A teenage Black boy is set to make history at one of the state universities in Houston. This fall, he will be the youngest person to earn a degree from that school.
Fifteen-year-old Nehemiah Juniel will be the youngest person to ever graduate from
.

The young scholar will receive his bachelor’s degree in health science from the institution on Saturday, Aug. 6, and while the road has been very long (most people spend 16 years to complete K-12 and undergraduate education), it has not been without sacrifice.
While most kids were playing kickball, he was figuring out complicated math equations and reading books. According to The Huntsville Item, he was knocking out pre-algebra at the age of 5 and received his associate of science degree by 13.
One of six siblings, he and his sister Gabrielle were homeschooled by his parents. His 19-year-old sister is scheduled to graduate also from SHSU this fall.
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Corie Juniel, the duo’s mother, said the school was perfect for her children because it accommodated the family’s financial needs to fund the two teen’s matriculation.
She said, “Financial aid spent hours with us to get Nehemiah’s award package worked out. They went the extra mile when speaking with the Federal Student Aid office, and were the most patient, resilient staff we’ve ever had the pleasure of working with.”
She added, “With my husband being a veteran, we used his Hazelwood benefits, and the Veterans Resource Center walked us through the process.”
The school also was perfect because it helped Nehemiah, who is autistic, navigate the school without triggers, according to KXXV.
“The day someone had diagnosed me with autism really tried to explain back to me, the very first thing I said back was ‘finally someone gets me,’ ” said the genius.
His father Raphael Juniel said the family therapist suggested getting him tested, and both he and his wife said it was “the best thing that could have happened for us as parents and for Nehemiah.”
“Having people understand me as a person, it was the most important thing ever because people would get frustrated with me,” Nehemiah said. “They wouldn’t understand why I had to be so specific about things, why I had anxiety about a lot of things and when I was diagnosed with autism, it clicked for everyone else.”
Corie Juniel said she started seeing the signs when he was around nine years old, saying, “You’d go in his room and cars would be lined up by color, so like dark to light, or the crayon box. He would dump all the crayons out and then reorganize them in the way he felt they should be in the box and those were repetitive behaviors.”
The way Nehemiah sees it, autism enhanced his spirit of curiosity.
“Curiosity would lead to me deconstructing things, trying to figure out how it functions, how things work, and I didn’t have the knowledge to put everything back together. I wasn’t necessarily being deconstructive; it was just having misplaced curiosity,” the soon-to-be-graduate remarked.
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