Kentucky's , which is wrapping up this week on 农夫导航鈥檚 campus, gave 342 participants new friendships, networking opportunities, community-building practices and a stress-free learning environment, according to several of the students. The five students 鈥 all rising high school seniors 鈥 recently participated in a roundtable discussion to share their perspectives on the five-week summer residential learning experience:
  • Emma Keeling, Louisville, duPont Manual High School (college interests: health sciences, engineering)
  • Caleb Aridano, Crestwood, South Oldham High School (college interests: English, history)
  • John Paul Stegman, Prospect, Saint Xavier High School (college interest: architecture)
  • Chloe Walker, Mount Sterling, Montgomery County High School (college interest: mathematics)
  • Brexton Cromer, Mount Vernon, Rockcastle County High School (college interest: geology, paleontology)
鈥淚 think Bellarmine鈥檚 campus has been great for GSP,鈥 said Keeling, who was excited to stay on campus because her father is a BU alumnus. 鈥淭he modern buildings, like Centro, create an open learning environment that complements the GSP program. It鈥檚 built to centralize everyone with the quad in the middle and the residence halls arranged together. Bellarmine was built to create a community.鈥 Aridano said the Siena residential complex 鈥渃oncentrates all the scholars in one area to hang out and encourages you to meet more people.鈥 He said Bellarmine鈥檚 traditional symbol of hospitality, the pineapple 鈥 found on the University鈥檚 coat of arms 鈥 is reflective of the friendly atmosphere shown throughout the campus. 鈥淭he pineapple is very fitting for Bellarmine because everyone from the Facilities Department to the University Dining Hall has been very nice to the students,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ellarmine has been a very welcoming place.鈥 Stegman has enjoyed meeting students from across the state and exchanging differing views on a variety of topics. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to understand where people come from and their various ideas,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hrough this experience, I have decided I want to be a more authentic person.鈥 He said he wants to take the program鈥檚 theme of seeing the world through new eyes back to his high school to share with others. This summer, Stegman experienced something Bellarmine鈥檚 incoming first-year students will disover next month as they walk from residence halls to the quad. 鈥淭he hill has gotten me some good calves,鈥 he joked. 鈥淭he hill has been rough, but good for me in the end.鈥 Walker said she has enjoyed spending time with friends in places such as Centro, the SuRF and the waterfall in the Sienna residential complex. 鈥淚 really have enjoyed GSP,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t has been a mixture of fun and learning and just adapting to each other鈥檚 schedules. GSP has been a great place to grow 鈥 a place where you come together with people of differing ideas and political views. You learn how to handle yourself and GSP teaches you how to do this in a respectful and fashionable manner.鈥 The Governor鈥檚 Scholars Program has given Cromer a chance to network with other students, faculty and staff. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a lot of good conversations,鈥 he said. 鈥淕SP, as a whole, I think is a very positive experience.鈥 Cromer said the program has made him a better communicator. 鈥淕SP allows you to incorporate all facets into an interdisciplinary area,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he structure of Bellarmine鈥檚 campus helps with this and enforces the idea of community.鈥 The students said they鈥檇 encourage other students from their high schools to participate in the Governor鈥檚 Scholars Program in the future.  鈥淚 will be bringing back information about this program to my high school and encouraging more people to apply,鈥 Aridano said. The closing ceremony for this year鈥檚 students is Saturday, July 27, at 9 a.m. The Governor鈥檚 Scholars Program originated in 1983 as a response to concerns that Kentucky's best and brightest students were leaving the Commonwealth to pursue educational and career opportunities elsewhere, without fully understanding the potential of their talents at home. The program鈥檚 mission is to enrich Kentucky鈥檚 next generation of leaders. Article by Daniel Spitza, intern in Bellarmine's Office of Enrollment, Marketing and Communication