Category: 2017-2018

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Alexa Thompson

By: Alexa Thompson

It’s that horrible time of the year when all the seniors are making their final decisions on where they’re applying and are sending in applications. For some schools, it’s a demanding responsibility. Essay after essay, supplemental after supplemental, check box after check box. Luckily, the Gatton staff work hard to make sure that not only provide us with any documentation or information we need, but they also make sure they know us on a personal level to write outstanding letters of recommendation.

Tracy, our main College Coordinator, has been working hard to make sure every student knows about any scholarship opportunity or any program that might interest him or her. Cheryl, our Academic Opportunities Coordinator, has been searching for summer internships. One of the other incredible things about being Gatton student is the relationships we develop with our “counselors.” (We just call them letter writers.) Nearly every college requires a counselor-written letter from the high school, but for students from schools with 1000+ kids, it can be hard to actually have a relationship with said counselor. Here, students pick the staff member they want to write their letter or rec. This letter writer typically already knows the student pretty well, but then they partner together, have special one-on-one meetings, and further improve their connection. A single staff member writes letters for usually between five to ten students, so each letter conveys a personal relationship with the student.

The staff members work hard to make our application process as easy as possible, and we work back to make it easy for them too.

Last Fall on the Hill

October 30, 2017 | 2017-2018, Avatars, Natalie Ngong | No Comments

Natalie Ngong

By: Natalie Ngong

Now that I’m a senior, certain things are dawning on me. First, that the Visual Performing Arts Library located in the basement of Cravens library might be the perfect study nook (ideal lighting, surrounded by music and books (but never dust), and usually only a few people around.)

Second, fall on the hill is gorgeous. Last year my Saturdays were spent deep in the thrall of sleep but this year I’ve had time to explore while the majority of WKU students are asleep. The campus is beautiful, with the nice breeze that comes this time of year and the trees starting to turn the vibrant orange of fall (it’s especially nice when I decide to treat myself to a cup of coffee for my walk.)

Third, this is going to be my last fall at Gatton, and depending on how college decisions work out, maybe at WKU. Next year I won’t get to use meal swipes on the seasonal fall drinks with some of the baby juniors still naïve to the joys of Java City. I won’t get to appreciate from Florence Schneider the homecoming parade when it comes down the road. I won’t get to run down to the staff member’s offices and beg for a final review of an essay before it is due (since I’m squarely in college app season and I don’t know if that’s a bad thing). In the two years that I’ve been here, Gatton has really become my home. A home filled with family and friends, and traditions that until now I didn’t realize I had. So I’ll really miss fall from my Florence Schneider home.

Spring Registration Is Upon Us

October 20, 2017 | 2017-2018, Avatars, Jacob Harris | No Comments

Jacob Harris

By: Jacob Harris

This week was intense for the Gatton Student body. Not only were we finishing up with midterms, it was also time to submit schedules for next semester. All of the juniors and some seniors (seniors have the option of registering themselves for last semester classes) were required to upload their requested schedules to an online homework portal that went live at exactly 10:00 pm.

April Gaskey, our Coordinator for Student Success, and Derick Strode, our Assistant Director for Academic Services, registers students for classes in the order that their schedules are uploaded. The first people to upload get registered first, almost guaranteeing them a spot in their desired classes. Those further down the list are less likely to get the classes they want, as some classes fill up quickly.

I’m sure you can imagine the intensity that ensues. By 7:30 that night, all the ethernet cords had been claimed in a determined quest for faster upload speed. People were frantically comparing speed tests and hypothesizing about the quickest way to upload a file. The guys sitting next to me practiced submitting their schedules for three hours, just to cut a few seconds off their time.

Occasions like this remind me why I love Gatton. The students here care. People care about succeeding; they care about doing well. The friends I’ve made here want more voraciously than anyone I have ever met. They are hungry. They want success in college and in the professional world. They want to provide comfortable lives for their families. They want to make the world a better place. They want to expand on our scientific understanding and our capabilities as a civilization. The people I’ve met here don’t take chances; their futures are far too important to forget the little things. They study for every test and go to every review session. The friends I’ve made here capitalize on every opportunity—even those as small as a good schedule.

