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The Kentucky Governor's Scholars Program (GSP) is a program to attempt to keep "the brightest" rising high school seniors inside the state of Kentucky.The program is a five-week program over the summer for students between their junior and senior years of high school.
The program is free for students to attend. Nearly 30 universities across the commonwealth and outside Kentucky offer scholarships to GSA alumni. [1] Selected applicants are divided into nine different art forms (which the program calls "disciplines"). Students may apply in two, [1] but are only accepted for one. An average of about 28 students ...
LOUISVILLE The 2024 Kentucky Governor’s School for the Arts program concluded on July 27, with a class that represented more than half of the Commonwealth’s 120 counties. The conclusion of the ...
The National Conference of Governor's Schools (NCoGS) is a United States national organization committed to establishing, supporting, and enriching summer residential governor's school programs. Its members are individuals involved in maintaining governor's school programs across the country, including administrators, statewide co-ordinators ...
Student attendance has suffered vastly since the pandemic, with the rate of Kentucky students labeled chronically absent jumping to 30% last year from 18% the year prior to the pandemic.. In the ...
The Gatton Academy began in the 2007–2008 school year. The Academy admits 95–105 qualifying high school students (aiming for a total of 200 students attending) each year to spend their junior and senior years on the WKU campus taking classes at the university. The students are selected on basis of grades, standardized test scores, extracurricular activities, teacher and community leader ...
OpEd: If passed, Amendment 2 would simply allow the General Assembly to empower families to explore educational opportunities that work best for their children.
Voluntary charter schools certainly provide one aspect to bettering the educational system in Kentucky. But while charter schools benefit students by creating a more competitive educational marketplace, one still needs to consider how to institute reform that better prepares Kentucky students for post-secondary education, should they choose to pursue it.