Crafton Hills College is going to see his youngest scholar to see the phase of graduation.
Alisa Parales is ready to become the youngest graduate in Yucaipa, California, college with two associate degrees at the age of 10.
According to San Bernardino’s Whiz Kid California Community College, GPA for a 4.0 will take the title with a degree in many sciences and mathematics to get its diploma with a 4.0 GPA “Close”.
The secret of his success? She just likes it.
“It’s very fun to me – almost fun to play outside or ride a bike,” Alisa told KBC. “I just enjoy learning.”
Her father, Rafael Paralaces, told the outlet that Alisa began to home school when she was only 1 year old, which was with the help of a heritage that allowed her to stay at home. While most of the 5-year-old children were learning their ABC and 1-2-3S, Alisa was already reading books and doing algebra.
“We were working from eight in the morning to four o’clock in the afternoon, and we did six days a week,” Paralaces told KABC. “It was a lot of work.”
When she was 8 years old, Alisa enrolled in Crafton Hills. Her classmates were often confused when Perles left her into class, assuming that he was a student bringing her child into class.
The two -year -old Alyssa spent working for her degree, especially socially her difficulties.
Paralaces told KABC, “We have some challenges to find friends, because it is not that she can go to school and play on an average with her friends at the age of 10.” “We have had to go out of our way, and ride a bike in the neighborhood and find other children to play.”
But Alisa, not from his college visit, despite the age of most of his colleagues.
Sandra Ruiz, a professor at Crafton Hills College, told KABC, “His younger age doesn’t stop him.” “She was always eager to learn, to find out new things.”
After graduation, Alisa has its own places to obtain a degree in computer science at a reputed university.
“I am going to plan to move, hopefully, Stanford,” Alisa told KABC. “I applied there a few months ago, and I am waiting for a response.”
Paralaces said Elisa could potentially start a college in 10, but never thought that she would be a graduate at the moment.
“She is only starting,” he told KABC.