Next week, the 12-year-old genius will become the youngest student ever to graduate from his Long Island high school and will attend New York University in the fall.
Suborno Bali, of Lynbrook, who has written two books and taught college classes in India, will bring home his diploma from Malvern High School on June 26.
“I’m really excited,” said Bali. He told ABC7.
The child prodigy, who set a world record by scoring 1,500 on the SAT at age 11, said he plans to study mathematics and physics at New York University, where he has been offered a full scholarship.
“[I want] “I want to help people all over the world understand math and science,” he said. “My goal is to become a professor and help people who need good resources.”
The boy genius said high school was rewarding, despite being much younger than the rest of his classmates.
“The university administration and the student body, well, most of the student body, have been really supportive,” he told the Long Island newspaper. News 12.
Bali’s academic ability allowed her to skip grades, from 4th to 8th, and then from 9th to 12th, shortening her time in school.
“He was always one step ahead,” his mother, Shaheda Bari, told ABC 7. “He’s not like other kids.”
Balinese teachers praised him as a unique individual.
“We have some great students here, some who go on to Princeton and Harvard,” said Patrick Nolan, an AP chemistry teacher at Bali. “We’re sending great students to top schools. Sborno is a really unique case.”
At the age of seven, this talented boy wrote his first book, “The Love,” in which he envisioned a world without terrorism. He lectured as a visiting professor. He holds a degree in Physics from the University of Mumbai.
When Soborno was four years old, she was praised by former President Barack Obama for her achievements in math and science.
Two years later, he was accepted into New York City’s gifted students program by Harvard University, where his “problem-solving” skills were recognized, and he also took classes at Stony Brook University.
“I love it. [having] “Curiosity in all subjects is important, whether it’s math, science or history,” Bali said.
Bali expressed his gratitude to his parents. Facebook Post He announced his graduation.
“None of this would have been possible without the hard work of my mother, father and brother. For example, my father worked for me as a taxi driver, driving me every day from Malvern High School to Stony Brook University (40 miles), then from Stony Brook to NYU (60 miles), and then from NYU back home (20 miles),” he wrote about his father, Rashidul Bari.
“Even taxi drivers don’t drive 120 miles a day, thanks dad,” the boy added.
Bali plans to earn her bachelor’s degree at 14 and her doctorate at 18.
He plans to work on growing vegetables in his vegetable patch over the summer.

