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Choate Rosemary Hall
Summer Programs Wallingford, Connecticut
For More Information, Contact
Mariann Arnold, Director of Admissions
Choate Rosemary Hall Summer Programs
Wallingford, Connecticut 06492
203-697-2365
Fax: 203-697-2519
http://www.choate.edu/summer
Type of Program: College-preparatory academic enrichment/credit for residential and day students
Participants: Coeducational, students who have completed grades 6–8 and 9–12
Enrollment: 500
Program Dates: June 29 to August 1, 2008
Head of Program: James Irzyk, Director
LocationThe 450-acre campus of Choate Rosemary Hall is in the center of Wallingford, a town 12 miles north of New Haven and 20 miles south of Hartford. It is a 2-hour drive from Boston and New York City.
Background and PhilosophyThe Choate Rosemary Hall Summer Programs were established in 1916. The mission is to encourage, support, and challenge each student’s potential while making the learning experience productive, rewarding, and enjoyable. This is accomplished not only in the classroom, but also in the dormitory, through sports and social activities, and by sharing life in a residential community.
Program OfferingsStudents in each program are fully integrated into all athletic, extracurricular, and social activities on campus.
EnrollmentEach summer, 500 students from nearly fifty-five states and countries attend the summer programs. Students come from such countries as France, Japan, Spain, Switzerland, Germany, Korea, Turkey, and Argentina. Adding strength to the student body are 30 highly motivated students (Connecticut Scholars) from Connecticut’s urban public school systems.
Daily Schedule
Classes meet Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 8:15 a.m. to 2:40 p.m. and Wednesday and Saturday from 8:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. Athletics are held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. All programs have 2 hours of evening study.
Extra Opportunities and ActivitiesA variety of activities are offered on and off campus. Trips are scheduled on Wednesday afternoons and on weekends and usually include visits to Boston, New York City, shopping malls, movie theaters, professional sporting events, and nearby college campuses.
FacilitiesChoate’s academic and athletic facilities are among the best in the country. The campus resembles those of many small liberal arts colleges. The Science Center includes twenty-two air-conditioned classrooms and laboratories and a 150-seat auditorium. The Humanities Center houses thirty air-conditioned classrooms, an audiovisual viewing room, a computer center, and photographic studios. The dining hall is air conditioned. The Andrew Mellon Library has more than 60,000 volumes, 6,750 reels of microfilm, more than 2,100 CDs, English and foreign language periodicals and newspapers, and the latest library research technology, as well as wireless Internet access. The Archives hold school memorabilia, including the papers of such distinguished alumni as John F. Kennedy ‘35, Adlai Stevenson ‘18, Alan Jay Lerner ‘36, Glenn Close ‘65, Jamie Lee Curtis ‘76, and Michael Douglas ‘63. The International Learning Center includes a thirty-two-station language laboratory and allows for individual instruction and practice for the English Language Institute and foreign language classes. The Paul Mellon Arts Center houses two theaters, a recital hall, music classrooms and practice rooms, art studios, dance and film facilities, and an art gallery. The renovated Johnson Athletic Center houses three basketball and three volleyball courts and weight-training and Nautilus rooms. There are twenty outdoor tennis courts, thirteen athletic fields, and a 25-meter, eight-lane indoor swimming pool with an electronic timing system. The social hub is the John Joseph Activities Center, which has games, a snack shop, and several televisions with VCRs.
StaffMany of the faculty members are teachers in Choate Rosemary Hall’s regular session. Additional faculty members come from other independent secondary and public schools and from colleges and universities. Thirty teaching interns from select colleges and universities complement the program.
Medical CareThe infirmary is open daily, and overnight care is available. The school physician is in residence and can be paged for emergencies. Parents must have some form of insurance for their child. Each student is required by Connecticut law to submit a health form before enrolling.
CostsIn 2007, tuition, room, and board for the summer session were $5400. Day student costs ranged from $900 to 1650. Costs for the Kennedy Institute were $5400, with an additional $455 for the Washington, D.C., trip. Costs for the English Language Institute were $6000, with an additional $400 for the long weekend trip. Boarding students in the two-week Writing Project paid $2220, and day students paid $1620. Boarding students in the CONNECT program paid $4600, and day students paid $3320. For the Young Writers Workshop, boarding students paid $2220, and day students paid $1680. Students boarding in Beginning Writers Workshop paid $2220; day students paid $1680. Boarding students in the Immersion Courses paid $5200, and day students paid $3900.
Financial AidNeed-based financial aid is available; applications should be submitted by March 10. Candidates are notified of their acceptance and financial aid awards by April 1.
Application TimetableEarly application is encouraged. Students are strongly encouraged to apply by May 11. Admission is on a rolling basis. Acceptance decisions are made within two weeks of receiving a completed application.
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