Advanced Academic Services is part of the Austin Independent School District. This blog provides information, activities, and events regarding advanced academics and high ability children and teens. Smart without compromise. Potential without limits.

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Austin Healthy Adolescent Teen Summit: "Courage to Change" 07/19/19

The Austin Healthy Adolescent would like to invite all youth to the Teen Summit “Courage to Change”, which will give an opportunity for youth and young adults to sharpen leadership skills, network with peers, obtain information from local youth-serving professionals and organizations, all while having a good time. NO COST TO ATTEND THIS EVENT AND FOOD WILL BE PROVIDED. Register on eventbrite at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/austin-healthy-adolescent-aha-teen-summit-courage-to-change-tickets-59017313373 Friday, 07/19/19 from 9-3 at the Crowne Plaza Hotel.

Saturday, June 29, 2019

Austin Public Library Summer Reading Programs


  • Youth Summer Reading
  • Teen Summer Reading
  • Adult Summer Reading

  • Youth Summer Reading

    It's that time again! The Austin Public Library is your free ticket to a summer full of reading and loads of fun activities this June through August. You can also win prizes for reading!
    Join the Summer Reading Program. It's as easy as 1, 2, 3!
    1. Pick up a reading log at the Library or download and print one.
    2. For every 20 minutes you read, color in a section. Or if you prefer, list your books on the back.
    3. Return your completed log to any of the Austin Public Library's 21 locations between July and August, 2019.
    Congratulations, you did it! You’ve earned a prize book. You can earn one prize book per summer.
    For more information APL's Summer Reading Program call 512-974-7400, Ask a Librarian or use #AustinSRP.


Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Summer Tours of Local Colleges



Summer is a great time to visit some of the local college campuses with middle and high schoolers. The following links provide information on scheduling visits:

Sunday, June 23, 2019

UT Austin Public Summer Star Parties!



Summer star party viewing at UT Austin



Begins in mid-June! 

Please check back for details on starting dates and times.


Every Wednesday night while UT is in session the astronomy department sponsors free public star parties on the top roof of Robert Lee Moore Hall, which is located at the southeast corner of Dean Keeton (formerly 26th street) and Speedway. Once you reach RLM, take the elevators to the 17th floor and then follow the signs to the stairs up to the telescope.

Click here for map to RLM and nearby parking garages. (Garage rate information is available here.)

Please review the rules for accessing the RLM roof and telescope dome before your visit.

All ages are welcome, but we ask that younger children be under adult supervision at all times. Viewing times change throughout the year so please check this page for current times before planning your visit. Please call 512-232-4265 for weather cancellation information. This line is updated approximately 30-45 minutes before the scheduled start time. (If you get an old message from an earlier date, that means the line has not been updated for the current date yet.)

If you are interested in bringing a small group of 15 or fewer, you may come to a public viewing night without prior arrangements or reservations. If you plan on bringing a group of more than 15, please notify Lara Eakins at least two weeks in advance to avoid having too many groups show up on the same evening. Please note: we do not do private events for groups or individuals.

Public viewing nights occur throughout the year while the university is in session. Typically spring semester viewing runs from late January to early May, summer sessions viewing runs from early-to-mid June to mid-August, and fall semster viewing runs from early September to early December. The other telescope on campus is located at Painter Hall and is open on Fridays and Saturdays.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

The 10th Annual New York Times Summer Reading Contest: June 14-Aug. 23, 2019

The 10th Annual New York Times Summer Reading Contest: June 14-Aug. 23, 2019


Every year since 2010 we have invited teenagers around the world to add The New York Times to their summer reading lists and, so far, nearly 50,000 have.
At a time when teachers are looking for ways to offer students more “voice and choice,” we hope our open-ended contest can help: Every week, we ask participants to choose something in The Times that has sparked their interest, then tell us why. At the end of the week, judges from the Times newsroom pick favorite responses, and we publish them here. It’s as simple as that.
Though our goals include some on many educators’ lists — helping students become more aware of the world and their place in it, learning how to navigate sophisticated nonfiction, and practicing writing for a real audience — we also just hope that students will realize that reading the newspaper can be fun.

As you’ll see in the guidelines below, they can choose literally anything they like that was published on NYTimes.com in 2019. 
Interested? All the details you need are below, and this handy PDF summarizes them on one page.
Q. How does this contest work?
• Every Friday beginning June 14, we will publish a post here asking the same two questions: “What interested you most in The Times this week?” and “Why?.” You can always find that link at the top of this page since we’ll post it there every week.
 Teenagers can post an answer any week until Friday, Aug. 23, and contestants can choose from any Times article, essay, video, interactive, podcast or photograph published in 2019, on any topic they like.

