The Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth is a
Transcription
The Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth is a
The Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth is a nonprofit organization dedicated to identifying and developing the academic talents of the most promising K-12 students worldwide. As part of Johns Hopkins, CTY helps fulfill the university’s mission of preparing students to make significant future contributions to our world. mcauley hall, suite 400 | 5801 smith avenue, baltimore md 21209 410.735.4100 | ctyinfo@jhu.edu | cty.jhu.edu AN N UAL R EPORT 2013 he alphabet is one of the first codes we master as young children. Once deciphered, this string of 26 letters provides the building blocks of language and learning and gives us the tools we need to express ourselves and connect with the world. We are grateful to the alphabet for giving us so many things—the periodic table and the Declaration of Independence, important words like “peace” and “truth” and fun-to-say words like “quibble” and “quark,” books like Harry Potter, and useful shorthand like LOL, BTW, and, of course, CTY. But CTY is more than just three letters. Just as the alphabet provides an invaluable instrument for expression and engagement, the Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth gives bright young learners what they need to grow academically and socially— challenging course work, dedicated instructors, a vibrant community of peers from around the globe, and infinite possibilities for the future. Delve into our 2013 Annual Report and discover the alphabet of CTY from A to Z. These photos were submitted by some of our awesomely talented CTYers. To view more, or submit your own, visit CTY’s online annual report at www.ctyannualreport.com In these pages you’ll read about the year’s CTY highlights and discover what our students accomplish at CTY. You’ll learn about some of our engaged instructors and amazing alumni. And you’ll also meet some of our donors, whose generosity makes it possible for bright, qualified students from families of limited financial means to come to CTY on scholarship. w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m We hope you’ll even be inspired to contribute to our online gallery of photo illustrations created by CTYers or support a CTY student yourself. Visit www.ctyannualreport.com to view the “CTY from A to Z” video, learn more about our programs, and make a gift. Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 But it’s also where to find stories and photographs showing the impact that CTY has on the lives of our students, families, alumni, and friends. cty from a to z nnual report Consider CTY’s annual report a once-a-year accounting of our activities, and you’ll be accurate. It’s the place to find financial charts, lists of endowments and top donors, and enrollment figures. 3 right in baltimore Joshua Turner CTY Student Baltimore, Md. “At school I was sometimes bullied because of my academic achievement. One quarter I even got Bs on purpose to see if kids would stop teasing me. Being at CTY made me realize it’s okay to be smart. At CTY I heard about so many new things. I could have conversations with other kids about science, and they didn’t look at me like I had 10 heads. Here I can be myself.” 4 become a doctor and work with children. But there were so many programs and colleges to choose from. Should she go public or private? Stay in New York or venture far? Select a small school or a big one? As a CTY Scholar, Wannah got the guidance and support she needed in one place. Paired with CTY educational advisor Makaya Jackson, she attended competitive college applicant. In addition, she had someone to guide her through the entire process, help her fine-tune college essays, and navigate deadlines, applications, and financial aid forms. She could call, email, or text Jackson whenever she had a question. “Makaya became a college to major in biomedical sciences at SUNY Buffalo and become a neonatologist. Since 2004, the CTY Scholars Program has enrolled more than 660 low-income students from across the United States and given them the support they needed to be successful in high school and beyond. Graduates of the four-year scholarship program have gone on to attend some of the nation’s top colleges, including MIT, Swarthmore, and Columbia. For Jackson, counseling these bright, engaged students is rewarding work. “I think of this program as leveling the playing field for students who don’t have as much access to information about the college admissions process as those in private schools or more affluent school districts,” she says. “If you inform students about the amazing opportunities that are out there, they’ll take advantage of them.” Give to the CTY Scholars Program at cty.jhu.edu/support w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m workshops where she learned how to become a the smallest of problems,” says Wannah, who plans Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 The Greenburgh, N.Y., teenager had long hoped to counselor I could contact all the time, even with cty from a to z is for college. Wannah Robert always knew she would go to college. What she didn’t know was where. 