It is Thursday lunchtime in the main dining hall of the 探花直播 Centre. At a long table, Richard Davoren, James Finley and Ali Torabi are tucking into lunch with the concentration that comes from having spent the previous four hours designing and making robots.
It is Thursday lunchtime in the main dining hall of the 探花直播 Centre. At a long table, Richard Davoren, James Finley and Ali Torabi are tucking into lunch with the concentration that comes from having spent the previous four hours designing and making robots.
All three 17-year-olds say that they haven鈥檛 had a single dull moment since they arrived in Cambridge four days ago to take part in the second Sutton Trust Summer School to be run this summer. 鈥淲ell, ok, some of the lectures have been a bit long but that鈥檚 because I find it really hard to sit still,鈥 admits James.
Richard, James and Stephanie are among 200 sixth-formers who have experienced Cambridge this summer through four subject-based residential courses supported by the Sutton Trust, an educational charity that encourages state school pupils from families with little history of higher education to aim high academically.
Along with 20 or so others, the trio are spending their days at the Department of Engineering, taking part in lectures, project work and small group teaching sessions. During the evening all participants meet up for social activities such as debates, punting on the Cam and watching Shakespeare plays in the College gardens 鈥 with Sidney Sussex College providing accommodation.
Richard, who goes to St James鈥 Catholic High School in Colindale, north London, says the week in Cambridge has given him an insight into the structure of engineering course and has dispelled concerns about fitting in.
鈥淚 had a picture of Cambridge being full of elite people but the Cambridge students we鈥檝e met are all normal and down to earth,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e really enjoyed mechanical engineering, especially when we stripped and rebuilt engines, and also fluid mechanics, because I鈥檇 like to go into the aerospace industry. Hopefully, I will be applying to Cambridge in the autumn.鈥
It is clear talking to these students that some had ambivalent feelings about Cambridge being 鈥渟carily out of reach鈥 before arriving.
鈥淐ambridge has huge kudos as a world-renowned university. But it鈥檚 easy to feel that only the elite have a good chance of getting in 鈥 people who are really, really smart intellectually and probably from private school,鈥 says James (pictured second from left), a pupil at Glossopdale Community College, Derbyshire. 鈥淗aving spent a week here I feel much more relaxed about applying.鈥
No-one around the table has encountered anyone at Cambridge 鈥渨ith a really posh accent鈥 or 鈥渨earing top hat and tails鈥, they joke. 鈥淚 thought that Cambridge lecturers would wear cloaks and expect you to shut up and listen. Now I know that they are happy to have a conversation with you,鈥 says Ali Torabi (second from right), a pupil at St Thomas More RC High School in North Shields.
Ali, who came to the UK with his family from Iran in 2004, says that the summer school has afforded a welcome in-depth look at Cambridge. 鈥淚 came to one of the recent Open Days where there is so much to take in. So it鈥檚 been great to have been treated as a potential student during this week,鈥 he says.
Look out for a personal diary of the Sutton Trust programme later this week.
STOP PRESS: Teachers and higher education education/careers advisers interested in learning more about the Cambridge applications procedure, including recent changes, are invited to book places for an HE Advisers鈥 Conference on 23-24 September. For information visit the link at the sidebar.
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