UT Dallas Offers Diverse Playlist of Summer Camps
05.09.2022
Callier Center for Communication Disorders offers support to children and adults with speech, language and hearing disorders.
This summer, The University of Texas at Dallas will host a slate of in-person and online camps for children and teens, with topics ranging from chess and athletics to coding and Chinese culture. Here are a few highlights:
Chess
Online. Presented by the UT Dallas chess program, one of the top collegiate programs in the U.S., the camps provide high-level training for beginning, intermediate and advanced players ages 8-17. For more information, visit the summer chess camps webpage.
STEM (science, technology, engineering and math)
In person. The Young Women In Science and Engineering Investigators program offers a one-week residential camp for rising 11th and 12th graders that includes tours of UT Dallas research labs, faculty-led sessions about STEM degrees and research, and college readiness and recreational activities. Visit the Young WISE Investigators webpage for more information.
Callier Center
In person. UT Dallas’ Callier Center for Communication Disorders offers support to children and adults with speech, language and hearing disorders. The center offers several summer camps, including Camp Interact, a therapeutic day camp for children with social difficulties, and the Cochlear Implant Summer Listening Camp for children ages 4-11. Visit the Callier Center camps webpage for more information.
Chinese Culture
In person. The Center for Asian Studies presents the “Become a Gong Fu Panda” Chinese language and culture summer camp for ages 5-15. Campers can attend for one to three weeks. Activities include immersion classes that enable campers to learn the language quickly, as well as opportunities to study Chinese art and culture. Visit the program webpage for more information.
Here is a partial listing of other UT Dallas summer camps and clinics for 2022:
Mean Green Comet Debate Institute
For the most up-to-date information on summer camps and classes, visit UT Dallas’ Programs for Minors webpage.
–Jessica Good
Tags: Outreach