5 i n e: CTY inspires students to further define their academic passions. Whether it’s linguistics or philosophy, Arabic, flight science, or Scratch programming, CTY offers young people the opportunity to pursue subject matter they might not have access to in school. For Sam Zhang, a CTY student from Shanghai who has always been passionate about animals, attending a Summer Programs course in zoology sparked his interest in the birds of North America. So, prior to the first day of class, he memorized the entire Peterson Field Guide to Birds of North America. During his first week at CTY, Sam mastered hundreds of bird calls. By his third week, he gave a 60-minute presentation to his class about the body structures and orders of the birds of the world. “CTY really strengthened my interest in animal science,” he says. is for greece. CTY Greece, made possible by a generous grant from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, isn’t just about giving bright Greek students academic challenges and connecting them with a community of learners. It’s about opportunity. “Because of Greece’s current financial crisis there are few opportunities, and few people have the financial means to take advantage of a program like CTY,” explains Stelios Vasilakis, senior program officer for strategy and initiatives for the Niarchos Foundation. “The fact that CTY Greece will offer scholarships and provide access to families that could not otherwise afford the program was very important to us.” CTY Greece will be operated by Anatolia College in Thessaloniki and welcome its first students in 2014. Georgina Kypriotaki, 15, was one of 10 Greek students who attended CTY Lancaster this summer on scholarship. She was so excited about the opportunity to come to CTY that she traveled 556 miles by ferry and bus from her home in Crete to Anatolia College to test for CTY. “This was my dream to come here,” she says. “From the very first day it was a wonderful experience.” mom and dad, Sorry I haven’t written. Things have been so busy here at CTY that I haven’t had a chance. My class is totally amazing and my instructor and TA are incredible. We’re in class seven hours a day but the time flies by. We are going on a field trip tomorrow and I can’t wait. My roommate is from New York and she is really cool. She’s invited CTY friends to her house during school break. Can I go? It’s lights out. I’ve gotta go. Please send Nutella and Pringles. Love, Me 7 i s f o r J o h ns Ho p k i ns. Johns Hopkins is where CTY got its start in Julian Stanley’s pioneering research on high-achieving students. It’s our educational home and the source of many strong partnerships and collaborations. realize what I want to do with my life,” Gabriel, who took bioethics at CTY, wrote to him in 2007. “I will always remember all the skills I learned and all the friends I made at CTY,” Justin, an electrical engineering student, wrote Kahn last year. “These experiences will forever affect who I am.” Their words resonate with the CTY parent and why he gives to CTY. “The reason I’m so enthusiastic about sponsoring students is that CTY can be a totally life-changing experience, particularly if you come from a background where the kids you see at school in the program. Over the years he’s supported some 40 CTY scholarship students from the Bay Area and established the Kahn Family Scholarship Endowment to ensure support for future generations of CTYers. His hope, he says, is that by opening the door to CTY to these young students they will learn more, see more, and do more than they ever dreamed of before. He explains, “This is about raising students’ expectations and increasing their horizons so they see what the real possibilities are.” and in your neighborhood don’t seem to value learning,” Visit www.ctyannualreport.com to see the video says Kahn, a CTY donor since 2005. “When they come to CTY and are surrounded by other students who are really excited about learning it can be transformative.” about CTY scholarships and support a CTY student. w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m Advisory Board member because they remind him Kahn, who lives in San Francisco, first became aware of CTY through his son Eli’s participation Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 “This class really opened my eyes … and [made me] cty from a to z is for kids. The letters from kids Ron Kahn supports with scholarships to CTY Summer Programs arrive in his mailbox each fall, bursting with stories about inspiring classes, new friends, and lasting impressions. He can’t wait