“With my other children, if I didn’t want them to know what I was talking about, we could just spell things out in front of them, but Isla picks it up right away!" www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2023/11/mensas-youngest-member-started-spelling-at-age-two-760281
The best gift a child this young can have is the ability to read and find pleasure in it. She's going to go so far, I can tell :D Take her to the library!!
What is that? My son is very smart. Was reading a few words by 18 months and could spell out/recognize all the letters of the alphabet. He just turned 4 and reading basic books, can name just about every dinosaur and doing basic addition (math). Will stay up late reading books. Exceptionally interested in learning about everything and anything. Very social but sometimes has a hard time relating to other kids his age. I wonder if I should test him. My brother was put into gifted and my parents were going to test him for Mensa but never did so for unknown reasons. Am I missing something? Clearly I’m not gifted lol
Mainly when they get older they are no longer a child prodigy, and people stop being impressed, and they lose their identity they’ve had up to that point.
I was just barely a child genius, but enough to be trotted out to show it off, go to a special high school, start college early, etc. As soon as you hit the workforce, you’re nothing special, since there are so many other roads to doing a great job. It never affected me beyond a few cool facts and some funny stories.
@@pm7823 kids who are considered gifted in around elementary school or before tend to have a lot of pressure put on them to fulfill the title of gifted often and once they reach middle and/or high school it gets a lot harder for them to do things as well as they could and elementary school and get burnt out trying to try and it tends to lead to mental health issues to I think mainly anxiety and when they don’t do as well they’re compared to their past self and overall it’s a role they’re given when they’re young and they’re pressured to keep the role sorry if I explained that horribly and it happened to me to some extend but definitely not as bad as it could have but it might who knows because I’m not even in high school yet
I can't really judge since I'm only but a surface-level viewer but I just hope all of this praise and prestige doesn't it make her grow up to be egotistical or really depressed because she's told she's going to do something great but if she doesn't achieve "greatness" later in her life. I hope she can find success and purpose.
It's lonely at the top, but her parents seem lovely so she probably always feels like she has parents who support her. And in the future she can make friends or find a partner at mensa meetings or university.
I had two of them. The first I knew she could read ,she was 16 months. She told me to buy LUVS diapers instead of Pampers for her sister. I went home and kept showing her words and she knew all of them. She and her sister grew up reading to me. By kindergarten she was reading fifth grade level. On the testing the State does they both scored off the charts. I let them develop at there own level and never put pressure. Their Dad is an educator. They didn't have much trouble with other children, and they have turned out to be wonderful people excelling in their careers. I don't know why they were so intelligent but Im happy I had them.
as if. if this was legit, youd have a more compelling narrative. this is basically you just putting yourself in the spotlight even though it has nothing to do with you or your probably very average children. edit: you can't distinguish the correct grammar to use either so im finding this to be very doubtful. you dont have to prove anything to me or the internet so really if you are bullshitting, its more on you than anything.
@@neonbelly9491 You can't seem to use the correct spelling, punctuation, and capitalization either so that's not even a legitimate reason to attack someone. This is very believable as well. I didn't walk until almost 18 months, but was reading advanced at age five. I scored very high in state testing up through sixth grade. I've since rounded out to "smart", and not "brilliant", but I have never lost my passion for reading and have developed one for mechanical engineering and computers. Sharing is different from "putting yourself in the spotlight" as well, considering this is on a video about genius children. On top of that, it was said humbly, with clear love and pride for one's children. If you're a parent, I'm ashamed with your attitude. So please don't act like you know everything, and do stop being clearly jealous. Smart children exist. In fact, they're more common than you might think, but many education systems either limit or put down potential for incredible intelligence. So please try not to put anyone down simply because that was an area where you may not have been as blessed. Think on other blessings you have, I think it'll make a difference. Essay over, have a nice day!
She doesn't lorde over her genius on others. She doesn't show off, that's why she gets along with kids her age, that's very mature behavior (well, duh, she's a little genius). But, you're right, let her find her own path, don't push her. I've seen many videos on genius children, that as adults had done a 180, all because the parents wouldn't stop pushing. But, these parents don't seem like that; I'm glad.
