In the Unites States
the statistics for black males who are of school age are not that good to say
the least:
Black males are twice
as likely to be held back in elementary school as white males
Black males are three
times as likely to be suspended from school
Only 50% of Black Males
are likely to graduate from college.
But Stephen R. Stafford
II has a very different statistics.
Stafford, who is from
Lithonia, Georgia, started his education playing school with his older sister
when he was only two years old. Now 17, he is set to graduate college with a
triple major and could complete medical school by the time he turns 22.

Stafford’s mother was
not about to take that chance and home-schooled him. By the time he was 11, his
mother found that he was too smart for her to teach, even though she was quite
intelligent. She had him audit Algebra II at Morehouse College in Atlanta. The
next year he aced pre-calculus and Morehouse College allowed him to officially
enroll.

Though he will graduate
this year with a triple major in pre-med, mathematics and computer science, he
doesn’t see it as anything special. Even though he was named one of the “50
Smartest Teenagers” in the country.
“I look back and see
all the stuff I’ve done. I know, yes, I’ve done a lot,” Stafford says. “But I
can do a whole lot more. 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.”
In 2010, he was quoted
as saying, “I didn’t know what the big deal was about…I just knew it was the
next step in.... my education–and I’m
gonna do what my mother tells me to do.”
After graduation,
Stafford will attend Morehouse’s School of Medicine and one day specialize in
obstetrics and fertility. The classically trained pianist says, “I’m just like
any other kid. I just learn very, very quickly.”
“I plan to go to the
Morehouse School of Medicine, focus in obstetrics, specialize in infertility,
and graduate when I’m 22. I want to help babies come into the world. I’d also
like to develop my own computer operating system. At one point, I will live
outside of the country for a few years. And when I come back, I am thinking
about moving into the city. I just love the idea of the city, like downtown
Atlanta. I went there for the first time the other week. We went to this
building and it had a radio station. I was on two radio shows in the same
building. And I just loved downtown.”
No comments:
Post a Comment