Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would it offer any benefit for a young girl who has plenty of friends and whose parents are nerds and more than happy to teach her lots of advanced material?
That was me, and I absolutely loved it. What 15:27 said was right on. It was a wonderful experience, and it made going to college not an issue at all, as it was just like going over the summer.
Anonymous wrote:Would it offer any benefit for a young girl who has plenty of friends and whose parents are nerds and more than happy to teach her lots of advanced material?
Anonymous wrote:I did it years ago during the summers when I was 12 through 15 years old. I have no recent experience so it might have changed.
I loved it. It was extremely important to me. I stayed in college dorms and took classes for 3 to 6 weeks each summer. I took classes in creative writing, history, etc.
What was important to me was that I was able to hang out with kids my age who were also extremely intellectually curious and this was not seen as "nerdy" at all since we were all like that.
Maybe adults would have looked at us and said we had "poor social skills." But when I was that age, I did not perceive it like that. What I felt was that my social skills were just fine but that a lot of the other kids at my middle/high school were cruel jerks a lot of the time. It was a great relief to be away from that.
The classes were taught by the kind of people who might be adjuncts at universities and to me they seemed wonderfully cool and interesting and non-authoritarian, since they did not have to spend a lot of time trying to keep a class under control. I wanted to be like them.
Going away to CTY gave me a taste of what life would be like when I was older and lived away from home and didn't have to be in an institutional school setting where I was either picked on or mostly a loner....and it was heaven. I feel lucky that my parents could afford it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, the application process is costly and time-consuming IMO. Application fee is $37 and THEN you have to sign up with Prometric for $55 for the SCAT (my DC took it the summer between 2nd & 3rd grades). All of their programs are expensive, even the one-day family programs that are open to everyone. You must have deep pockets and a highly motivated child to do any of the online programs let alone the camps.
The reason we did it is because we thought it would provide a great opportunity for some additional enrichment. I should have checked the price tag!
I was disappointed in the program although to be fair we never signed uo for anything. All the programs seemed too expensive and to be blunt it seemed like it was great if your kid was really nerdy and had nothing else to do. We skipped it for our son who is probably the smartest of our 3 kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, the application process is costly and time-consuming IMO. Application fee is $37 and THEN you have to sign up with Prometric for $55 for the SCAT (my DC took it the summer between 2nd & 3rd grades). All of their programs are expensive, even the one-day family programs that are open to everyone. You must have deep pockets and a highly motivated child to do any of the online programs let alone the camps.
The reason we did it is because we thought it would provide a great opportunity for some additional enrichment. I should have checked the price tag!
I was disappointed in the program although to be fair we never signed uo for anything. All the programs seemed too expensive and to be blunt it seemed like it was great if your kid was really nerdy and had nothing else to do. We skipped it for our son who is probably the smartest of our 3 kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the application process is costly and time-consuming IMO. Application fee is $37 and THEN you have to sign up with Prometric for $55 for the SCAT (my DC took it the summer between 2nd & 3rd grades). All of their programs are expensive, even the one-day family programs that are open to everyone. You must have deep pockets and a highly motivated child to do any of the online programs let alone the camps.
The reason we did it is because we thought it would provide a great opportunity for some additional enrichment. I should have checked the price tag!
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else have a problem with the name? I know a lot of very talented kids that wouldn't be accepted into CTY-- wrong kind of talent. I guess Center for Scantron Adept Youth doesn't have the same ring to it.