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Moshe Kai Cavalin, 14-Year-Old Boy Genius, Writes Book Revealing Life In College At Age 8 (VIDEO)

JOHN ROGERS   02/15/12 12:41 PM ET  AP

LOS ANGELES — The one thing 14-year-old Moshe Kai Cavalin dislikes is being called a genius.

All he did, after all, was enroll in college at age 8 and earn his first of two Associate of Arts degrees from East Los Angeles Community College in 2009 at age 11, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade point average.

Now, at 14, he's poised to graduate from UCLA this year. He's also just published an English edition of his first book, "We Can Do."

The 100-page guideline explains how other young people can accomplish what Cavalin did through such simple acts as keeping themselves focused and approaching everything with total commitment. He's hoping it will show people there's no genius involved, just hard work.

"That's always the question that bothers me," Cavalin, who turned 14 on Valentine's Day, says when the G-word is raised. "People need to know you don't really need to be a genius. You just have to work hard and you can accomplish anything."

And maybe cut out some of the TV.

Although he's a big fan of Jackie Chan movies, Cavalin says he limits his television time to four hours a week.

Not that he lacks for recreational activities or feels that his parents pressured him into studying constantly. He writes in "We Can Do" of learning to scuba dive, and he loves soccer and martial arts. He used to participate in the latter sport when he was younger, winning trophies for his age group, until his UCLA studies and his writing made things a little too hectic.

Indeed one of the key messages of his book is to stay focused and to not take on any endeavor half-heartedly.

"I was able to reach the stars, but others can reach the `Milky Way," he tells readers.

It was a professor at his first institution of higher learning, East Los Angeles City College, who inspired him, Cavalin says. He didn't like the subject but managed to get an A in it anyway, by applying himself and seeing how enthusiastic his teacher, Richard Avila, was about the subject.

Avila, he says, inspired him to write a book explaining his methods for success so he could motivate others.

It took four years to finish, in part because Cavalin, whose mother is Chinese, decided to publish it in Chinese, and doing the translation himself was laborious.

Han Shian Culture Publishing of Taiwan put the book in print, and it did well in Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia, as well in several bookstores in Southern California's Asian communities. He then brought it out in English for the U.S. market.

Because of his heavy study load, Cavalin has had little opportunity to promote the book, other than a signing at UCLA, where he also lives in student housing with his parents and attends the school on a scholarship.

After earning his bachelor's degree, the math major plans to enroll in graduate school with hopes of eventually earning a doctorate.

After that, he's not so sure. He points out that he's still just barely a teenager.

"Who knows?" he says, chuckling at the thought of what lies ahead in adulthood. "That's a very distant future, and I'm pretty much planning for just the next few years. That's too far into the future for me to see."

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LOS ANGELES — The one thing 14-year-old Moshe Kai Cavalin dislikes is being called a genius. All he did, after all, was enroll in college at age 8 and earn his first of two Associate of Arts de...
LOS ANGELES — The one thing 14-year-old Moshe Kai Cavalin dislikes is being called a genius. All he did, after all, was enroll in college at age 8 and earn his first of two Associate of Arts de...
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acumenguy
It could be carried by an African swallow
12:21 AM on 02/17/2012
I hope this boy is happy and is having the kind of fun experiences a kid his age needs.

It's wonderful that he has this great "brain," but, that does not circumvent his developmental needs.
I hope he is establishing relationships with kids his own age. The absence of these relationships could be disasterous.

He spent a lot of formative years with adults and young adults.
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lnedykstra
Calling a spade a spade!
06:33 PM on 02/16/2012
Good for this child! Good for his parents on raising such a smart little guy. However, I am torn about whether this is good or not. I have an Asian boyfriend who was pretty much forced to succeed by his "tiger mom." Nothing was ever good enough and a result, he resents her to this day.
sinner11
Humanist and Liberal
06:04 PM on 02/16/2012
I thought college comes after puberty.
12:58 PM on 03/06/2012
I thought success was not age-dependent.
02:49 PM on 02/16/2012
Many but not all kids are easy to mold and influence up to a certain age. Asian parents do a great job at tapping into that age period. A few of kids naturally want to learn at a very rapid rate. I had one of these kids though I didn't take advantage of the window of opportunity to anywhere near the extent I see in Asian families. This kid is obviously very bright but had the right parent behind him to push him on. How many parents would move into on campus housing with their kid. I am not Asian and don't subscribe to their parenting style but the let a kid be a kid for as long as possible philosophy. I hope all the best for Cavalin. Good for him giving the credit to hard work. Anyone who has accomplished anything great will admit they worked extremely hard.
02:27 PM on 02/16/2012
Boy, 14, Set to Graduate College

