Pakistani British Teen with IQ Higher than Einstein's Calls for More Support for Gifted Students
By Michelle De Pacina

 

Mahnoor Cheema, a 17-year-old student in Britain with an IQ of 161, is advocating for better support for gifted students in state schools.

Cheema, who arrived in  Britain  from Lahore,  Pakistan , at the age of 9, was denied the opportunity to advance academically at the Colnbrook Church of England primary school and the Langley Grammar School despite her exceptional intelligence and academic achievements, including passing 33 GCSEs and taking 28 A-Levels. Her  IQ  of 161 is  reported  to be higher than theoretical physicists  Albert Einstein  and  Stephen Hawking .

Instead, Cheema was given extra math and placed in a “nurture” group to help her make friends. Her teachers reportedly discouraged her from sitting so many GCSEs, claiming that she was already overburdened. When her parents became involved, they were reportedly dismissed as “pushy,” according to  The Times .

Calling for support: Now, Cheema highlights the need for recognition and support for talented students like herself, lamenting the waste of potential she sees in the education system.

“I feel we are wasting so much talent in the UK,” Cheema said. “I feel so sorry for that nine-year-old girl when I look back at my experience. I am sure I am not alone. I think there are so many kids who had talent to do so much but it was wasted because no one recognized their potential or knew what to do with it.”

Cheema asserts that educational institutions should recognize their responsibility to support gifted children, similar to the support provided for those with special educational needs. She criticizes the  British  education system for its perceived slowness in teaching  mathematics , citing examples of more advanced curricula in Pakistan.

Cheema also expresses her struggle to connect with peers due to her intellectual differences, having engaged in advanced reading of philosophers like Plato and Socrates while classmates preferred more typical adolescent literature like “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.”

Where is Cheema now? Now settled at Henrietta Barnett School, Cheema enjoys extracurricular activities like  swimming  and horse riding, demonstrating her well-rounded nature. She is a member of  Mensa , reserved for the top 2% of the general population in intelligence tests. NextShark

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Editor: Akhtar M. Faruqui