Einstein did NOT fail maths as a child — that's a myth invented by a misread report card
The popular story that Einstein failed maths as a child has been thoroughly debunked. In the Swiss grading system of his time, 6 was the top grade and 1 was the lowest — the reverse of today's common scale. Einstein's report cards show he received the highest marks in maths and physics throughout school. The myth was spread after a 1984 Ripley's Believe It or Not column misread the grading scale. Einstein himself, when shown the column, said it amused him — he had mastered calculus by 15.
The 'Einstein failed maths' story is widely used to encourage struggling students. Its falseness undermines the comfort it offers, but the real Einstein story — a child who mastered calculus at 15 out of sheer curiosity — is arguably more inspiring.
“Einstein did NOT fail maths as a child. Swiss schools graded 1–6 (6 = best). He got top marks throughout. The myth came from a 1984 column that misread the grading scale. 📐 #OddlyHuman”