This is a nice little story, but how can one have any faith in a journalist who cannot follow the grammatical rules of the language in which he is working? Students do not "graduate college," as "graduate" is an intransitive verb, not a transitive verb. They graduate FROM college...or they matriculate at a college.
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12:22 AM on 02/17/2012
Agree! Second paragraph alone has numerous grammar errors.
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Ayla87
Don't Delete Me Bro!
11:02 AM on 02/16/2012
"Although he's a big fan of Jackie Chan movies, Cavalin says he limits his television time to four hours a week."

Smart boy.
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
10:20 AM on 02/16/2012
Quick Question - do these child prodigies and self declared (or parent declared) child geniuses ever amount to anything?
We hear about them every couple of years, than never again. You'd think if being a child genius was so great, you'd hear about them when they are kids, than as adults they'd be great public successes.
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Comicoffee
real analysis paired with a hefty dose of sarcasm
10:45 AM on 02/16/2012
Many of them go into research or full-time academia. They're probably known in their fields, but the nature of the jobs are insular, so they probably don't get much notoriety from the "outside".
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
11:17 AM on 02/16/2012
I never, ever hear about them. I wonder how many are working at McDonalds.
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Sofia Champion
The future is now.
09:59 AM on 02/16/2012
I think I heard about this kid when I was ten. He said something like "Oh, kids my age never do anything good. All they ever do is play video games. Blah blah blah I'm so smart."

Since I was ten, had a high IQ, and I loved to play video games, he kind of made me feel like a clump of fruit mold. I'm glad to see he's not such a cocky little twerp anymore.
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
11:38 AM on 02/16/2012
Doing a little research, some of these child-geniuses do all right as adults, many just grow up to be unhappy.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-550549/How-child-prodigy-Oxford-130-hour-prostitute.html

http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1532087,00.html
12:24 PM on 02/16/2012
They just grow up as unhappy as the rest of us.
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Quis Custodiet
Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes
06:45 PM on 02/18/2012
So a sample of two prodigies who ended up "unhappy" because their genius was something manufactured by their parents signifies that a large portion of naturally gifted men and women also end up unhappy?

Happiness and Success are not one and the same even though society likes to lump them together; perhaps out of a dire need to convince the young that happiness follows arbitrarily defined success. One perfect example of that is Christopher Michael Langdon, an American polymath with an IQ in the 195-210 range, who is a total failure according to the colloquial definition of success. Having worked as a stable hand and a bouncer hardly qualifies him to be considered a sterling example of what an intelligent person *should* be able to do.

That is until you consider, for a few moments, the social and work environments which surround such talented people. Americans, for one do not like anyone who is smarter than they are. We see it in our media, filled with intellectually debasing junk as it is, and in our political process - as candidates run themselves on xenophobia and empty demagoguery, partially out of fear of being found "too elitist" by the average American.

