he puts down a schoolbook and swivels around in his chair to greet a visitor.
"I'm studying statistics," says the alternately precocious and shy Cavalin, his textbook lying open on the living room desk of his parents' apartment in this quiet suburb east of Los Angeles.
Within a year, if he keeps up his grades and completes the rest of his requirements, he hopes to transfer from his two-year program at East Los Angeles College to a prestigious four-year school and study astrophysics.
One of his primary interests is "wormholes," a hypothetical scientific phenomenon connected to Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. It has been theorized that if such holes do exist in space, they could — in tandem with black holes — allow for the kind of space-age time travel seen in science fiction.
"Just like black holes, they suck in particulate objects, and also like black holes, they also travel at escape velocity, which is, the speed to get out of there is faster than the speed of light," Cavalin says. "I'd like to prove that wormholes are really there and prove all the theories are correct."
First, he has statistics homework to finish. Later, he'll work with his mother, Shu Chen Chien, to brush up on his Mandarin for his Chinese class. Then it's over to the piano to prepare for his recital in music class.
His father, Yosef Cavalin, frets about the piano-playing, noting that his only child recently broke his arm pursuing another passion, martial arts. He has won several trophies for his age group.
"Finals are coming and everything and he cannot play with both hands. He'll just try to play with the right hand," he says. "I don't know how his grade's going to be in piano. It worries me a bit."
If past success is any indication, his son will find a way to compensate. Cavalin, who enrolled in college more than a year ago, has maintained an A-plus average in such subjects as algebra, history, astronomy and physical education.
College officials couldn't immediately say whether he is the youngest student in the school's 63-year history. Among child prodigies, Michael Kearney, now 24, is often cited as the world's youngest college graduate, having earned a bachelor's degree in anthropology from the University of South Alabama at age 10.
Cavalin's professors can't recall having a younger student in their classes.
"He is the youngest college student I've ever taught and one of the hardest working," says Daniel Judge, his statistics professor. "He's actually a pleasure to have in class. He's a well- adjusted, nice little boy."
Cavalin was an 8-year-old freshman when he enrolled in Guajao Liao's intermediate algebra class in 2006. By the end of the term, Liao recalls, he was tutoring some of his 19- and 20-year-old classmates.
"I told his parents that his ability was much higher than that level, that he should take a higher-level course," Liao says. "But his parents didn't want to push him."
Cavalin's parents avoid calling their son a genius. They say he's just an average kid who enjoys studying as much as he likes playing soccer, watching Jackie Chan movies, and collecting toy cars and baseball caps with tiger emblems on them. He was born during the Year of the Tiger in the Chinese zodiac.
Cavalin has a general idea what his IQ is, but doesn't like to discuss it. He says other students can achieve his success if they study hard and stay focused on their work.
His parents say they never planned to enroll their son in college at age 8, and sought to put him in a private elementary school when he was 6.
"They didn't want to accept me because I knew more than the teacher there and they said I looked too bored," the youngster recalls.
His parents home-schooled him instead, but after two years decided college was the best place for him. East L.A. officials agreed to accept him if he enrolled initially in just two classes, math and physical education. After he earned A-pluses in both, he was allowed to expand his studies.
"He sees things very simply," says Judge, his statistics teacher. "Most students think that things should be harder than they are and they put these mental blocks in front of them and they make things harder than they should be. In the case of Moshe, he sees right through the complications. ... It's not really mystical in any way, but at the same time it's amazing."
Chock another up for home-schooling! Time to get rid of these government schools. They fail time and time again.
With this boys level of intelligence, I am sure home-schooling had little to do with it!
Home schooling had everything to do with it. In the public school he would be in trouble. He would be bored to distraction by the requirements to teach to the dumbest kid in the class. I had the good fortune to have a fourth grade teacher that put me on a table in the back of the room. I could do any subject I wanted when I wanted as long as I took the tests and did not interrupt the class otherwise. This would not happen today. I spent the high school years going from room to room running the audio-visual equipment or in the darkroom or amateur radio room.
No, this kid is not a genius. Government schools are glorified day cares that engrain socialism into kids. If you look into home-schooling you'll frequently see kids that enter college at 12-14, normal kids, with parents that have had no formal training in schooling.
Government schools are glorified day cares that engrain socialism into kids.
Oh yes, that explains all the "screw you guys, I got mine" snobs in my classes.
In the public school he would be in trouble. He would be bored to distraction by the requirements to teach to the dumbest kid in the class.
Depends on your school district. While this kid is in a different leage (esp. if he goes through with studying a hard science major), I'd completed the material for the normal first two years of college, and had more than enough for a physics minor, by the time I graduated high school -- no homeschooling.
Of course there are crappy districts with lowest-denominator educations, but it's incredibly presumptuous to simply say "public school is teh suck, and home schooling rocks lots of socks" for trendily rebellious brownie points, ignoring the brilliant minds that came out of public school, and the socially maladjusted kids bred from home schooling.
I often worry when I read tstories like these that the children, though very intelligent, miss out on the little things that make life special. We only live once and a relatively short time at that so to totally bypass the wonderous years of childhood, this little boy IMHO is missing out on a huge part of life's educational process.
Yeah, I worry about these kids, too. I saw a Discovery Channel program that highlighted an Indian med-school prodigy. Sure, this kid is in a bunch of programs like martial arts and piano, but simply doing many things doesn't make one well-rounded.
for him, our current system works while it fails for so many. He's fortunate that his parents were willing to help him get to where he is. I believer there are far more children with his intelligence but instead of feeding their hunger we call them ADHD and give them drugs so they stay focused in class even when their minds are so far beyond it.
I has a friend who was told by the teachers that her son was terribly ADD. She got him an IQ test. 180 (the highest it could measure for his age). He was labeled as dumb when he was actually too smart for any of the teachers.
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