I had the same experience with my son. It all started when he was 18 months old and could say the alphabet and recognize upper and lower case letters on flash cards. Whenever we stopped at a stop sign, he would yell S-T-O-P, stop! By age 2, his interest was numbers. I bought him a little calculator, and he would keep track of the price of groceries as I shopped. His doctor said the same thing to me as he did to the parents of this little girl - don’t push him! No worries there! I couldn’t hold him back if I tried! He continued to amaze me during his growing up years. Forward to the present, he is now 37 years old and is a senior programmer at the company he works for. I couldn’t be prouder!
Lots of kids this young shine. I did and so did many of my friends. It levels off with time and you either become humble and realize how little it matters or you suffer the golden child drug abuse rollercoaster.
That's my cousin, Isla!! I'm telling y'all she really is a smart cookie, she surprises me all the time with half the stuff she knows! When you get her and my nephew together, they are an unstoppable force lol! So she is definitely still a kid, sometimes I wish I had her energy and her smarts. Super proud of her and her family!! Way to go Isla!! Love you!
@crhollifield2012 i kinda disagree with you, as someone who worked with elementary schoolars taught preschoolers and babies that sat 1-2 years. This is completely developmental appropriate for her age. Typically in preschool you arent really reciting the alphabet with them because by the age of 3 they already have that down. They might need a bit of help in terms of their hand writting, but most of the lesson plans I had developed for children were going over environmental science topics and the natural world around you. Children aren't nearly as dumb as you perceive them to be and can even understand topics like insulation, the seasons, ect.
@Legendsays-ql6qe were you teaching them? Children have to be taught in a certain way. If you wait until their 6 or 7 to start teaching them things they're going to struggle to pick things up. The child in this video like most children was clearly taught abcs at the proper age, and is showing developmental appropriate capabilities imp
I'm not gonna lie, I was really waiting for the part where they tell us how a two-year-old learned dentistry at her preschool because I didn't realise it was just role-play
My oldest Daughter was like this. She knew all the letters of the alphabet the phonetic sound and word examples for each by 20 months, she checked out Homers The Iliad and the Odyssey when she was 7 and read it.... I e never read a word of it. Lol but my 7 yr old read the thing and the librarian was like ummm right, so what was your favorite character, and who was this and what did they do, etc... Asking her questions about the book and she knew all the answers. Now she's 14, and she's on track to Graduate with a technical college certification, her highschool diploma, and most if not all the credits required for an Associates degree before she turns 17. Never looked into Mensa or getting her IQ tested..🤷♀️ but she's been in Girls Scouts for 7+ years, this will be her 4th year in softball, first place team twice and 2nd place once. For Christmas she asked for set of mythology books from cultures around the world. And then my middle child 🤦♀️ who hates reading, math is confusing, and she wants to be a professional couch potato 😂. And my youngest, is slower with the reading, but extremely intelligent and at 3 could draw you a diagram of ceiling fans and electrical and can recall how refrigeration and compressors work. He wants to know everything and how everything works and is made .... He is 6 now and has always loved watching lengthy videos about human anyone like how the cardiovascular system works or how the ears work. Last week he wanted to know what's at the end of space, and how long would it take to get there and OMG, I can't even answer some of his questions ... We do a lot of looking up answers and watching videos and documentaries online. Lol
It does seems awesome and I certainly love how she learns so fast, but often it is important to spend the time together, especially with such a fast learning child. If I was a parent of a kid like her I would feel like time flies so fast with how quick she learns. Have fun learning, I hope you all do great. 🙂
My son is 21 months old.. he's along the same lines. He says ABC, recognize letters, counts to 15 etc, knows all shapes and colors. I even have video on my page showing it off. ❤
because people who acknowledge theyre in mensa as part of themselves usually a bit dense in the non pattern recognition departments and so they jus sad and narcissistic
I hope dearly if she continues to be interested in academics when she's older that she has a social life and a supportive community. Lots of geniuses unfortunately get mental health issues or depression or loneliness either from isolating themselves or not being able to find a work life balance. My mediocre brain can't relate 😅
Awesome. I love hearing about exceptional children. Makes me smile. By 8 months old my daughter was walking, talking, speaking entire sentences and had potty trained herself. She was reading books before she was one. She stood less than 18" tall when she began walking and appeared to be a midget because she talked like an adult. When she was in elementary school she was still too small to wear anything but onesies. She'll be 34 this year and is still less than 5 ft tall. Her mom and I put her through martial arts training from when she was 12 up till she turned 21, World Federation Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do. She got a job working at a bar as a waitress. A tall burley man tried to sexually abuse her while waiting tables, stuck a beer bottle between her legs near her privates and said something I can't repeat on here. She grabbed him up and held his face on the table, had his arm pinned behind his back and then whispered in his ear, "it takes less than 8 pounds of pressure to snap your arm in two right here", then squeezed his elbow. "If you touch me again you won't be able to use this arm ever again." She let him go and walked away. I'm so proud of our baby girl for restraining herself from putting him in the hospital, letting him off with a warning. Me, I would have not been so nice. She showed excellent control over her emotions and self defense skills.
