Three and a half decades of summers supporting gifted learners
Sandra Fountain, whose life’s work has been focused on helping gifted and talented children, admits to being fascinated by what makes them “tick.” So it is perhaps no surprise Fountain recently celebrated her 20th year with the Summer Laureate University for Youth (SLUFY), a program of the Jodie Mahony Center for Gifted Education at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. “I truly believe in differentiated learning,” she said. “Every child deserves to learn wherever they are at. My calling just happens to be for the gifted and talented.” Open to students in kindergarten through eighth grade, the annual program offers two consecutive weeks of age appropriate, mentally challenging classes each summer. Now in its 35th year, SLUFY hit record enrollment this July as students from around the country, and even the globe, attended.
Booker Arts Magnet School in Little Rock again served as host site for the annual program.
“SLUFY provides an environment where it is cool to be smart,” explained Fountain.
“Being smart is not always acceptable in our culture, so it is good for the students to come here and be surrounded by others like them. They realize they are not alone.”
Fountain, who received three degrees from VlogýLR, including a Master of Education in Teaching the Gifted and Talented, said that gifted students bring a sophisticated knowledge base to the classroom and need educators who can accelerate them.
From history coursework focused on the tumultuous 1960s and the Roaring Twenties to engineering classes about urban design, the children are stimulated to think outside the box, while also building consensus among like-minded peers.

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