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Doctoral candidate Rafael Davtian is 16

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  • Doctoral candidate Rafael Davtian is 16

    Buffalo News, NY
    Nov 30 2004

    Doctoral candidate is 16

    UB student has two degrees and is a teaching assistant

    By PETER SIMON
    News Staff Reporter
    11/30/2004

    Sharon Cantillon/Buffalo News

    While other 16-year-olds are in high school, Rafael Davtian is
    working on his doctorate in political science at the University at
    Buffalo.


    Rafael Davtian is a young man in a hurry.
    A big hurry.

    At age 16 - when students are normally still in high school - Rafael
    is studying for his doctorate at the University at Buffalo. He has,
    in effect, skipped eight grades of school.

    Rafael doesn't have his driver's license yet, but he already has
    earned both his bachelor's and master's degrees.

    Even though he won't be old enough to vote for another two years, he
    is a teaching assistant in UB's political science department, helping
    instruct students years older than he is.

    "I like to learn and was motivated to advance," said Rafael, a native
    of Armenia who came to this country with his parents at age 8. "The
    two main components were constant hard work and determination to keep
    going."

    Academic acceleration hasn't hurt the quality of his work one bit.
    Rafael has never - not once, at any grade level - earned a grade
    lower than A. He was valedictorian of Utah State University's College
    of Humanities with a perfect 4.0 grade point average.

    And in less than a semester, Rafael has earned a sterling reputation
    at UB.

    "He's extremely mature and extremely bright," said Franco Mattei,
    director of graduate studies in political science. "He's just at the
    top of the class."

    Rafael hopes to teach at the college level, work for the State
    Department or an international agency or get involved in electoral
    politics.

    His academic accomplishments are even more remarkable because he
    arrived in the United States at age 8, knowing just a few words of
    English.

    In search of better opportunities and a Western lifestyle, his family
    moved from Armenia to West Germany when Rafael was 3 and then to Salt
    Lake City five years later.

    Rafael's progress was meteoric. For example:

    - He skipped grades 4 and 5 and went directly from sixth grade to
    ninth grade.

    - He tackled the last three years of high school in two years and
    still managed to accumulate 40 college credits.

    - He earned an associate's degree from Salt Lake Community College at
    age 13, finished his undergraduate requirements in three semesters
    instead of four and earned his master's degree in one year rather
    than two.

    - Even though he studies from six to eight hours a day, Rafael finds
    time to play tennis, soccer and chess and to read books for pleasure.


    Most accelerated students skip just a year or two of school, and
    Rafael's academic career is highly unusual but not unique, said
    Nicholas Colangelo, director of the Belin-Blank Center for Gifted
    Education at the University of Iowa.

    Colangelo, an advocate of acceleration for gifted students, said even
    dramatic advancement can work with the support and planning of
    parents and schools.

    "The bottom line is, kids develop at different rates, and some very
    much so," he said. "The question you have to ask is: What would it
    have been like for this young man if he stayed with his age group?"

    Well-spoken, personable and impeccably polite, Rafael said he doesn't
    think about age and feels perfectly comfortable with his classmates.

    "For me, it has become more or less normal," he said. "I simply
    accept the fact that here I am. It could be no other way."

    Armin Davtian, a manufacturing engineer while in Armenia, said he
    advocated for Rafael's acceleration based on his progress in the
    early grades and his love of learning.

    "I saw how quickly he grasped almost everything," Davtian said. "He
    was really fast, capable and brilliant."

    Neighbors, teachers and guidance counselors questioned that strategy
    and raised concerns about the social and emotional pressures Rafael
    would face. Some argued that we was being robbed of his childhood.

    But the determination and confidence of both son and father never
    wavered.

    "I faced lots of blame and condemnation, but I knew I was doing the
    right thing," said Armin Davtian. "He proved he could overcome. He
    produced excellent results. Whenever I was asked the question:
    "Why?,' the answer would be: "Why not?' "

    Rafael agrees. "I was able to adapt well," he said. "I get along with
    everyone. I think it was stranger for the people around me than it
    was for me, actually."

    Rafael's academic success has been a family effort.

    Armin and his wife, Gayene, moved with Rafael from Salt Lake City to
    Logan, Utah, so their only child could attend Utah State, and then to
    Amherst for Rafael's doctoral program.

    At Utah State, Armin Davtian enrolled in and graduated from the same
    master's program as his son.

    "He was 14, I was 41, and we were sitting together and taking classes
    together," Davtian said.

    UB provided Rafael not only a paid assistantship, but also a
    Presidential Fellowship, the highest academic recognition accorded by
    the College of Arts and Sciences.

    "He's one of the most outstanding students we've had in recent
    years," said Frank C. Zagare, chairman of UB's political science
    department and one of Rafael's professors. "He more than competes
    with older students in the class."

    Rafael loves UB, and college officials said his adjustment backs up
    the confidence they showed in him.

    "We made the right decision," UB's Mattei said. "I'm glad we did,
    because otherwise it would have been our loss."

    http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20041130/1028399.asp
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