I would imagine its not easy to be a small child genius. You will always be different than your peers of the same age, and it might be difficult for each to relate to the other. Just as a handicapped child is different and gets treated differently. I dont envy her at all.
It's just a gift. I'd rather admire a kid who knows he is incapable and always behind the class nevertheless keeps going step by step. She doesn't deserve any respect at all at least for now.
Some sadness in this. Main priority is for her to have a relatively normal life and that this "genius" does not severely interfere with her overall wellbeing
Get geniuses out of public education, get them two english to other language dictionaries, challenge the highschool diploma as soon as possible, then get into a paralegal course at a communuty college 😊
You can see how her parents really are trying to do exactly what's right for her development and if they weren't doing that, they wouldn't have found out she was a genius to begin with.
You must teach her multiple languages which are far from the native language such as Arabic, Spanish, Russian, Thai and read let her do her thing. Look up Terence Tao, when he was her age or little older he started learning maths and programming.
I had a similar experience as this. My son was 2 months old when he surprised me and started reading War and Peace out loud to me. At first I was confused, because I had not read the book myself and I did not understand a word my infant was speaking, but once I learned about gifted children....you get the gist of it.
no, 2 months is correct. . . I thought she was a genius like the child in the above video, but she seems not so smart now. . . I don't know what happened. . . I hope it was not my or my oaf of a husband's influence. . . Now we will be lucky if she can read fluently by age 20!
Guinness, my friend submitted a record almost 10 years ago for the most miles run in a 24-hour mile relay, providing more than the requisite evidence, and yet, despite the fact that his case is still open on the website, you never respond. Please advise. Thank you.
She outsmarted me. My IQ is anywhere between 115-125 only, still better than average though. But Isla? She started spelling words and playing an instrument 4 years earlier than me. (I learned organ at the age of 6 and read at the age of 3 and a half, with Vietnamese being my first language.)
THE WAY SHE'S ASSOCIATING WORDS WITH ACTIONS...heart/crossed arms....dog/pants.....COLORFUL/rainbow....monkey sounds/monkey Crazy. 100% she'll be average lol
My 18 month year old niece does all of this too but shes not reading yet she just memorizes the words and meanings. But thats normal for a 1.5 year old though i think.
Pretty easy to get your child ahead when there’s a stay at home mom with one child to fully focus on teaching her through writing and focus cards, gotta start them young and they say girls learn faster then boys
Make sure to document this and see if she actually has a photographic memory, most people only remember stuff when they’re after the year of 3 . Wished I had a photographic memory lol
No, no you don’t. I wouldn’t say I have an eidactic memory, but I do remember most things in photographic detail, as does my mom. It’s miserable. Consider that you also remember every bad thing that’s ever happened to you, a loved one, and the world around you. It’s not just all of the things people think, like never having to study for tests, and remembering everything you’d want to remember. Having a normal memory is so much better! I think you lucked out!
