Cynon Valley

The Aberdare schoolboy who might be even smarter than Einstein

- ABBIE WIGHTWICK abbie.wightwick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A 12-YEAR-OLD boy has scored higher in an IQ test than the projected scores of Albert Einstein.

Harrison Casey got 162 marks on a Mensa paper, the maximum possible result and two points higher than the estimated IQs of Einstein and the late cosmologis­t Stephen Hawking.

The mark puts the Aberdare Community School pupil in the top 1% of the population and he is now a member of the elite Mensa society.

Harrison, who dreams of becoming a pathologis­t and finding cures to diseases, said the two-hour IQ test paper, which he sat in Cardiff last month, was “sort of difficult”.

The Year Eight pupil, who was reading newspapers at the age of one and subtractin­g and dividing numbers aged three, said: “I am happy with the result. It was quite good.

“It was sort of difficult. I took the test because I thought I would get a rather high score and I was right. It took me two hours as planned.”

Harrison is in top sets for all subjects at school, but his favourite subject is maths and he aims to take maths GCSE two years early next year.

“The truth is I don’t really study. It just comes naturally. I quite like school,” he said modestly

And he brushed off suggestion­s he might be cleverer than top brains like Einstein and Hawking, adding: “I like Stephen Hawking. He’s cool.”

Aberdare Community School assistant headteache­r Tara Neale said she thinks Harrison is the first pupil in the school to become a Mensa member.

“We are incredibly proud of him,” she said.

“He’s obviously going to be a future star and we hope he remembers us when he is.

“Education is about responding to the needs of the child, so we will work with his parents to come up with a plan for him.

“It’s an amazing achievemen­t.”

Harrison’s mother Amy said she and his dad Lee, a mechanical engineer, realised their son was gifted academical­ly from a young age.

Diagnosed with highfuncti­oning Asperger’s syndrome at age four, Harrison could subtract and divide numbers aged three, she said.

“We always new he was clever,” said Amy.

“He will sit GCSE maths next year at the age of 14. He gets As in every subject except art.

“We are very proud of him. His educationa­l psychologi­st suggested he sat the Mensa test when he was in primary school, but you can’t sit it until you are at least 10.”

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 ?? ROB BROWNE ?? Harrison Casey,12, of Aberdare Community school, who has a Mensa score of 162
ROB BROWNE Harrison Casey,12, of Aberdare Community school, who has a Mensa score of 162
 ??  ?? Harrison’s IQ is estimated to be higher than those of Einstein and Stephen Hawking
Harrison’s IQ is estimated to be higher than those of Einstein and Stephen Hawking
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