11-year-olds in college - 3 minutes read
11-year-olds in college – Philip Greenspun’s Weblog
Every now and then someone is impressed that I graduated college on the younger side. I would respond by pointing out that Sho Yano got his Ph.D. at age 18 and an M.D. at 21.
Cal State Los Angeles, it seems, has sex up a factory for producing kids like Sho Yano: “A sixth-grader was sick of coloring. So she skipped six grades to attend Cal State L.A.” (LA Times):
With that, Mia left Crescent Elementary in Anaheim. She studied at home for the rest of the year — and then, at age 12, jumped six grade levels to enter Cal State Los Angeles as a freshman last fall. While the admissions scandal has transfixed the nation’s attention on elite universities such as UCLA and USC, the school of choice for many whiz kids like Mia is Cal State L.A. For nearly four decades, the campus has provided a haven where children who are academically gifted and socially mature can bypass years of boring classwork and surge ahead. Cal State L.A. is the only university in California — and one of only a handful across the country — with a program to admit students as young as 11.
The article notes that California has limited options for gifted and talented programs within its K-12 public schools. But Massachusetts doesn’t have anything at all!
Maybe you don’t want to be a father:
The family lives in Camarillo, but Shanti and Sathya stay with their father, Ramesh Raminani, at a hotel near campus during the week. He drops them off at school, drives two hours to his pharmacy business and two hours back to pick them up. … All told, Raminani drives 200 miles a day and spends $20,000 a year on hotels on top of the roughly $12,000 in annual tuition for both children.
Why is this guy being hit with tuition bills? His children would be eligible for a free education at the local state-funded public school. Until they turn 18, why can’t they take at least whatever the state would have spent on them in K-12 and use that to offset the tuition charges? Shouldn’t a family be entitled to 13 years of taxpayer-funded schooling per child? (Maybe Elizabeth Warren will fix this!)
Source: Greenspun.com
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Keywords:
Philip Greenspun • Blog • Sho Yano • Doctor of Philosophy • Doctor of Medicine • California State University, Los Angeles • Sho Yano • California State University, Los Angeles • Los Angeles Times • Miami Marlins • Elementary school • Anaheim, California • California State University, Los Angeles • Freshman • University of California, Los Angeles • University of Southern California • Whiz Kids (baseball) • Miami Marlins • California State University, Los Angeles • California State University, Los Angeles • California • Education • California • Gifted education • K–12 • Massachusetts • Camarillo, California • School • Pharmacy • Free education • State school • State school • K–12 • Tuition payments • Elizabeth Warren •
Every now and then someone is impressed that I graduated college on the younger side. I would respond by pointing out that Sho Yano got his Ph.D. at age 18 and an M.D. at 21.
Cal State Los Angeles, it seems, has sex up a factory for producing kids like Sho Yano: “A sixth-grader was sick of coloring. So she skipped six grades to attend Cal State L.A.” (LA Times):
With that, Mia left Crescent Elementary in Anaheim. She studied at home for the rest of the year — and then, at age 12, jumped six grade levels to enter Cal State Los Angeles as a freshman last fall. While the admissions scandal has transfixed the nation’s attention on elite universities such as UCLA and USC, the school of choice for many whiz kids like Mia is Cal State L.A. For nearly four decades, the campus has provided a haven where children who are academically gifted and socially mature can bypass years of boring classwork and surge ahead. Cal State L.A. is the only university in California — and one of only a handful across the country — with a program to admit students as young as 11.
The article notes that California has limited options for gifted and talented programs within its K-12 public schools. But Massachusetts doesn’t have anything at all!
Maybe you don’t want to be a father:
The family lives in Camarillo, but Shanti and Sathya stay with their father, Ramesh Raminani, at a hotel near campus during the week. He drops them off at school, drives two hours to his pharmacy business and two hours back to pick them up. … All told, Raminani drives 200 miles a day and spends $20,000 a year on hotels on top of the roughly $12,000 in annual tuition for both children.
Why is this guy being hit with tuition bills? His children would be eligible for a free education at the local state-funded public school. Until they turn 18, why can’t they take at least whatever the state would have spent on them in K-12 and use that to offset the tuition charges? Shouldn’t a family be entitled to 13 years of taxpayer-funded schooling per child? (Maybe Elizabeth Warren will fix this!)
Source: Greenspun.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Philip Greenspun • Blog • Sho Yano • Doctor of Philosophy • Doctor of Medicine • California State University, Los Angeles • Sho Yano • California State University, Los Angeles • Los Angeles Times • Miami Marlins • Elementary school • Anaheim, California • California State University, Los Angeles • Freshman • University of California, Los Angeles • University of Southern California • Whiz Kids (baseball) • Miami Marlins • California State University, Los Angeles • California State University, Los Angeles • California • Education • California • Gifted education • K–12 • Massachusetts • Camarillo, California • School • Pharmacy • Free education • State school • State school • K–12 • Tuition payments • Elizabeth Warren •