My son was reading at 18 months. He started teaching himself Russian at 3. He is hyperlexic and knows all the capitals of all the states and countries, their shapes , capitals, flags, and what years the flags were their certain ways. He knows all about the human anatomy and most about space. He is 8 now. He has been evaluated at the Belin and Blank gifted children's center and had a very high IQ. I can not get any assistance in moving him ahead in school. Please advise.
I'm not saying she isn't a very intelligent child. She clearly is. But Mensa, while it might be famous, is not recognized by any official agency because it's testing methods do not conform with official testing methods. Mensa is kinda like those things you see on social media "if you can guess riddle correctly, you have an IQ of 150", just a bunch of BS. Mensa just wants your $79/year and to sell you other merch. Also, Mensa's entry requirement (top 2%) is well below "genius". This girl probably does qualify for real high IQ clubs. But being in a club isn't going to help beyond getting feedback from other members. What would prob help her the most is her parents getting their hands on harder & harder lessons she can do at home. Some cost, but many are free.
Uhm get her to do honors math for 1 year homework everyday 3 new notes of pages everyday train everyday start learning to wrestle then become a professional wwe announcer.
My dad had an IQ of 160. He told me he skipped second grade and never had to study until he went to Purdue and then Cal Tech. he became an electrical engineer. He designed wepons for the military.
“With my other children, if I didn’t want them to know what I was talking about, we could just spell things out in front of them, but Isla picks it up right away!"
www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2023/11/mensas-youngest-member-started-spelling-at-age-two-760281
@@guinnessworldrecords how to apply for kids
Smart folks. Don't push her. Let her develop at her own pace. Just be there to support her needs.
Shoutout to the family for also being curious towards her learning capabilities and actually fostering an expansive enviroment
I agree 💯 and the parents didn't push she's just playing around being a genius ❤
The best gift a child this young can have is the ability to read and find pleasure in it. She's going to go so far, I can tell :D Take her to the library!!
She has a great Dad. So many blessings. I am excited for you all!
I pray she doesn’t go through what gifted kids often do
What is that? My son is very smart. Was reading a few words by 18 months and could spell out/recognize all the letters of the alphabet. He just turned 4 and reading basic books, can name just about every dinosaur and doing basic addition (math). Will stay up late reading books. Exceptionally interested in learning about everything and anything. Very social but sometimes has a hard time relating to other kids his age. I wonder if I should test him. My brother was put into gifted and my parents were going to test him for Mensa but never did so for unknown reasons. Am I missing something? Clearly I’m not gifted lol
Mainly when they get older they are no longer a child prodigy, and people stop being impressed, and they lose their identity they’ve had up to that point.
I was just barely a child genius, but enough to be trotted out to show it off, go to a special high school, start college early, etc. As soon as you hit the workforce, you’re nothing special, since there are so many other roads to doing a great job. It never affected me beyond a few cool facts and some funny stories.
@@pm7823 dont push him. let him do his thing naturally
@@pm7823 kids who are considered gifted in around elementary school or before tend to have a lot of pressure put on them to fulfill the title of gifted often and once they reach middle and/or high school it gets a lot harder for them to do things as well as they could and elementary school and get burnt out trying to try and it tends to lead to mental health issues to I think mainly anxiety and when they don’t do as well they’re compared to their past self and overall it’s a role they’re given when they’re young and they’re pressured to keep the role sorry if I explained that horribly and it happened to me to some extend but definitely not as bad as it could have but it might who knows because I’m not even in high school yet
I can't really judge since I'm only but a surface-level viewer but I just hope all of this praise and prestige doesn't it make her grow up to be egotistical or really depressed because she's told she's going to do something great but if she doesn't achieve "greatness" later in her life. I hope she can find success and purpose.
you mean 'doesn't' instead of 'does it', right
@@notmuchgd9842 Yes thank you for the correction that was kind of a big mistake lol
It's lonely at the top, but her parents seem lovely so she probably always feels like she has parents who support her. And in the future she can make friends or find a partner at mensa meetings or university.