Alexa Thompson

Alexa Thompson

Last year, the intramural volleyball program for WKU approached before I had time to sign up for a team, so this year I decided over summer to discuss and create teams with some other senior girls. We were able to make a female team of about 10 people. As a spin on our Gatton Academy symbol (the Sierpinski triangle) and because the other teams were named after their sororities, we were named DeltaDeltaDelta.

Unfortunately, the season lasted a short two weeks, four games total. But that didn’t stop us from having so much fun! Going to a school with no real sports teams can be sad for those of us that do love sports and had to leave teams back home. It was exciting to watch not only veteran players return, but also new players being introduced to the game. Two of our games in particular were fun in that the competition was stiff. In both games we won one set but lost the second and third sets. In the last game we played, we had reached the point cap and only lost by one point. I am happy to report that we have not tarnished Gatton’s intramural record. We are still 0-All. (Gatton teams are well known for losing, but we probably have just as much fun as anyone else, if not more.)

Callie Freeman

Hey everyone! My name is Callie Freeman, and I’m from the great city of Louisville. When I’m not here at Gatton, you can find me at a congressional debate competition, orchestra concert (I play the harp!), outside with my Australian Shepherd Missy, or someplace where I can read a Jane Austen novel (the best author EVER, right?). Otherwise, it’s pretty difficult to think of times when I’m not here Gatton, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. From academics to research to study abroad, Gatton has given me the opportunities – and friends – of a lifetime.

One of the things that makes Gatton so different from traditional high school is all of the opportunities we have to do research. My very first semester, I participated in the Genome Discovery and Exploration Program, where I isolated and genetically analyzed my own unique bacteriophage – Pemberley (it takes a Jane Austen fan to get this one). Later, I was awarded a Research Internship Grant to study the mitoNEET protein and its application in diabetes treatment at the University of Louisville over the summer.

Gatton also provides us with the opportunity to explore outside of the STEM world. This summer, I spent three weeks learning all things British literature in England. Filled with books, tea, history, Harry Potter, castles, red phone booths, Shakespeare, and sheep, the trip could not have been any better. I definitely made memories that will last a lifetime.

As incredible as all the academic, research, and travel opportunities that Gatton offers are, some of my favorite memories here are the ones made staying up late with friends, chilling on weekends, and laughing with my roommate. It is no exaggeration when I say that I truly love every part of Gatton. It really is my second home, and I can’t wait for the new Juniors to experience it.

Morganne Williams

I am Morganne, a current senior at the Gatton Academy, an astronomy lover, a French horn player, and a (terrible) croquet player. I’m from Boone County in northern Kentucky, or Burlington to be more specific. I first heard about Gatton when it opened, and ever since then attending this school became my #1 goal. I’m really glad I made that decision.

While I usually spend most my free time sleeping, I do participate in a number of clubs and interest groups here. I’m the head of the Space Club, and a member of the Speech and Debate team, Gay-Straight Alliance, Drama Club, and Sierpinski’s Performing Arts Club. I also volunteer at the Hardin Planetarium on campus, and research with a scientist at the Space Telescope Science Institute.

Research has been one of my favorite activities here at Gatton. I’ve been working with the same professor for about a year now, and I’m constantly learning new things. Ever since I was little, I wanted to do astronomy-related research, and now I get to live out that dream. I also presented my research over Cepheids at the WKU research conference, and this year I hope to go to the American Astronomical Society convention and present there.

Studying abroad is another one of my favorite memories of my time at Gatton. This summer I went on the Harlaxton trip where I lived in England and learned English for three weeks. I visited Bath, Stonehenge, Stratford-Upon-Avon, and Oxford, took a tour of the Harry Potter Studios, explored London, and had so many amazing experiences there that if I tried to list them all you’d get tired of scrolling through this blog post. Living in a giant manor filled with secret passages for two weeks probably takes the cake though.

