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When this kid was born his parents were told that he might have a learning disability. Eighteen years later he gets perfect scores on his SAT and ACT tests.
Here's the part of the article that I found interesting.
quote:Traveling so much, and spending a lot of time reading, for years Jake saw himself as a "shy, nerdy kid," ostracized by others. He delved heavily into reading history, and science fiction.
Then one book in particular — "Ender's Game," by Orson Scott Card — rallied him. It's about a shy, ostracized kid, who went on to save the world.
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A kid in my high school did the same thing (sure as hell wasn't me). I wasn't aware it was a rare enough occurance to be on the news.
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That darn dictionary stuff always got me. You know, that part where you have to know what words mean. That's hard!
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A guy in my graduating class also did this, but it only made the local news. He was kind of a genius, really talented, and everyone was always talking about what a promising future he had. He got offers from tons of colleges and was basically the school's golden child, yadayadayada. Then he got married at 18 to his Scientologist girlfriend and moved to Cincinatti to work for the Church of Scientology. The last time I heard about him he was passing out fliers at a local mall. (No offense to Scientologists out there. It's just frustrating to me that someone with so much potential will never fully reach it. Though I guess to him he's doing what's most important. Oh well.)
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See, all this excitement over perfect scores on both tests is why I was disappointed in my 35 on my ACT. Still, at least it's better than a 35 on the SAT...
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If you had done better, E, maybe you could have played Ender.
How many people take both tests? I imagine that would cut the number down more than people acing one not being able to ace the other.
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posted
A very shallow description of Ender's Game, but still touching -- especially since those were the reporter's words, and I'm sure the actual kid doesn't think of Ender's Game like that.
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Who knows. I thought it was a story of a shy, ostracized kid who commits an unnecessary genocide. Saying Ender saved the world is more dubious than saying that Bush saved us from Saddam's large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction.
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quote:It's about a shy, ostracized kid, who went on to save the world.
Is that the same book I read?
Its the media, don't expect it to be accurate or fit comfortably with your interpretation. I've learned this through reading any article about something in which I was involved: the reporter ALWAYS gets it wrong, or sorta wrong, in a way that bothers me.
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