The Imafidon children have set academic records in their country.
Twelve year-old twins, Peter and Paula Imafidon, are black children
from Waltham Forest in northeast London. Nicknamed “the Wonder Twins,”
Peter and Paula are Great Britain’s current highest achievers. At
9-years-old they made history as the youngest children in British
history to attend high school. They are now in their third year. The
children became the youngest to ever pass the University of Cambridge’s
advanced mathematics exam after participating in the Excellence in
Education program. They set world records when they passed the
A/AS-level math papers. Peter Imafidon, who is also a 100m and 400m
relay champ in London, has said that he would like to serve as Prime
Minister one day and his sister Paula, a county champion in rugby, would
like to teach math. Both students are musicians.
The twins joined the ranks of their gifted siblings, Anne-Marie
Imafidon, who was the pioneering child among the young genii. Now 23
years old, Anne-Marie spoke six languages and graduated from high school
at age 10. In 2003, when she was only 13, she was granted a British
scholarship to study Mathematics at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, Maryland. Four years later, Anne-Marie obtained her Masters
Degree from Oxford University. Anne-Marie was the youngest person to
pass the A-level computing exam. Just last year she was called a “serial
world record breaker” in the September 2011 edition of “Higher
Education Digest.” Anne-Marie has mentioned that she believes in
mentoring children to help them succeed. She is involved in the S.T.E.M.
(Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) program to help fulfill the
need for math and science female leaders. She is currently working in a
high-level position at an international investment bank in the United
Kingdom.
At 11 years old, Christina Imafidon (now 19) was the youngest student
in history to attend a British university – the United Kingdom
University. Christina is now working as an intern with the Citigroup
Corporation as well as conducting research on mathematics with Oxford
University. Fifteen year-old Samantha Imafidon had passed two high
school-level mathematics and statistics exams at age 6. She became the
youngest girl in the UK to attend secondary school at the age of 9.
Samantha was the sibling who mentored the twins to pass their own math
secondary school test when they were also 6 years old. She is a gold
level champion in the 100m and 200m relays.
Dr. Chris Imafidon and Ann Imafidon raised the children with a guided
discipline. The father emigrated from Edo State, Nigeria to London over
30 years ago. He is currently working as a renowned scholar and
international education consultant to several governments. He also
serves as a mentor and coach to American students at varios academic
levels using Skype and web technology. His family has been used as a
model to improve scholarship in Europe and Asia. He strongly believes
that anyone can achieve what he has achieved with his family through a
specific model for education. In his own family, if one child had a
reading assignment, there was a communal effort. “If you really want a
child to learn anything, find out the best way that child learns,” says
Imafidon. “Every human being has a unique way of learning.”
source: http://blackamericaweb.com
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