All in all, Gatton has been everything I ever hoped it would be. I’ve made so many cherished memories in only a year, and I can’t wait to see what this next year brings.

2017-2018 Avatar: Wendy Cecil

August 24, 2017 | 2017-2018, Avatars, Wendy Cecil | No Comments

Wendy Cecil

The Gatton Academy is home to students from all over Kentucky and with different backgrounds. My home is in Bardstown, a small town in central Kentucky. However, I had only moved there when I was in seventh grade, after my dad passed away. Going to a new school was intimidating. I faced uncertainty, but I made some of the best friends I could have asked for, played volleyball, joined clubs, and got involved. I began to feel at home. I am confident to say that I love the people in my hometown and the sense of home that comes along with Bardstown, Kentucky.

At this point in my life, I felt like I hadn’t asked for a change as drastic as moving miles away, going to a new school, and learning to love a new community. Sometimes I felt like I wasn’t in control of my life. When I was a sophomore in high school, however, I wanted to finally be the one to have responsibility and influence on the course of my future. To do so, I decided to face another kind of uncertainty. I began my application to The Gatton Academy, knowing that I had nothing to lose and infinite possibilities to gain. Ever since middle school, I had taken advanced classes, studied hard, and genuinely enjoyed learning. Despite being nervous, I felt like I had a chance of getting in to the Academy. I was willing and ready to move miles away, to go to a new school, and learn to love the Gatton community. Here I am today, two years later, in my senior at Gatton and retelling the story of it all.

I am appreciative of who I was before Gatton and even more so of the person I am today because of Gatton. A few short years ago, I was surrounded by my best friends in Bardstown, playing volleyball, and competing in club activities. Sometimes I miss how things used to be before I came to Gatton, which is natural. It’s normal to miss home. However, I feel almost as though I have made more than a fair trade. As I write this today, I am surrounded by a table full of other Gatton students, a table full of studious individuals who are busy at work, a table full of my best friends. I just finished my second day of fall semester classes at Western Kentucky University. It is early in the semester, and I am in the midst of signing up for clubs, decorating my dorm room, and applying for colleges. Many doors are open for my future because of Gatton in the same way that doors have been opened for me while at Gatton to be able to take college courses, to participate in undergraduate research, and to become immersed in math and science.

I want to appreciate my final year at Gatton to the fullest in the midst of the chaos of senior year. Before we graduate and move on to other wonderful things, we still have a year left with our best friends, a year left to explore math and science, and a year left in this community that we have all come to love.

2017-2018 Avatar: John Nickell

August 23, 2017 | 2017-2018, Avatars, John Nickell | No Comments

John Nickell

Hey guys! My name is John Nickell and I am extremely excited to serve as an Avatar this year for The Gatton Academy. Although I have been lucky enough to call Bowling Green my home for the past year, the hills and hollers of Eastern Kentucky still hold my heart. I grew up in Morehead, Kentucky. A town nestled in the foothills of Appalachia.

I must confess before Gatton, the majority of the time you could find me on the baseball diamond where I played center field for Rowan County Senior High School. During the offseason though, I would put baseball aside and focus on other activities such as Academic Team, Speech and Debate, and Student Y.

I first heard of The Gatton Academy while attending a summer camp put on by The Center for Gifted Studies here at WKU. After sitting through an information session on the academy, I was still unsure. I returned to the dorm (The current Gatton Academy dorm) after the session and that night, my roommate and I stayed up late into the night chewing on one question: Do I really want to spend my last two years of high school at a place I barely know? Finally, we both found enough courage to promise each other that we would apply. Four years later, we are both proud to call that same dorm home.

Since arriving at Gatton, I have had the privilege of studying abroad in Greece for two weeks. From the ancient ruins of Olympia and Athens to the snow covered mountaintops of Delphi, we truly took in all the aspects of Greek culture. This winter I hope to escape the frigid Bluegrass State for two weeks to study leather back sea turtles and biological diversity in the Costa Rican rainforest.

