UK Indian-origin boy beats Einstein and Hawking in IQ test

Arnav Sharma. Screengrab/YouTube video

London: An 11-year-old Indian-origin boy in the UK has secured the top possible score of 162 on a Mensa IQ test, two points higher than geniuses Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking, making him one of the brainiest children in the country.

Arnav Sharma, from Reading town in southern England, passed the infamously difficult test a few weeks back with zero preparation. He did not know what a typical paper looked like before taking it.

His mark in the exam, which primarily measures verbal reasoning ability, puts him in the top one percent of the nation in terms of IQ level, The Independent reported.

"I took the exam at the Salvation centre and it took about two and a half hours," Sharma recalled, adding there were about seven or eight people there. A couple were children but the rest were adults.

'Not nervous'

Sharma insisted he was not anxious before sitting for the test, saying "I had no preparation at all for the exam but I was not nervous. My family were surprised but they were also very happy when I told them about the result."

Meesha Dhamija Sharma, his mother, said she kept her "fingers crossed" for the whole exam.

"I was thinking what is going to happen because you never know and he had never seen how the paper looks like," she explained.

It was not until he was two-and-a-half years old that she became aware of his mathematical prowess.

"He was counting more than 100. That was when I stopped teaching him because I came to know that there is no end to his numbers," she said.

When asked about whether there was anyone else in the family with an unusually high IQ, she could not recall anyone, adding: "His dad is quite clever as well but not as clever."

Sharma, who attends Crossfields School on the outskirts of Reading, has been selected for Eton College and Westminster, both highly competitive and sought-after schools, with no preparation.

But his talents are not restricted to numbers. Sharma has a passion for singing and dancing and reached the semifinals for 'Reading's Got Talent' for dancing with a Bollywood act when he was eight.

"It is a high mark which only a small percentage of people in the country will achieve," a spokesperson for Mensa said.

Mensa is believed to be the largest and oldest high IQ society in the world. Membership is open to anyone who can demonstrate an IQ in the top 2 percent of the population, measured by a recognized or approved IQ testing process.

It was founded in 1946 in Oxford by Lancelot Lionel Ware, a scientist and lawyer, and Roland Berrill, an Australian barrister, but the organisation later spread around the world.

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