Date: Fri 30-May-1997
Date: Fri 30-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
schools-Johns-Hopkins-gifted
Full Text:
Gifted Youth Honored In
Johns Hopkins Talent Search
Carolyn Brennan (left), Tyler Wood and Matthew Barackman from the Hawley
School were three of the 11 Newtown students recognized in the recent Johns
Hopkins Talent Search.
-Courtesy Doug Brennan
B Y D OROTHY E VANS
At only 10 or 11 years old, some students already show promise of academic
achievement.
In Newtown alone, there were 11 youngsters from grades five through nine who
scored well on a special test for the academically gifted that was sponsored
by the Johns Hopkins University Institute for the Academic Advancement of
Youth (IAAY).
They are among 7,000 other gifted students who have been honored nationwide
and, as such, are considered to be in the top one-half of one percent
academically of all students in their age group.
Approximately 500 Connecticut public and private school youngsters were cited
by the Johns Hopkins study and received their awards at a special recognition
ceremony held Saturday, May 24, at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield.
The 11 Newtown students were from the Hawley Elementary, St Rose and Newtown
Middle Schools and were cited for their outstanding verbal and/or mathematical
abilities as shown by tests that they took in December and January.
They were Maren Anderson from St Rose, Matthew Barackman from Hawley, Carolyn
Brennan from Hawley, Megan Heithaus from St Rose, Stephanie Kraushaar from St
Rose, Daniel Letson from Hawley, Lauren Parrish from Newtown Middle School,
Ryan Richardson from Newtown Middle School, Kristin Ryan from Newtown Middle
School, Lindsay Sprung from Newtown Middle School and Tyler Wood from Hawley.
The tests were administered by the Educational Testing Service in Princeton,
N.J., which also tests high school students through the S.A.T. examinations.
All the youth scored at least three school years above their present grade
level.
Carolyn Brennan, one of the recipients, said she was very proud to receive the
Johns Hopkins award - especially in the field of mathematics, the subject she
enjoyed most.
"There are many challenges for you," Carolyn Felton, president of the
Connecticut Association of the Gifted, told the students at the IAAY ceremony.
"You will be the inventors, the thinkers, the teachers, the political leaders
and business leaders," she said.
"Pursue your passion... Be yourself, accept the challenges around you. We have
a long way to go," Ms Felton said.
Also speaking at the event were Simeon Brodsky of the Summer Academic Programs
Institute for the Academic Advancement of Youth at John Hopkins and Michael
Rembish, Director of Freshman Admissions at Sacred Heart University.
In addition to sponsoring Talent Searches, IAAY offers academic school-year
and summer programs designed to challenge Talent Search participants. The
Talent Search is continuing to expand worldwide.