Me- smart and miserable. 😂🖤
@@ANomAloUS_MonsTAiq ain't make you talented though
I had two of them. The first I knew she could read ,she was 16 months. She told me to buy LUVS diapers instead of Pampers for her sister. I went home and kept showing her words and she knew all of them. She and her sister grew up reading to me. By kindergarten she was reading fifth grade level. On the testing the State does they both scored off the charts. I let them develop at there own level and never put pressure. Their Dad is an educator. They didn't have much trouble with other children, and they have turned out to be wonderful people excelling in their careers. I don't know why they were so intelligent but Im happy I had them.
as if. if this was legit, youd have a more compelling narrative. this is basically you just putting yourself in the spotlight even though it has nothing to do with you or your probably very average children. edit: you can't distinguish the correct grammar to use either so im finding this to be very doubtful. you dont have to prove anything to me or the internet so really if you are bullshitting, its more on you than anything.
@@neonbelly9491 You can't seem to use the correct spelling, punctuation, and capitalization either so that's not even a legitimate reason to attack someone.
This is very believable as well. I didn't walk until almost 18 months, but was reading advanced at age five. I scored very high in state testing up through sixth grade. I've since rounded out to "smart", and not "brilliant", but I have never lost my passion for reading and have developed one for mechanical engineering and computers.
Sharing is different from "putting yourself in the spotlight" as well, considering this is on a video about genius children. On top of that, it was said humbly, with clear love and pride for one's children. If you're a parent, I'm ashamed with your attitude.
So please don't act like you know everything, and do stop being clearly jealous. Smart children exist. In fact, they're more common than you might think, but many education systems either limit or put down potential for incredible intelligence.
So please try not to put anyone down simply because that was an area where you may not have been as blessed. Think on other blessings you have, I think it'll make a difference.
Essay over, have a nice day!
@@neonbelly9491 oh please, stop being so sensitive. This is a PUBLIC COMMENT SECTION. You can even use punctuation correctly.
Random update on top of that: I've since scored at 140 IQ on an official test, which puts me on the level of "genius".
She doesn't lorde over her genius on others. She doesn't show off, that's why she gets along with kids her age, that's very mature behavior (well, duh, she's a little genius). But, you're right, let her find her own path, don't push her. I've seen many videos on genius children, that as adults had done a 180, all because the parents wouldn't stop pushing. But, these parents don't seem like that; I'm glad.
Shes a baby dude chill, of course shes not goikg to lorde over others she has no concept of being rude
I had the same experience with my son. It all started when he was 18 months old and could say the alphabet and recognize upper and lower case letters on flash cards. Whenever we stopped at a stop sign, he would yell S-T-O-P, stop! By age 2, his interest was numbers. I bought him a little calculator, and he would keep track of the price of groceries as I shopped. His doctor said the same thing to me as he did to the parents of this little girl - don’t push him! No worries there! I couldn’t hold him back if I tried! He continued to amaze me during his growing up years. Forward to the present, he is now 37 years old and is a senior programmer at the company he works for. I couldn’t be prouder!
Why didn’t he get a world record yet? Are you lying?
Lots of kids this young shine. I did and so did many of my friends. It levels off with time and you either become humble and realize how little it matters or you suffer the golden child drug abuse rollercoaster.
That's my cousin, Isla!! I'm telling y'all she really is a smart cookie, she surprises me all the time with half the stuff she knows! When you get her and my nephew together, they are an unstoppable force lol! So she is definitely still a kid, sometimes I wish I had her energy and her smarts. Super proud of her and her family!! Way to go Isla!! Love you!
wow. at 2 she is on the level of a 5 year old
More like a 6 or 7 year old
@@fitzwatson6202 yea, probably so honestly
I have a 5 year old niece and she can’t read yet
@crhollifield2012 i kinda disagree with you, as someone who worked with elementary schoolars taught preschoolers and babies that sat 1-2 years. This is completely developmental appropriate for her age. Typically in preschool you arent really reciting the alphabet with them because by the age of 3 they already have that down. They might need a bit of help in terms of their hand writting, but most of the lesson plans I had developed for children were going over environmental science topics and the natural world around you. Children aren't nearly as dumb as you perceive them to be and can even understand topics like insulation, the seasons, ect.