to read them. 9 anyard At its simplest, the CTY lanyard is a strip of webbing designed to hold an ID card and identify a person as a CTY Summer Programs student or staffer. The color of the lanyard changes each summer, but the rules do not. Always wear your lanyard at CTY. And please, do not swing it around. More than 192,550 lanyards have been distributed to CTY students and staff since 1996. And somewhere along the line, student lanyards became a keepsake to cherish. “Not only is a CTY lanyard an automatic souvenir, it’s almost a tradition,” Michael Holmes, who has attended CTY for the past eight summers, says of the rainbow of lanyards hanging on his bedroom doorknob. “The lanyard becomes part of who you are at CTY.” imagine agazine In 1993 when Imagine magazine launched its first issue, there was no Google, no social media, no smartphones. If a kid wanted to know about summer engineering programs or writing contests or what it’s like to attend a certain college, there was no single place to go to find out. Nowhere, that is, except Imagine. In the last two decades, Imagine, which CTY publishes five times per year, has explored a wide range of themes in 101 issues, reached tens of thousands of readers, and printed articles by more than 750 student contributors on topics ranging from science fairs to museum internships. The magazine’s mission, to show students ways to pursue their academic interests outside school, remains more important than ever. “The amount of information out there about academic opportunities is just overwhelming,” says Imagine editor Melissa Hartman. “We use our experience to curate those opportunities and share the very best with our readers.” erd Some people shy away from the word nerd. At CTY, a place some lovingly refer to as “Nerd Camp,” we don’t. Say it loud, say it proud. Nerd is a word to embrace, to celebrate. A nerd is a beautiful thing–smart, intense, and passionate– a person with strong interests and big ideas who shares knowledge with the world. Nerds are powerful people– they effect change, they innovate, they create. As actor/ writer/self-professed nerd Wil Wheaton recently explained, “Being a nerd … is not about what you love–it’s about how you love it.” 11 12 Inspiration beyond their everyday surroundings is students in need of scholarship support have focused exactly what Warren Lee and his fellow members of geographic boundaries. And this year, for the first students they helped support would discover at CTY. advanced Hong Kong students from families of limited how awed his daughter Madeline was when she came on the United States. But academic talent knows no time, CTY identified some two dozen academically financial means and awarded them scholarships to CTY’s East Asia Advisory Group hoped the Hong Kong Lee, a CTY parent who lives in Hong Kong, remembers home from CTY for the first time. “There are students at CTY who know everything,” she told him. The students, who are in the 5th through 10th The knowledge that she wasn’t the smartest three weeks at CTY this summer immersed in such and challenged her to be a better student, he says. grades and attend local Hong Kong schools, spent courses as Mathematical Modeling, Macroeconomics, and Introduction to the Biomedical Sciences. For Chin Ching, 15, studying physics at CTY provided a markedly different way of learning than he had experienced in school. “CTY is not just a place to study,” he says. “It is a place for inspiring ideas.” student in the room opened his daughter’s eyes It’s a lesson he’d like other bright young people in Hong Kong to learn as well. “I want these students to know there are no limits,” he says. Learn more about supporting a CTY student at cty.jhu.edu/support w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m attend CTY Hong Kong. Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 Historically, the Center’s outreach efforts to identify cty from a to z is for outstanding outreach. CTY is dedicated to sharing its programs with all bright students who qualify, regardless of their family’s financial circumstances. 13 is for pie – american pie. CTYers can’t seem to say goodbye to “American Pie,” the 1971 Don McLean song traditionally played last at CTY dances. When a group of 40 CTY alumni recently got together for a reunion dance in New York City, “American Pie” drove everyone to the dance floor, where they not only danced, they kicked their legs, swayed to the music, and chanted the traditional CTY responses to certain lines. “Everyone was crying and hugging at the end, just like the end of any CTY dance,” says Farin Rebecca Loeb, a CTY alumna who helped coordinate the event. “We had a blast.” Go to www.cty.edu/alumni to find out more about CTY Alumni activities and connect with fellow CTYers. is for qu esti ons. What is truth? How do you know right from wrong? Why does vinegar smell weird? What is organic form in writing