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Centre for the Talented Youth of Ireland

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Centre for the Talented Youth of Ireland
Formation 1992
Headquarters Dublin City University
Location Ireland
Colm O'Reilly
Key people Colm O'Reilly, Eleanor Cooke, Catriona Fitzgerald
Website CTYI

The Centre for the Talented Youth of Ireland (CTYI) is a youth programme for students between the ages of six and sixteen of high academic ability (generally scoring at the 95th percentile on assessment tests for 6-13 year olds and 97th percentile for 12-16 year olds) in Ireland.

There are sibling projects around the world, most notably the CTY programme at Johns Hopkins University, the original model for CTYI. CTY students are eligible to participate in CTYI's summer sessions for older students. CTYI was founded in 1992 and is based at Dublin City University in Glasnevin, Dublin 9. Colm O'Reilly has been its director since 2005. The centre offers various courses for gifted students as well as conducting research and promoting the needs of the talented in Ireland.

Contents

[edit] Summer Courses

Summer courses are available for 6-7-year-olds and 8-13-year-olds (one-week sessions) at DCU and at other colleges and institutes of technology around Ireland. These students normally study two related subjects in either the morning or the afternoon session.

The summer programme for older students (12-16-year-olds) runs only at DCU. Two sessions of three weeks each run each summer, usually from mid-June until the end of July or early August. Demand in recent years has meant that eligible students have only attended one session each year, though as of 2009 students may attend both sessions.

Some of the students at the summer programme come from overseas, mostly from the United States. Owing to the intensive nature of the programme, most of the 250-300 students who attend each session are residential, living in college accommodation for the duration of the course.

Weekdays in the summer programme are highly structured. Classes run from 9am to 3pm, with an hour's break for lunch. Activities take place from 3.15pm to 5pm, supervised by the residential assistants (RAs). Between 5pm and 6:30pm students have dinner and are required to attend a meeting with their RA group. 6:30pm to 8:30pm is taken up by the study period, which is supervised by the teaching assistant. Social time takes place between 8:30pm and 10pm, with lights-out at 10.30pm. On weekends, social activities such as discos, shopping trips, visits to the cinema, excursions to various interesting sights in Ireland, talent shows, casino nights and so on are organised.

Students on the older students programme study one subject intensively over three weeks. The courses on offer tend to cover material that is at first-year university level or its equivalent, and involve subjects not taught (or widely taught) for the Leaving Certificate. In 2009, the following courses were offered: Archaeology (A and B), Art History, Astronomy, Biomedical Diagnostics, Chinese, Computer Applications, Corporate Business, Criminology, Drama, Engineering, Entrepreneurship, Film Studies, Globalisation, Gothic Studies, Human Rights Law, International History, International Relations, Journalism, Modern Mathematics, Novel Writing, Philosophy, Psychology, Social Psychology, Speculative Fiction Writing, Sports Science, Superhero Science, Theoretical Physics, Veterinary Science, War and Conflict Studies, Writing for Life.

[edit] Saturday Courses

Saturday courses are offered at various colleges and institutes of technology around Ireland throughout the year. There are courses for both the 6-7 age group and the 8-13 group. Some centres also run classes on Wednesday afternoons.

[edit] Correspondence Courses

The centre runs correspondence courses throughout the year for 12-16-year-olds and also for Transition Year students who do not have to fulfil any aptitude test requirements. Courses include or have included Writing By Mail, Journalism, Psychology, Philosophy, Legal Studies, and Science of Tomorrow. There are also correspondence courses for younger students (8-13) in computing-related subjects and Writing By Mail.

[edit] Discovery Days

These are once-off days at DCU, usually Saturdays, which feature a lecture or series of lectures on a particular topic of interest, e.g. "The Science behind Superheroes".

[edit] Cut in Funding

It was announced in the Irish 2009 Government Budget that the government would not continue funding CTYI. Up to 2008 the Department of Education had been providing the course with €97,000. The move was criticized by CTYI staff. However a spokesperson for the Department of Education said that “the resources available for next year meant that difficult choices had to be made and the abolition of the grant to the Centre for Talented Youth was one of those tough decisions.” The government had planned to allow CTYI to become a national mandate. [1][2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/features/2009/0311/1224242651684.html

[edit] External links

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