@Legendsays-ql6qe were you teaching them? Children have to be taught in a certain way. If you wait until their 6 or 7 to start teaching them things they're going to struggle to pick things up. The child in this video like most children was clearly taught abcs at the proper age, and is showing developmental appropriate capabilities imp
I'm not gonna lie, I was really waiting for the part where they tell us how a two-year-old learned dentistry at her preschool because I didn't realise it was just role-play
Yeah that was just playing you don't learn dentistry in preschool
You too?
Meanwhile me here capable of nothing 🤣💀
You are capable of writing comments 👍
@@marcelxd1633 LMAO
makes 2 of us lol
You are capable of getting more than 40 likes
oh ahahah
I congratulate him and his daughter, I hope she achieves the best
Kids won’t always say if something’s wrong out of fear of disappointment, consider this while raising her! She’s smart enough to think about that!
Hope the little girl also have a normal life and still be a a Genius
Let her also have her play and childhood to ❤
Reminds me of “a baby can read” commercials on tv. She definitely can read words at the baby ages, so incredible!
I have the pleasure of knowing this family! One of their other children was my best friend in high school. They are super cool and Isla is adorable.
Great kid, and obviously great parents!
My oldest Daughter was like this. She knew all the letters of the alphabet the phonetic sound and word examples for each by 20 months, she checked out Homers The Iliad and the Odyssey when she was 7 and read it.... I e never read a word of it. Lol but my 7 yr old read the thing and the librarian was like ummm right, so what was your favorite character, and who was this and what did they do, etc... Asking her questions about the book and she knew all the answers. Now she's 14, and she's on track to Graduate with a technical college certification, her highschool diploma, and most if not all the credits required for an Associates degree before she turns 17. Never looked into Mensa or getting her IQ tested..🤷♀️ but she's been in Girls Scouts for 7+ years, this will be her 4th year in softball, first place team twice and 2nd place once. For Christmas she asked for set of mythology books from cultures around the world. And then my middle child 🤦♀️ who hates reading, math is confusing, and she wants to be a professional couch potato 😂. And my youngest, is slower with the reading, but extremely intelligent and at 3 could draw you a diagram of ceiling fans and electrical and can recall how refrigeration and compressors work. He wants to know everything and how everything works and is made .... He is 6 now and has always loved watching lengthy videos about human anyone like how the cardiovascular system works or how the ears work. Last week he wanted to know what's at the end of space, and how long would it take to get there and OMG, I can't even answer some of his questions ... We do a lot of looking up answers and watching videos and documentaries online. Lol
Space has no end
There's a free example of their psychometric test on their website.
For the parents it must feel like (additional) miracles happen in front of their eyes.
This kid will be generous in the future
She's blessed with two loving parents.
she is set up for greatness. hope I live long enough to see it.
1:15if you’re not paying attention you would think she thinks house is start but if you look at the bottom left you will see the star card
My names also Isla but I learned how to read at the age of 2 almost 3 hopefully that Isla can keep her path going and keep learning more and more
She's a ✨MIRACLE!✨ Congratulations! 🎉
It does seems awesome and I certainly love how she learns so fast, but often it is important to spend the time together, especially with such a fast learning child. If I was a parent of a kid like her I would feel like time flies so fast with how quick she learns. Have fun learning, I hope you all do great. 🙂
While my neighbours child 3 years old able to do 4th class maths
My son is 21 months old.. he's along the same lines. He says ABC, recognize letters, counts to 15 etc, knows all shapes and colors. I even have video on my page showing it off. ❤
She could be the real life Jimmy Neutron
Great parents. I have a photographic memory aswell she will save many life's one day!
Mensa makes most people feel bad.
Feel bad? How so?
because people who acknowledge theyre in mensa as part of themselves usually a bit dense in the non pattern recognition departments and so they jus sad and narcissistic
I hope dearly if she continues to be interested in academics when she's older that she has a social life and a supportive community. Lots of geniuses unfortunately get mental health issues or depression or loneliness either from isolating themselves or not being able to find a work life balance. My mediocre brain can't relate 😅
That is so wonderful! I pray God's continued blessing on your whole family! And keep on having fun!