and why does it matter? How does the nervous system sustain life? Why is the number of crabs in the Chesapeake Bay declining? These are just a handful of the kinds of questions our students ask–and answer–at CTY. ewarding research Supporting young scientists with promising math and science research ideas with grants of up to $600 is the mission of the new CTY Cogito Research Awards. The middle and high school students selected to receive the awards will be paired with a mentor to support them through the research process and blog about their projects on Cogito.org, CTY’s website for students interested in math and science. Up to 10 students will be selected. “Students sharing what it’s like to do science, in a friendly virtual environment–that’s a big part of Cogito’s mission,” says Kristi Birch, Cogito’s managing editor. “We want to not only give these students financial assistance and mentoring, we also want to connect them with a supportive online community of students doing real-world research.” Visit www.cogito.org to connect with young thinkers from around the world. 15 uperamazingwickedawesome eachers At CTY our students’ passion for learning is mirrored and nurtured by the educators who work with them. From the CTYOnline engineering instructor whose enthusiasm makes the topic come alive, to the Summer Programs instructor who wears an orange NASA jumpsuit and arranges a flyover to welcome students to flight science, CTY instructors and staff are dedicated to the intellectual and social development of their students. How dedicated? In 2013, 79 percent of CTY summer instructors and 86 percent of site directors were returning staff members. “CTY is one of the truest forms of teaching in this country today,” says Elvida Henry, CTY Haverford academic dean and a CTY staff member since 2008. “Freed up from the high stakes testing, the grades, the pressures of performance, CTY students achieve magic.” 16 u i s at th e c e nte r o f com m n ity “CTY has always been like a second home to me. The reason I come back to CTY every summer is because of the amazing feeling of community. I get to meet people from all over the world … people who are excited to be learning, whether it’s about ancient Greek or astrophysics. The people at CTY all care for one another and when I’m there I feel like I’m a part of something important. Because that’s the amazing thing about CTY– you feel important because everybody cares about each other.” – Leslie Luqueño, CTY student, Bell Gardens, Calif. See how CTYers illustrated the word “community” as part of CTY’s Photo Illustration Contest at www.ctyannualreport.com 18 The online courses have not replaced the “brick school the opportunity to take Mandarin and Arabic. and requires all students to take. But in addition to students at the independent, co-ed Brooklyn, N.Y., It’s been a major success. Student enrollment has increased steadily – from 46 enrollments in 2011 to 64 this year – and a number of Berkeley Carroll graduates have gone on to continue their Arabic studies in college. “This is something we really felt would enhance our is one of more than 300 institutions that have enrolled students in CTYOnline courses over the years. “The idea here is to expand our campus and open our doors to new opportunities for students.” increasing the variety of languages students can learn, the CTYOnline courses have helped Berkeley Carroll students explore online learning and have enhanced their independent learning skills, she says. In fact the relationship with CTY has been so positive, according to Fogarty, that Berkeley Carroll was the site of a CTYOnline Mandarin Immersion Day this fall and hopes to soon offer CTYOnline computer science courses. “We want our students to be able to tap into what their passions are.” Visit cty.jhu.edu/ctyonline to learn more about CTYOnline. w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m language offerings,” explains Fogarty, whose school and mortar” language classes the school offers Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 So she sought out CTYOnline to offer high school cty from a to z is for very bright idea. When Suzanne Fogarty wanted to expand the language course offerings for high school students at Berkeley Carroll School beyond French, Latin, and Spanish, she decided to do something new: give students at the school the chance to learn online. 