Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
school-Rhoda-Tamakloe-gifted
Full Text:
with photo... A Summer Vacation Of Self-Discovery
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
Rhoda Tamakloe is gifted and she recently attended a camp made the most of
those gifts.
Last week, the 12-year-old Newtown resident returned from Vassar College in
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., where she participated in the three-week Summer Institute
for the Gifted, a program designed to prepare high-achieving students for the
rigors of college and for further success in high school.
"It looked like fun, and I hadn't been away from home for any long period of
time," she explained. "I wanted to do something that was worth my while."
Rhoda, the daughter of Nelson and Sylvia Tamakloe of Russet Road, will be an
eighth grader at Wooster School in Danbury this fall. She recently finished in
the 99th percentile on her Mastery Test scores.
The overnight camp allowed the gifted students to take courses not normally
available to them. For example, Rhoda enrolled herself in an introduction to
veterinary medicine, plane geometry, mock trials in the justice system and
team sports, challenging courses for any 18-year-old, much less a girl who
won't turn 13 until December.
"The camp helped me learn to study on my own better. I didn't have any help
from my mom or dad. It was just me," she explained.
Each course was taught by a person who worked in that particular field.
In her veterinary course, Rhoda learned the many aspects of the profession and
even got to draw blood from a dog. She hopes to become a veterinarian some day
and feels she now has an advantage over other prospective vets.
Rhoda will be studying plane geometry in school this coming year and get a
head start by enrolling in a plane geometry course at camp.
As for the mock trial, the Wooster School student said she'd always wanted to
see what a trial was like, figuring the trials seen on TV and in the movies
were far from the real thing.
At camp, her mock trial class recreated the Salem Witch Trials and the trial
of Captain Henry Wirz, the ruthless Confederate leader of the Andersonville
Prison Camp during the Civil War.
In team sports, the gifted students participated in several games where
teammates had to depend on each other in order to win.
"It helped us learn how to work with other people," she explained.
An honors students at Wooster School, Rhoda said she is looking forward to
getting back into the academics this fall, but said she's especially excited
about going back to the camp for the gifted next summer.
