But Linda Pistun doesnât know her IQ score because her parents wonât tell her. She and two of her brothers are off-the-charts smart, and Mom and Dad donât want to start a squabble.
Mother Katie Pistun offered a second reason. Linda â a newly published author â is starting to attract media attention. âHer psychologist recommended that we not give her the actual number until she is an adult,â Katie Pistun said. âPeople like to compare her to other child prodigies or famous people in history, and we want to remove as much of that pressure as possible while sheâs little.â
Pistun is taking Mandarin classes remotely from her home in Gainesville, but she came to Grounds one day last month for a calligraphy workshop and picnic.
âIt was really fun, and it was just so interesting,â she said. âI love doing the calligraphy and learning about the different brush strokes.â
It was the first time Pistun got to see her teacher and classmates in-person, and she was met with utter disbelief.
âWe didnât know she was only 10!â said Shu-Chen Chen, an associate professor of Chinese and Pistunâs instructor. The possibility had never occurred to Chen. She said previous Zoom sessions didnât give away Pistunâs age because, like many students, she uses a blurry background to obscure everything but her face.
The Summer Language Institute is an intensive program that meets five days a week for up to 4 hours a day. Students cover two semesters worth of material between June and August, earning eight college credits. Linda also is taking a high school economics class this summer, which Chen says makes her accomplishments even more remarkable. âShe is amazing and willing to go beyond the textbook to learn more expressions,â Chen said.
This isnât Pistunâs first time at UVA. Sheâs attended the Saturday Enrichment Program, run by the School of Education and Human Development, since she was 6.
Whatâs it like to be the youngest person in a college-level class? âWell, to be totally honest, Iâm kind of used to it. All these years Iâve always been the one to walk in the room and be asked âAre you supposed to be here? Are you lost?ââ said Pistun, who stands 53 inches tall. âI just find it kind of funny.â
Why Such a Grown-Up Name for Such a Young Person?
Linda Pistun is named for her grandmother, Linda Franklin. Franklin was killed Oct. 14, 2002, by the so-called âD.C. snipers,â a boy and a man who terrorized the region in October of that year, randomly murdering 10 people. Franklin and her husband William had been loading home improvement supplies into her car at a Home Depot parking lot in Falls Church.
Franklin was brilliant, a math and science teacher before she joined the FBI as an analyst. âShe was the funniest, most fiery, most amazing person you could meet,â said Katie, mother to the younger Linda and daughter of the elder. âAnd Linda is so much like her. She loves that even random science tied them together from the beginning.â
And Linda Pistun got something else from her grandmother. Mother Katie and her three sons have brown eyes. âBut Linda got the recessive gene. She has my momâs hazel eyes,â Katie said.
Favorite Book: âThe Origin of Speciesâ
Yes, you read that correctly.
The younger Pistunâs best-loved book is Charles Darwinâs âThe Origin of Species,â considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. âI learned about it from one of my other favorite books from when I was a little kid,â the 10-year-old explained. âItâs very interesting what Charles Darwin wrote.â
It all makes sense. Pistunâs favorite subject is math, followed by science, just like her hazel-eyed namesake grandmother.
Now sheâs taken her talent and funneled it into her newest accomplishment: published author.
âLinda and the Mysterious Footprintsâ takes readers on a journey using the scientific method to discover what is causing black footprints all over Lindaâs town. Itâs making its way to local bookstores and can also be found on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and soon, at the UVA Bookstore.
In her spare time, Pistun plays the violin and the piano. âI decided to play the violin because Albert Einstein played it and it helped him think,â she said. âIt actually does help me think, just like Albert Einstein.â
As for her future, Pistun has it all planned out. The prodigy, who skipped three full grades and six grades in math, is starting high school this fall at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology. Then her sights are set on UVA, where she wants to study astrophysics. The goal is to enroll as a full-time student when she is 14. Sheâs well on her way, front-loading college credits. Once she finishes her Mandarin class at UVA, she will have accumulated 18 hours, including credits in math and science.
The plan is to use her UVA degree to apply to graduate school at the California Institute of Technology, with the ultimate goal of landing a job at NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is based at the Pasadena, California, school.
âSince UVA is such a great school, I feel like that will look really good on my rĂ©sumĂ©,â she said.