19 ays to give Give to CTY and you’ll help bright students make their mark on our world. Gifts of all amounts are important to us and can be made via mail, wire or stock transfer, or online by going to: cty.jhu.edu/support. For more information, email supportactystudent@jhu.edu or call CTY Development at 410-735-6007. cty leadership circle To recognize donors who give $5,000 or more annually we have created this special group. A gift at this level can provide bright students with full tuition to attend a CTY Summer Program, including the cost of books, travel, and lab fees, or resources for a student to take courses via CTYOnline or participate in CTY’s Family Academic Programs. Leadership Circle gifts also help CTY expand programming and launch new research initiatives. cty scholars CTY’s national outreach and scholarship program identifies academically talented 8th-graders from low-income families and provides them with the support, challenge, and direction they need through- out high school to gain admission to the nation’s top colleges and universities. The CTY Scholars program offers rigorous summer programs, online courses, cty annual scholarship fund and academic and college counseling. Give to the CTY Annual Scholarship Fund and you’ll research help ensure that all bright children who qualify can attend CTY programs, regardless of their family’s financial circumstances. Gifts provide full and partial scholarships to CTY’s challenging Summer Programs or our popular online classes and family programs. Gifts may also support Rural Connections and our Hong Kong Scholarship Fund, which make it possible for students to attend CTY Summer Programs and connect with a diverse community of learners. alumni scholarship fund No one knows better than CTY alumni the difference a CTY experience can make. Gifts directly benefit students from families that would otherwise not 20 be able to take advantage of CTY programs. Full and partial scholarships are available. Support CTY’s research and you’ll help us lead the way in studying what precocious development tells us about the mind’s potential to learn and in generating findings that can influence the way all students learn. endowment Be a guiding force in CTY’s success by establishing a named endowment that honors a loved one or memorializes an important person in your life. CTY’s endowment creates a base of funding that exists in perpetuity and ensures that, even in a struggling economy, financial resources will be available to provide scholarships and sustain research. SINCE 1979 Talent Search participations 36,097 1,822,069 Student enrollments in all CTY programs 28,275 528,546 9,480 204,394 13,308 125,575 5,487 198,579 533 23,460 Estimated value of one-course scholarships $1,225,090 $36,646,851 Financial aid awarded (excluding one-course scholarships) $5,553,380 $54,209,257 Financial aid awarded (including one-course scholarships) $6,778,470 $90,856,108 Summer Programs enrollments CTYOnline enrollments Family Academic Program enrollments One-course scholarships donated by colleges and universities to top-scoring CTY Talent Search students sources and uses statements J U LY 1 , 2 0 1 2 – J U N E 3 0 , 2 0 1 3 Gifts, Grants & Investment Income: $7,169 Tuition & Fees: $47,733 Instruction, Research & Program Services: $29,689 13% 1% in thousands 10% 31% Other Sources & Auxiliary: $339 total sources 5% 54% total uses in thousands Student Aid: $5,553 General Services & Administration: $16,906 w w w . c t ya n n u a l r e p o r t . c o m 86% Reserve Transfer: $3,093 Center for Talented Youth Annual Report 2013 FY 2013 cty from a to z cty by the numbers 21 we value our e traordinary advisors. CTY gratefully acknowledges the efforts of our Advisory Board, East Asia Advisory Group, and Southeast Asia Advisory Group. Composed of volunteers, these advisory groups provide philanthropic support for the Center’s priorities, help promote our programs, and assist in fundraising efforts. Whether our advisors are CTY parents, alumni, or friends, they share a passion for the education of academically gifted students. cty advisory board Steven Buckley Noriko Honda Chen Peter Hammack Mary Hyman Ronald Kahn James Li W. Austin Ligon Marjorie Loeb John Lutz Laura Overdeck *Chair, CTY Advisory Board Jeanne Paynter Stephen Pelletier Ming Jack Po Robert Raymond* Ràul Salinas Lee Stephens William Viqueira Jesse Wu cty east asia advisory group and southeast asia advisory group Michelle Chin Karel Vacek Harvey Goldstein* Oliver Weisberg** Gerard Chuah Warren Lee Low Wei Ling Yiling Mao Masako Varma Clara Wu Andrew Yiu Ada Yung Shirley Zanton * Chair, Southeast Asia Advisory Group ** Chair, East Asia Advisory Group dear friends, As you can see in these pages, CTY is dedicated to nurturing the academic and social growth of bright young learners and giving them a plethora of opportunities from A to Z to engage and challenge them. This year CTY enrolled some 28,275 students from nearly 100 countries in our summer, online, and family programs and awarded more than $5.5 million in financial aid so that students from families of limited financial means could come to CTY and join a community of academically advanced learners from around the world. Thank you for your support of CTY. Sincerely, Elaine Tuttle Hansen, Executive Director 23 thank ou to our donors We extend our thanks to every donor who has contributed to CTY’s success. Below we recognize