Archive

Author Archive

Free webinar on gifted learning

October 14, 2024 Leave a comment

Midtown International School invites parents and teachers to attend an online presentation about gifted children and how they learn, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024 at 7 p.m.

The one-hour webinar will cover signs of giftedness, types of gifted learners, and strategies to support gifted children’s intellectual and social growth.

Registration for the webinar is required for all attendees.

Midtown International School is an independent school in northeast Atlanta that caters specifically to gifted children in kindergarten through 12th grade.

Categories: In the schools

Georgia Tech October workshops for grades 2-12

October 2, 2024 Leave a comment

Registration is open for Georgia Tech’s K.I.D.S. Club and STEAM Workshop classes for Saturday, October 26, from 9 a.m. to noon on the Georgia Tech campus.

K.I.D.S. Club is open to students in grades 2 through 5. STEAM Workshops are for students in grades 6 through 12. Topics vary by age group.

Cost to attend is $65 per student. Unfortunately, the scholarship program that had been offered for the past several years, which was funded through the American Rescue Plan, has ended.

Additional K.I.D.S. Club and STEAM Workshops are planned for November 16, and December 7.

Categories: Enrichment

Emory to host math festival this Saturday

September 5, 2024 Leave a comment

Emory University’s Math Circle program will host a Julia Robinson Mathematics Festival this Saturday, September 7.

The event targets middle- and high-school students who love math. Students go from table to table, trying out a range of games and puzzles which tend to focus on math concepts more than numerical computation. I attended this event with my kids some years ago, and found it to be challenging yet approachable and fun.

The math festival will be held in the atrium of the Math and Science Center from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. The event is intended as a drop-in activity — families can come and go at any time.

Admission to the festival is free, and free parking is available in the Oxford Road parking deck.

Categories: Enrichment

Emory Math Circle registering for fall 2024

September 4, 2024 Leave a comment

The Math Circle program at Emory University is now registering students in grades 6 to 12 for its fall 2024 classes, which will begin in mid-September.

Math Circle is an enrichment program for middle-school and high-school kids who enjoy mathematics and want to explore topics and concepts beyond what’s taught in their regular math class at school.

Classes meet twice a month on Saturdays. High-school classes will meet on the Emory campus; middle-school students can choose from in-person or Zoom-based classes.

You can get more information and register at the Math Circle website.

Emory Math Circle is free to attend, but the program operates with the help of donations, and they suggest a donation of $30 per child for those who can afford to give.

Categories: Enrichment

Georgia Tech September workshops for grades 2-12

August 29, 2024 Leave a comment

Registration is open for Georgia Tech’s K.I.D.S. Club and STEAM Workshop classes for Saturday, September 28, from 9 a.m. to noon on the Georgia Tech campus.

K.I.D.S. Club is open to students in grades 2 through 5. STEAM Workshops are for students in grades 6 through 12. Topics vary by age group and include robotics, computer science, forensic science, biotechnology, and chemistry.

Cost to attend is $65 per student. Unfortunately, the scholarship program that had been offered for the past several years, which was funded through the American Rescue Plan, has ended.

Additional K.I.D.S. Club and STEAM Workshops are planned for October 26, November 16, and December 7.

Categories: Enrichment

Get to know DI (Destination Imagination)

July 29, 2024 Leave a comment

I’ll say up front, this one is close to my heart.

Destination Imagination is an international program that encourages children’s creativity and collaborative skills. Working in small teams, kids tackle challenges that require a combination of technical skills, artistic ability, and ingenuity. Some challenges lean more toward the technical, while others require more artistry and theatrical presentation. DI is centered around STEAM components, but the teamwork required provides a separate learning experience of its own, and the child-led nature of the program does wonders for kids’ self-confidence.

My kids were in DI for several years, and I was their “team manager,” so I’m very familiar with how it works and what it does for kids, and I’m a big proponent of the program. Yet as I sit here and try to describe it, it’s surprisingly hard to put into words. That’s why I’d suggest, if you’re looking for an activity for the coming school year that emphasizes creativity and teamwork, you attend one of the upcoming information sessions being presented by the Georgia affiliate of DI and see if it could be a fit for your child and/or your school.

