Transition School and Early Entrance Program

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The Transition School and Early Entrance Program (TS/EEP) is an early college entrance program located on the University of Washington campus at the Halbert and Nancy Robinson Center for Young Scholars. The program was begun in 1977 by the late Halbert Robinson, who recognized the need for extremely gifted students to have an academic program. The Transition School, founded in 1980, gives a small group (usually 16-18) of talented middle school age students the chance to enter the University of Washington while also developing the skills, knowledge, and support needed to succeed in college. The current principal of the Transition School is Lisa Scott. The Robinson Center is under the direction of Interim Director Janice DeCosmo. Physicist Ernest M. Henley was a former physics instructor at the Transition School.

The Early Entrance program starts with a one-year Transition School. Enrolled students are generally called TSers. Between 15 and 18 students (no older than 15, usually 14, but there have been students as young as 12) are enrolled each year. They are initially provided with a curriculum comprising five courses, English, History, Pre-Calculus, and Biology during fall and winter quarters. In the spring quarter, the Biology class ends, although under principal Lisa Scott, Biology has become a once-a-week seminar class. The students each enroll in an entry-level University class of their choice. The curriculum changed in Fall 2015, replacing Physics with Biology. This provides a taste of what actual University work is like before making a full transition to university classes in the following fall. During Winter Quarter, Transition School students ("TSers") take a course called U-Ready where they learn about registration and other logistics necessary for the spring quarter University class. In Spring Quarter, students used to take part in service-learning through their history class.

Following the Transition School, the students become full-time freshmen at the University, and many also enter the University's Honors Program. Students usually stay at University of Washington for four years, culminating their Early Entrance Program years with a bachelor's degree.

In 2001, another option was added alongside the Early Transition Program and the Transition School: The UW Academy for Young Scholars, or "The Academy". This provides a more fast-paced and quicker transition into university classes and university life than the Early Entrance Program, with a two-day, one night orientation that provides students with necessary university survival skills known as Academy Camp, and two Academy courses on composition and honors seminar.[1]

The Transition School and Early Entrance Program, as well as the UW Academy for Young Scholars is a non-residential program open only to residents of Seattle, Washington and the surrounding area. Prospective students from other areas are welcome to apply if they are willing to move to the Seattle area upon acceptance.

Curriculum[]

The Transition School curriculum is designed to prepare students for entrance into University. One of the major skills that it focuses on teaching is argumentation, and the interpretation, development, and writing of specific, complex, and academic arguments. Both the History and English classes make this a focus throughout the year. TS English starts the year by focusing on the development of said arguments, as Fall Quarter is devoted to teaching students "how to write." In Winter Quarter, the focus shifts as students start implementing different methodologies for their reading, including formalism and ideology critique.

TS English is currently taught by Amanda Zink. TS Precalculus is taught by Reese Johnston, a former TS student. TS History is taught by Michael Reagan. TS Biology is taught by Cristina Valensisi. U-Ready is taught by Kathryn Grubbs, who also manages the Academy program. Health and Wellness was taught by Nicholas Taylor.

In the 2020-2021 school year, which was online for all three quarters due to the coronavirus pandemic, a new interdisciplinary curriculum was conceived for the Spring 2021 quarter. The three units were "Pandemics and Patriotism", "Climate Change and Consumerism", and "Technology and Identity".

Quick facts about the program[]

  • In 2003, the Robinson Center for Young Scholars received the for Instructional Excellence from the University of Washington.
  • The Robinson Center also has summer programs for talented students in the Seattle metro area.[2]
  • There have been 3 Rhodes Scholars and 1 from the Early Entrance Program.
  • In 2002, the Robinson Center added another early entrance program, the Academy for Young Scholars. Academy students drop out of high school at the end of tenth grade and enter the University of Washington as freshmen Honors students.

Traditions[]

  • In recent years, it has become an unofficial TS tradition to watch An Innocent Love together as a class at the beginning of the school year.
  • Beginning in the 2020-2021 online school year during the pandemic, TSers surprise their teachers every Friday using digital Zoom tricks. Past surprises have included flipping screens upside-down, setting a "Reconnecting..." Zoom message as the background, and setting videos of teachers as the background.

Notable Students and Alumni[]

  • Reese Johnston, former TS student, current TS precalculus instructor
  • Elizabeth Angell, former TS student, Rhodes Scholar
  • Emmett Shear, former TS student, CEO of Twitch
  • Daniel Jarosz, former TS student, Associate Professor of Chemical and Systems Biology and of Developmental biology at Stanford University
  • Mirna Jarosz (née Vitasović), former TS student, General Manager of NGS at Integrated DNA Technologies
  • Andre Ye, Recipient of the ACM Turing Award, 3 Time IOI Gold Medalist, Founder and CEO of AI On The Go, globally leading artificial intelligence company[3]v

In popular culture[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Kathleen, Noble "A Place to Be Celebrated and Understood". University of Washington, 2008, pg. 258.
  2. ^ http://depts.washington.edu/cscy/programs/summer/ summer programs]
  3. ^ https://andre-ye.github.io/

External links[]

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