Stephen Stafford

13 Year old Stephen is a triple major student in pre-med, math and computer science. Raised in Lithonia, Georgia, his family started teaching him at the tender age at 2 and his mother home-schooled him at 5 years old.

He said “I started learning when I was 2 years old. My sister was 6 and she decided we were going to play school. But she was actually going to teach me things that she learned in school. She was teaching me how to count, how to add. And I caught on to that, and then my mom started teaching me. And when I started kindergarten, I was doing multiplication. And my mother said the other stuff was too easy. I was bored”

This kid’s phenominal ability to learn and apply his education at such a young age is such an inspiration for young black youth and adults. In his feature on Creative Loafing, his outlook on his future potential is so profound. He says “I want to live up to my potential. Potential doesn’t have a limit. It’s like a rainbow. You can constantly keep chasing it and you will never get to it. And I know I don’t have any limits as long as I keep trying.”This is an exceptional kid I’m sure we haven’t heard the last from.

Check this video below featuring Stephen and his family talking about his rise from an elementary student to a college scholar.

 

 

Sources: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2010/01/13/morehouse-college-stephen-stafford/

 

President Obama speaking at a town hall meeting at The University of New Orleans (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

President Obama speaking at a town hall meeting at The University of New Orleans (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

President Barack Obama visited New Orleans today for the first time since being elected President of the United States. His first visit was at  Martin Luther King Jr. Charter School were he addressed students and encouraged them to say in school regardless of their circumstances. In his efforts to relate to the impressionable crowd, he talked about his upbringing and his experience as a child being raised in a single parent home. He asked them to promise that they would continue to work hard in school each and every day.