Does genius make it easier to succeed in life? Yes, if you remain in academia. In the normal day-to-day environment, however, the less you say and the less you show of your intellect - the better off you will be.
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mosuro
Snake Oil
06:00 AM on 02/16/2012
We need more Asian/Oriental teachers to teach our kids. I'm all for importing these teachers, it's about time we have smart teachers. America has flunked.
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artgrrl74
the big print giveth & the small print taketh away
06:04 AM on 02/16/2012
ugh.
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artgrrl74
the big print giveth & the small print taketh away
06:20 AM on 02/16/2012
maybe YOU should move THERE, isn't that a better solution? for ALL of us.
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mosuro
Snake Oil
06:35 AM on 02/16/2012
cheeseburgers in paradise?
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Sofia Champion
The future is now.
10:01 AM on 02/16/2012
"If you acknowledge the fact that most people in some foreign countries perform better than us in the field of education, GET OUT OF MY COUNTRY!!!!!!111!"
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artgrrl74
the big print giveth & the small print taketh away
05:49 AM on 02/16/2012
what is up with the asian adoration? it's gotten old now.
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
11:40 AM on 02/16/2012
That sort of thing is common. When things go bad, people try to find simple solutions, such as "Why can't we be like China?", or "We need to purify Islam and get back to our roots" or "We need to put god back in our schools"
The longer you live, the more often you'll see this sort of thing.
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12:41 AM on 02/17/2012
This is not simple as finding solutions. This is your excuses for why you are not successful as you can be. The world is changing but people-like-you's mind keeps outdated. You can deny genius and you think hard-working attitude is "getting old." Then you can stay relaxed, aimless and jobless, and meantime watching those hard-working people go much further than you do.
05:18 AM on 02/17/2012
There there. We admire Americans for their creativity and guts. I think all cultures admire something in other cultures.
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krf1942
Healing conservatives since 19XX
04:57 AM on 02/16/2012
What a kid and would guess his heart is/will be as big as his brain. Way to go.
04:24 AM on 02/16/2012
"People need to know you don't really need to be a genius. You just have to work hard and you can accomplish anything."

I disagree. Two people with different cognitive levels will perform differently even with the same amount of hard work. He must admit that he is not just an "average" kind who worked hard. His level of intelligence have contributed to his success.
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Jill Press
08:12 AM on 02/16/2012
And, I'm sure you will agree, not just his intelligence, but his environment was crucial. He came from a sufficiently supportive family and had an inspirational teacher to enable him to do what he chose to do. Plenty of great kids never get a chance.
06:15 PM on 02/16/2012
Oh yes, totally. There are many factors that contribute to his success. I would not count it all on hard work. And yes I do agree that many great kids do not get the chance and it's heartbreaking.
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12:58 AM on 02/17/2012
There are a lot of sufficiently supportive families with inspirational teacher, but of many their kids are spoiled and didn't achieve much. This is not a problem with the environment, how rich your family is or how supportive your parents are, but the issue will-poer and self-discipline, for both the kids and parents.
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12:46 AM on 02/17/2012
Well, I think kids with lower cognitive levels have to work even harder to compensate such intelligent drawbacks.

This is not an excuse to give up hard work. But this definitely makes losers sound even more pathetic.
06:38 PM on 02/20/2012
I would have to agree with you on the point that Children or young adults have to work "harder to compensate" for for intelligence drawback. I am personally one of those kids who have or had learning problems. I think these kids are more successful in the long run if they do not give up and discipline themselves. I noticed amongst my peer at school that young adults who are able to catch on to information quickly with little to none error lack self-control and are not as great self-regulators so when they have educational problems it tends to set them back or deter them quite a bit. This is just my opinion.
04:12 AM on 02/16/2012
Wonder if he knows we have already reached the milkyway.lol
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Truth Only
03:12 AM on 02/16/2012
"People need to know you don't really need to be a genius. You just have to work hard and you can accomplish anything."

Well it seems that rules out most democrats.
rlpl02
Motivational Bull****er
05:42 AM on 02/16/2012
Ah, but rules out all republicans
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Truth Only
02:25 PM on 02/16/2012
Look at the statistics, young learner. Handout recipients are largely democrats - social and fiscal baggage. Now get out of your trailer and get to work.
02:59 AM on 02/16/2012
"People need to know you don't really need to be a genius. You just have to work hard and you can accomplish anything."

It is impossible to perform infinite amounts of work given only finite amounts of time and energy.
04:42 AM on 02/16/2012
Theoretically you can do an infinite amount of tasks given a finite amount of time. Granted that it requires you to perform a task in half the time you're given with the next task done in half the time of the previous, and so on and so forth.
10:20 AM on 02/16/2012
Theoretically, i can have super powers, too.