Although study abroad has truly been an extraordinary, eye-opening experience, I have enjoyed the research opportunities here at Gatton the most. For my first two semesters at Gatton, I worked alongside two WKU economics professors where we conducted a research project on the effect financial literacy has on preventative healthcare usage. This project gave me the opportunity to travel to Charleston, South Carolina and present my research at The Academy of Economics and Finance Annual Conference. After such a great first experience with academic research, I could not wait to get started on a new project. For my next project though, I diverged from the field of economics to study the stars. With Dr. Thomas Pannuti at the Morehead State Space Science Center, I analyzed the peculiar Galactic Supernova Remnant W63 using current and archival data from X-ray emitting plasma.

Outside of the academics here at the academy, I am president of the Stock Market Club where we participate in local and global investment competitions. I am also an active member of FBLA, movie club, and Student Y here at Gatton. On the athletic side, play on the Gatton Academy’s intramural basketball and flag football team.

Once again, I sincerely cannot wait to see what this year holds for myself as well as my Gatton family.

Skyler Hornback

Hey there everybody! I’m Skyler Hornback, and I’m a senior here at The Gatton Academy. If I had only one word to describe myself, I’d have to say that I’m pretty country. Though my address says Sonora and my phone number suggests Magnolia, I’m actually from the tiny Oak Hill community in the southwestern corner of LaRue County in the central part of the state. I’m a true born-and-raised Kentuckian, having had the privilege of growing up on the same farm as my grandfather’s grandfather. I feel like I know just about everybody in the Sonora/Hodgenville area, and if I don’t know someone, I can just about guarantee I know some of their kinfolk! Needless to say, moving to Bowling Green, where there are more students on campus than in my entire county, has been quite the adjustment for me!

Before coming to Gatton, I was heavily involved at LaRue County High School. I was in Beta Club, Y-Club, academic team, class committees, and Teen Court. I loved my first two years of high school at LaRue County, and making the decision to leave home was a tough one for myself and my family. Fortunately, since coming to Gatton, I have been able to continue most of those activities, as well as become involved in new ones, such as Stock Market Club and FBLA. I have also had the amazing opportunities to participate in chemistry research with Dr. Edwin Stevens and travel abroad to Greece for my first trip out of the country! These new experiences that Gatton has afforded me are truly unique, and I am very grateful that I have been able to take advantage of them as a high school student.

This coming year, I am looking forward to continuing my research with Dr. Stevens, and hopefully, I will be able to travel with the Academy again this winter to Italy. Looking back on the past year, and looking towards the year to come, I am really happy with my decision to come to Gatton. I have been able to stay in-touch with my home community, while also becoming involved in a new one. I’m still the same country-music-listening, story-telling Skyler I was when I came here, just with more stories to tell!

2017-2018 Avatar: Benjamin Kash

August 22, 2017 | 2017-2018, Avatars, Ben Kash | No Comments

Benjamin Kash

Hey peeps! My name is Benjamin Kash, and I am from here in the good ole Warren County. Before Gatton, I attended Greenwood High School in BG where I played soccer and tennis, but from my first day of high school I knew Gatton was the place for me. My passion for STEM has only grown while attending the Academy. Watching our juniors move-in and experience Gatton life for the first time has brought back some amazing memories of my move-in last year, and I am excited to see what this year holds.

During my junior year, I have participated in two different research projects, one with the physics department and one with the chemistry department. My chemistry research project with Dr. Zhang extended into the summer under a RIG (Research Internship Grant) I was awarded and now is extending into the upcoming semester. I have been lucky enough to have studied abroad in Costa Rica and England. Outside of academia, I love to continue my lucrative sports career on South Lawn with intramural ultimate frisbee and soccer. I am involved in the Beta Club, the Science Bowl team, and hopefully a Big Brothers Big Sisters partnership program starting up this year.

Looking back at my junior year excites me for what awaits the incoming class. And with rest of the seniors moving in, I am anxious and pumped to see what this year holds for us all.