Is a fun to be with them. I got one here also at two. Maybe I have to get him assessed for this Mensa !
Not to knock the kid, but IQ is more of a measure of motivation and confidence than intelligence.
Awesome. I love hearing about exceptional children. Makes me smile.
By 8 months old my daughter was walking, talking, speaking entire sentences and had potty trained herself. She was reading books before she was one. She stood less than 18" tall when she began walking and appeared to be a midget because she talked like an adult. When she was in elementary school she was still too small to wear anything but onesies. She'll be 34 this year and is still less than 5 ft tall. Her mom and I put her through martial arts training from when she was 12 up till she turned 21, World Federation Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do.
She got a job working at a bar as a waitress. A tall burley man tried to sexually abuse her while waiting tables, stuck a beer bottle between her legs near her privates and said something I can't repeat on here. She grabbed him up and held his face on the table, had his arm pinned behind his back and then whispered in his ear, "it takes less than 8 pounds of pressure to snap your arm in two right here", then squeezed his elbow. "If you touch me again you won't be able to use this arm ever again." She let him go and walked away.
I'm so proud of our baby girl for restraining herself from putting him in the hospital, letting him off with a warning. Me, I would have not been so nice. She showed excellent control over her emotions and self defense skills.
The ultimate flex for the parents
incredibile
She's the real life Matilda!!!😮
Im not smart enough to have a kid as smart as that😅 she was given the right parents she needed for sure!
"Bad news, your kid's a genius"
-Some American soap
Does scoring the most goals in fifa 21 count as a record (216-0) a certificate would look nice on my wall 😂
depends......are you 2 years old?
@@Protantagonist a lot older
Inspirational honestly 👏
This is so adorable and wholesome. Also, I’m here before she solves world hunger or something.
Keep her humble or she will be lonely, no matter how smart.
That’s crazy!
Wow! I love this! 🩷🩷🥰🥰
También adhara perez de México es una genio, desde niña lo es.
I would imagine its not easy to be a small child genius. You will always be different than your peers of the same age, and it might be difficult for each to relate to the other. Just as a handicapped child is different and gets treated differently. I dont envy her at all.
It's just a gift. I'd rather admire a kid who knows he is incapable and always behind the class nevertheless keeps going step by step. She doesn't deserve any respect at all at least for now.
Would love to see her grow up to become a fellow nurse! She’ll have no problem with med math, I’m sure. ❤️
Congratulations guys 🎉
Sheldon will be eating her dust then.
Some sadness in this.
Main priority is for her to have a relatively normal life and that this "genius" does not severely interfere with her overall wellbeing
she's just like me
i feel bad for her
Get geniuses out of public education, get them two english to other language dictionaries, challenge the highschool diploma as soon as possible, then get into a paralegal course at a communuty college 😊
Shes so genius at 2 and theres me whos 11 and useless as heck
You can see how her parents really are trying to do exactly what's right for her development and if they weren't doing that, they wouldn't have found out she was a genius to begin with.
You must teach her multiple languages which are far from the native language such as Arabic, Spanish, Russian, Thai and read let her do her thing.
Look up Terence Tao, when he was her age or little older he started learning maths and programming.
She should be an author.
I'm the same way. She will be a kinesthetic learning and will have photographic memory. We are rare and a gift.
I had a similar experience as this. My son was 2 months old when he surprised me and started reading War and Peace out loud to me. At first I was confused, because I had not read the book myself and I did not understand a word my infant was speaking, but once I learned about gifted children....you get the gist of it.
@@lorem-1psum777 Your child read at 2 months? Did you mean 2 years old?
no, 2 months is correct. . . I thought she was a genius like the child in the above video, but she seems not so smart now. . . I don't know what happened. . . I hope it was not my or my oaf of a husband's influence. . . Now we will be lucky if she can read fluently by age 20!
@@lorem-1psum777 i lerned to read at 23 so its fine
She, in her innocent view of the world, will see something stupid, and fix it.