Sessions will be offered via Zoom on July 30 and 31 and August 5 and 6. If none of the available times is convenient for you, you can register and receive a link to watch a recording.

If you’d like more details about my personal experiences in DI, please use the form on the contact page to send me a message. I’m glad to share.

Categories: Enrichment

Rockfest coming to Tellus

May 13, 2024 Leave a comment

Tellus Science Museum will present its 33rd annual Rockfest rock and gem show on June 8 and 9, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both days.

Rockfest features gem, mineral, fossil, and jewelry dealers from across the country, along with activities and workshops. Kids can even bring rocks they’ve collected to have them identified by the experts.

Rockfest attendance is included with general admission to the museum.

Categories: Enrichment

VOX ATL taking applications for summer multimedia production program

May 9, 2024 Leave a comment

VOX ATL, a non-profit organization that calls itself “Atlanta’s home for uncensored teen publishing and self-expression” is taking applications for its Media Cafe summer program.

Media Cafe is a two-week program that introduces teens to multimedia production, journalism and public speaking. Working in VOX ATL’s downtown office, teens get hands-on experience with writing, video editing, podcasting and graphic design. They also take field trips and meet creative professionals who work in Atlanta.

The program is open to ages 13-19. It’s free, although participants are asked to provide a $100 deposit to hold their spot. The deposit is returned at the end of the session. (Deposit waivers may be available, based on financial need.)

The application deadline is May 22. To learn more, visit the Media Cafe page.

Categories: Summer programs

Flash sale on summer writing camps at Atlanta History Center

April 15, 2024 Leave a comment

Atlanta History Center is having a sale this week on its summer writing camps for students who are currently in 6th through 8th grades.

As they describe the camps, “Campers will learn how to become history detectives as they uncover museum mysteries, craft their own spooky stories, experiment with different styles of writing, and dream up their own imaginative worlds, all while having fun and exploring the past through games, historical simulations, and more!”

There’s no code required for the discount, which is $50 for non-members or $40 for members. The discount should appear automatically at registration. (Note that their history camps — which are for younger kids — aren’t part of this sale.) This offer ends this Friday, April 19.

Need more financial help for your child to attend a camp at Atlanta History Center? Camp scholarships are available for students who attend a Title I public school and receive free or reduced lunch. These are available for history camps or writing camps.

Categories: Summer programs

AICL is a totally different summer camp

April 1, 2024 1 comment

“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.”
— Henry David Thoreau

If this well-known quotation describes your gifted child, take a look at the Appalachian Institute for Creative Learning, a summer camp that revels in letting kids explore topics outside the expected.

AICL is one of the only summer programs I include on GiftedAtlanta.com that isn’t in the metro Atlanta area. It’s held at Mars Hill University, near Asheville, N.C. Why do I make this exception? First, my own kids attended this camp for two years, and my husband and I taught at the camp one of those years, so I’m personally familiar with it. And second, I know that AICL has given many quirky kids the priceless experience of feeling they’re with their true peers — including one kid whose mom read about AICL on this blog and who told me the camp was a godsend for her child.

Consider some of the classes they’re offering this summer: print making, the nervous system, Korean folk art, puppetry, short-story writing and French new wave films. Campers will create their own game shows, dismantle electronic devices, and program mini-robots to perform a play. In the afternoons and evenings, there are small-group clubs and large-group activities.

It isn’t just the classes AICL teaches that makes it work. It’s an underlying philosophy that celebrates personal and intellectual originality.

This summer, AICL will meet for two, one-week sessions. The camp is open to students rising to grades 3 through 12, with residential and day camp options. (Day camp at a location nearly four hours away is obvioulsy impractical, unless you make a sort of family vacation of it and rent a place around Asheville for the week — which we did the first year my kids attended.)

Categories: Summer programs