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Gifted LearningLinks Home
Program Description
Eligibility
How to Apply
Policies & Fees
Courses/Syllabi
FAQ
Benefits
Downloads
GLL Student Tutorials
Gifted LearningLinks for Schools
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Gifted LearningLinks 2007-2008 Brochure.
Click here to download entire
brochure.
Click here to download
application only.
Click here to view a video describing this
program.
(Note: Video may take a few minutes
to fully load.)
Enrichment Courses Offered (grades
3-8)
Honors Courses Offered (grades
6-12)
Advanced
Placement (AP®) Courses Offered (grades 6-12)
Accelerated Summer
Courses Offered (grades 3-12)
Education Program for Gifted Youth
(EPGY)
Program Dates and Deadlines
|
Session
|
Application Deadline |
Course
Dates |
| Summer |
May 15, 2008 |
June 1, 2008 -
February 28, 2009
(Honors and AP)
June 1, 2008 -
August 31, 2008
(Enrichment) |
| Accelerated Summer Option |
June 9, 2008 |
June 23, 2008 - August 1, 2008 |
EPGY
(you may not apply online for EPGY registration) |
Register by the 1st of the previous month |
Starts on the 1st of each month and lasts three months |
Gifted LearningLinks for
Schools
Find out how your school can use Gifted
LearningLinks curriculum to
help academically-talented students
receive the challenge they need. Click
here for more
information.
Articles
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A Students
Perspective on Gifted LearningLinks
As part of his preparation for college, John Chapman
took several distance learning courses through CTDs
Gifted LearningLinks.
What led you
to look outside your school for courses?
I attended a small school that had enrollment of
about 400 students. Understandably, our options for taking advanced
courses
were limited. By the end of my sophomore year
though, I was interested
in taking such accelerated courses.
The classes I had taken at my school,
even though I was
taking classes ahead of my classmates, were not challenging
me. I was wasting time when I felt I could have been doing more.
Also,
I wanted to explore topics that my school did not even
have classes for,
such as logic and philosophy.
How did you become aware of Gifted LearningLinks?
I participated in the Midwest Talent Search and
received a mailing because of that.
How would you describe your experience in Gifted
LearningLinks? What are
the pros and cons of distance
learning courses vs traditional courses?
The experience I had in Gifted LearningLinks was
enormously
beneficial to my education. I was able to handle
learning on my own and
sticking to a schedule. My teachers
were also very helpful. Whenever I
did have questions, my
teachers were able to answer them for me. For my
writing
courses, they gave me good feedback on how to improve my essays,
and in my AP courses they gave me material that was extremely useful
in
preparing for the AP exams. Having completed such
difficult courses, I
felt (and was in fact) more prepared
for college. These courses gave me
an opportunity to learn
about subject matter in such depth as I would
not have
gotten at my school, and that I was able to succeed gave me the
confidence to seek out more challenges.
For me, distance
learning was an opportunity to take courses I otherwise
would not have been able to at my high school. They also allowed me
to
work at my own pace. Nevertheless, there is something
lost in not having
a teacher, who in a normal class setting
delivers lectures, can further
emphasize certain aspects of
the material that are particularly important,
and answers
questions on the spot. Having said that, I would definitely
advise anyone who believes he can to give up those things for the
opportunity
to challenge himself with advanced classes which
interest him.
How did Gifted LearningLinks fit
into your daily school routine?
My high school had block scheduling with a total
of eight classes. The arrangement I had with my counselor was for me
to
work in the library during the periods I had for my
correspondence courses.
Thus, it worked right into my
schedule, just like any other class.
Who should
consider taking distance learning courses? What advice
would
you give to other students considering distance learning as an
option?
Any student who is
interested in learning about
topics that are not part of
their high school curriculum or students who
have a desire
to take more challenging courses which they would not otherwise
be able to take should consider taking distance learning courses. To
anyone
who is considering taking such courses, I would
advise them to be sure
that they believe that they are
prepared to take what is predominately
a self-motivated,
self-taught course. It takes a lot of discipline to
stick to
the schedule when no teachers are there to remind you, and the
nature of the course is such that the student must learn most of the
material
on his own through reading a textbook. But, if one
does take a distance
learning course, it can be just as good
or, insofar as you are also acquiring
good study habits
better than a regular course.
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