When I was two years old I was still begging to walk😂
This girl could definitely win the scripps national spelling bee
Yes, because that’s the ultimate goal in life.
bros gonna be like the megamind kid spelling iridocyclitis
Wer klug ist wird bewundert. Wer empathisch ist bekommt Zuneigung.
Guinness, my friend submitted a record almost 10 years ago for the most miles run in a 24-hour mile relay, providing more than the requisite evidence, and yet, despite the fact that his case is still open on the website, you never respond. Please advise. Thank you.
She outsmarted me. My IQ is anywhere between 115-125 only, still better than average though. But Isla? She started spelling words and playing an instrument 4 years earlier than me. (I learned organ at the age of 6 and read at the age of 3 and a half, with Vietnamese being my first language.)
she is 100000x smarter than me
THE WAY SHE'S ASSOCIATING WORDS WITH ACTIONS...heart/crossed arms....dog/pants.....COLORFUL/rainbow....monkey sounds/monkey
Crazy.
100% she'll be average lol
My 18 month year old niece does all of this too but shes not reading yet she just memorizes the words and meanings. But thats normal for a 1.5 year old though i think.
Be careful then, she may be a genius girl
My 2nd born started reading at 3 years old
That's actually really impressive! For my younger brother and I, we started reading at ths age of 1 (your typical asian siblings hehe)
My little first cousin once removed. She's the spitting image of her great grandmother...
Meanwhile 6yr olds out here can’t even read yet 😂
Pretty easy to get your child ahead when there’s a stay at home mom with one child to fully focus on teaching her through writing and focus cards, gotta start them young and they say girls learn faster then boys
wow
Make sure to document this and see if she actually has a photographic memory, most people only remember stuff when they’re after the year of 3 . Wished I had a photographic memory lol
No, no you don’t. I wouldn’t say I have an eidactic memory, but I do remember most things in photographic detail, as does my mom. It’s miserable. Consider that you also remember every bad thing that’s ever happened to you, a loved one, and the world around you. It’s not just all of the things people think, like never having to study for tests, and remembering everything you’d want to remember. Having a normal memory is so much better! I think you lucked out!
@@janesays1278bro it cannot be that bad
I have never closed school in my life
My son was reading at 18 months. He started teaching himself Russian at 3. He is hyperlexic and knows all the capitals of all the states and countries, their shapes , capitals, flags, and what years the flags were their certain ways. He knows all about the human anatomy and most about space. He is 8 now. He has been evaluated at the Belin and Blank gifted children's center and had a very high IQ. I can not get any assistance in moving him ahead in school. Please advise.
There is a thin line between genius and crazy.
Make her president at 20
Meanwhile me still misspelling beleive 💀
😂 same
Even with spellcheck?
Never heard of Mensa
I'm not saying she isn't a very intelligent child. She clearly is.
But Mensa, while it might be famous, is not recognized by any official agency because it's testing methods do not conform with official testing methods. Mensa is kinda like those things you see on social media "if you can guess riddle correctly, you have an IQ of 150", just a bunch of BS. Mensa just wants your $79/year and to sell you other merch. Also, Mensa's entry requirement (top 2%) is well below "genius".
This girl probably does qualify for real high IQ clubs. But being in a club isn't going to help beyond getting feedback from other members. What would prob help her the most is her parents getting their hands on harder & harder lessons she can do at home. Some cost, but many are free.
A great story
I think I can beat the lazy world record
Dont let the people have her keep her very close and dont let them brainwash this baby
One thing she lacks is awareness, but her thirst for knowledge will surely be quenched sooner or later.
Somehow she reads better then people in my grade
Uhm get her to do honors math for 1 year homework everyday 3 new notes of pages everyday train everyday start learning to wrestle then become a professional wwe announcer.
It’s not a first lol I did the same just with myself lol if I would’ve had parents like you guys to it would’ve been a world record in 2006😂💯
I went to a psychiatric last week and got my IQ tested it's 130 isn't that great
My dad had an IQ of 160. He told me he skipped second grade and never had to study until he went to Purdue and then Cal Tech. he became an electrical engineer. He designed wepons for the military.
Kat Williams be like: "Amateur"