Prodigy chooses HBCU over Harvard, Yale

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<p>Yes, that is the same thing I noted…that some are developmentally advanced such that they blend in at young ages in college while others (like our son till he was 13) are clearly “standing out” due to their size or voice or whatever.</p>

<p>And this can cause for some confusion with some students, like my son attended classes in college without a parent, but the first year our son was in college, he was in a LINUX Users Group that met at night and my husband once drove him there and sat in the lecture hall playing some game on his Palm Pilot while our son took part in the session. A student in that group came up to me later that week and informed me that he thought it was my husband who was a member of the group and that he just brought his son along as he couldn’t find a sitter until our son opened his mouth and started answering questions for people asking for help, and then he realized it was just my husband who was along for the ride.</p>