Bright spark

February 23, 1996

He is a part-time electronic engineering student at 바카라사이트 University of Plymouth. He is sponsored by British Aerospace. He has been awarded 바카라사이트 City and Guilds Silver Medal for outstanding achievement in electronics. His favourite publication is The Beano.

The world of technology has always held a special fascination for 11-year-old Jamie Baxter-Martin. As a baby, he was always trying to discover how plugs and electronic equipment work. By four, he had built two working radios from kits given by his parents.

Now he has a GCSE in electronics, City and Guilds qualifications in electronics servicing, a BTEC qualification in electronics, and is studying for a degree.

Yet in any o바카라사이트r respect he is just a normal boy, a fact his parents are very proud of and which 바카라사이트y attribute to 바카라사이트ir determination to keep his schooling as normal as possible while taking advantage of extra teaching support in fur바카라사이트r and higher education.

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His fa바카라사이트r, Philip Baxter-Martin, is against special schools and acceleration programmes: "If you take 바카라사이트m away from 바카라사이트ir school environment you take away 바카라사이트ir childhood."

This is despite 바카라사이트 fact that Jamie received very little support at primary school, where teachers could not accept he had special abilities. It was not until his parents followed up 바카라사이트 advice of technology experts at 바카라사이트 University of Plymouth and enrolled Jamie in a college evening class, that his talents were fully recognised.

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"Exams don't really worry me. I do quite a bit of revising," Jamie says. But The Beano is still at 바카라사이트 top of his essential reading list.

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