Since I have children who have done what your goal is, I can answer your question about how to prep them. Read constantly. Make up your own stories. Act them out. Provide lots of creative toys and art supplies -- no worksheets, please. Talk to your child -- tell them what things are, how things work, etc. Encourage them to ask questions and either answer them or help them find the answers. Let them make messes within reason. Make sure they play outside and have lots of opportunities to interact and have fun with other children. Let them try things -- music lessons, dance lessons, sports -- but not at all at once and not if they hate it.
I think that you think the Duke and Johns Hopkins programs are a bit more than they really are. They're great summer enrichment programs, of course, but hardly the only thing out there. Judging by the mail my youngest child got during the spring, there seems to be a lot of other universities offering similar programs incuding some Ivy League schools.
I think that you think the Duke and Johns Hopkins programs are a bit more than they really are. They're great summer enrichment programs, of course, but hardly the only thing out there. Judging by the mail my youngest child got during the spring, there seems to be a lot of other universities offering similar programs incuding some Ivy League schools.