all donors who made a gift or pledge to CTY of $1,000 or more between July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2013. We also wish to thank the many individuals and institutions who gave anonymously or in any amount. $1,000,000+ Stavros Niarchos Foundation $100,000 - $399,999 King Abdulaziz & His Companions Foundation Clifford Burnstein and Sabra Turnbull Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Goldsmith Family Foundation Harvey and Rosita Goldstein JPMorgan Chase Foundation Overdeck Family Foundation $50,000 - $99,999 American Fund for Czech & Slovak Leadership Sheldon and Cindy Stone Tek Sun and Marita Wong $25,000 –$49,999 Lawrence Golub and Karen Finerman Ronald Kahn and Julia Rowe Michael and Margie Loeb Math for America Mochary Foundation Anthony and Lary Lynn Muller NASDAQ OMX Group Educational Foundation Stephen Pelletier Robert and Judith Raymond Jordana Polis Schutz Michael and Temmy Tse Victoria Foundation James L. and Susan G. Winter Foundation $10,000 - $24,999 Anonymous Anonymous-Foundations 24 Albanian-American Development Foundation BlackRock, Inc. Gary and Michelle Chin Capital Group Charitable Foundation Suzanne F. Cohen Stephen Fantozzi and Fatima Steiner Goldman Sachs Gives Peter and Beth Hammack Fred L. Hartley Family Foundation Mary Hyman John and Alethea Lutz William Meyers and Nahma Sandrow Meyers Andrew and Monica Midler Laura J. Niles Foundation Nancy Buck Ransom Foundation Vernon Reid Jr. and Rosalind Plummer-Reid Scott Sagan and Bao Lamsam SanDisk Corporation Jean Shek $5,000 - $9,999 Robert Abernethy Kenneth Bacow and Nina Kleaveland Melissa Bostrom Douglas and Samara Braunstein Steven Buckley and Alice Detwiler Noriko Honda Chen Mark Davis and Yueh-Hsiu Chien James Del Favero Jared and Carolyn Dillian Keith and Casey Florance Scott Holdren Junior Philanthropists Fund, USVI Kingdom Property Company, Limited W. Austin Ligon Ryan Mack and Nadia Haq Nishar Family Foundation Arturo and Lourdes Pizano Stephen Smoot Craig and Sharon Stanfill Lee and Lisa Stephens Michael Stocker SXSW Community Fund Verizon Foundation Oliver Weisberg and Janine Feng Michael Whalen and Shirley Zanton Jesse Wu The Marjorie Wyman Charitable Annuity Trust $2,500 - $4,999 The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation Bridgestone Americas Trust Fund Eddie and Sylvia Brown Family Foundation Joel Dean Foundation GE Foundation Google Inc. Blake and Jill Grossman Stan and Elaine Hansen John and Kristen Kuhn John and Kay Kyle Ronald and Pamela Lake Warren and Susanna Lee Michael and Valerie McKeever Fund Sanjay and Sangeeta Mehrotra Merck & Company, Inc. Robert and Suzanne Nederlander Jr. Michael Norworth and Karen Walters Thomas Pong and Joan Li Milad Pooran Alfred Spector and Rhonda Kost William A. and Sunita Stewart Richard and Natasha Stowe David and Cynthia Tolsma Fund Joe Tsai and Clara M. Wu William Viqueira and Zaida Pacheco Allen and Rebecca Wirfs-Brock Zastron Precision-Tech Limited $1,000 - $2,499 Anonymous-Alumni Acacia Family Medical Group Adam and Diedre Abrons David and Justina Apaw Morris and Arlene Applebaum Peter Austin and Cynthia Birt Austin Charles and Elizabeth Beckman Richard Berman and Jessica Van Der Riet Andrew Blumberg Gina Caminito Steven David John Dudley and Andee Aaby Diana Ellsworth ExxonMobil Foundation Barry Field and Julia Farr Felicia Garnes Gilman School, Inc. Steve Givens and Elizabeth Nathane Craig Giventer Alexandros Hasson and Anne Clark Chester and Anna Hong Jeremy Hylton Andrew Janquitto and M. Elizabeth Albert Julian Jones and Patricia Wallace David Kaplan Kiwanis Club of Ellicott City Igor Kopylov Harvey C. Krentzman Charitable Fund Scott and Amy Krentzman Mark and Sherri Langfan Jordan Leader and Ericka Pazcoguin James Li William & Elaine Lo Family Foundation Rachel Madhogarhia Stephen and Sylvia Melikian Warren and Mary Naphtal Rebecca Nathenson Rodney and Ardis Ono Carl Osterman and Sandra Liotta Dmitry and Gina Papush Marshall Perrin Ming Jack Po John D. Rockefeller V and Emily Tagliabue Rockefeller Thomas and Victoria Rollins Elizabeth Rosenblatt William E. Schmidt Foundation Shell Oil Company Foundation Stacey Smith Wesley and Cindy Trochil Joseph Verbalis and Virginia Steen Juan Suarez and Lorena Bologni Margaret Walsh Ferdinand T. Wang and Sandra Cuzzi Jonathan T. Wang Joseph Wu Thomas Wu and Rachel Chin Jay Yoon i s f o r z i lli o ns. CTYers amaze us every day in a zillion different ways. See how the winners of the CTY Photo Illustration Contest expressed their connection to CTY – and share your own photos – by going to: www.ctyannualreport.com
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a world leader in gifted education. Founded in 1979 by Johns Hopkins University, the Center for Talented Youth (CTY) today is a leader in recognizing and developing the world’s brightest young mind...
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