• Every Tuesday starting July 2 we will announce winners from a previous week and publish their writing.
• To get an idea of the breadth of topics students have chosen in the past — from refugees and “post-truth politics” to accents and awkwardness — you can read the work of our 2017 and 2018 winners here, and our 2010-2016 winners here.
• Scroll down to find more details and tips, the most important of which are also on this one-page PDF.
• More questions? Here are some that have been frequently asked over the years, but please post anything else you’d like to know in the comments, or write to us at LNFeedback@nytimes.com, and we’ll answer you there.
Q. What kinds of responses are you looking for?
A. We don’t care what you choose or whether you loved or hated it; what we care about is what you have to say about why you picked it.
If you don’t believe us, scroll through our 2017 and 2018 winners, or, via our old blog, view the work of winners from 2010 to 2016.

They have written on weighty topics like gender, race and identityspace exploration and 21st-century concentration camps, but they have also written on power napping, junk foodBeyoncĆ©Disney shows, running and bagels.
Whatever the subject, you’ll see that the best pieces year after year make both personal connections to the news and go beyond the personal to discuss the broader questions and ideas that the topic raises.
So whether you were moved by an article, enlightened by an essay, bowled over by a photo, irked by an editorial or inspired by a video, find something in The Times that genuinely interests you and tell us why, as honestly and originally as you can.
Q. What are the rules?
• We will post the same questions every Friday, starting June 14. Each week we will ask, “What interested you most in The Times this week? Why?” That is where you should post your picks (and reasons) any time until the next Friday. Then we will close that post to comments and open a new one with the same questions. That means that students can write in on any day until Friday, Aug. 23, at 7 a.m. Eastern when the contest ends. As soon as the contest starts, we will keep an up-to-date link to that week’s question at the top of this page.
• You can choose from anything published in the print paper or on NYTimes.com in 2019, including videosgraphics, slide shows and podcasts.
• Feel free to participate any or every week, but we allow only onesubmission per person per week.
• Our commenting system allows responses up to 1,500 characters, which is somewhere between 250 and 300 words.
• Make sure to provide us with the full URL or headline (for example, “How to Deal With a Jerk Without Being a Jerk” or https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/05/smarter-living/how-to-deal-with-a-jerk-without-being-a-jerk.html).
• The children and stepchildren of New York Times employees, or teenagers who live in the same household as a Times employee, are not eligible to participate.
• New for 2019: Our eligible age ranges have changed slightly in response to new data-protection rules in the European Union.
Students in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom must be between 13 to 19 years old to participate. However, if you are submitting from anywhere else in the world, you must be between 16 to 19 years old. Please see The New York Times’s terms of service for more details.
Q. Who will be judging my work?
A. The Learning Network staff, plus a team of as-yet-to-be-named New York Times journalists.
Q. When should I check to see whether my submission won?
A. Every Tuesday from July 2 to Sept. 3, we will publish a previous week’s winner or winners in a separate article you can find here. We will also celebrate the winners on Twitter and Facebook.

For more information, visit this link.

Austin Symphony Summer Concerts in the Park


  • Austin Symphony Hartman Foundation “Concerts in the Park”

  • Free For Everyone!
  • June 2-August 25, 2019 7:30 PM
  • Kids frolicking, couples lounging on blankets, old friends in their trusty folding chairs, lone bicyclists and pedestrians who have been distracted from their destinations—all united by the sound of music. The Hartman Foundation “Concerts in the Park,” presented by the Austin Symphony Orchestra, brings together ardent enthusiasts and unwitting attendees alike just as similar events did in town centers years ago.
    In its 17th summer season, these free ensemble concerts take place in the Hartman Concert Park in front of the Long Center City Terrace and run on Sunday evenings from June 2nd through August 25th (except July 7th)7:30 p.m. A gift from the Hartman Family Foundation, these concerts are presented to the Austin community in thanks for its continued, generous support. Each Sunday a different ensemble of the Austin Symphony will be featured at the new Hartman Park, located on the grounds of the Long Center for the Performing Arts, performing music from jazz and light classical to pops selections and film scores. Concertgoers are encouraged to bring a picnic dinner and blanket and make it a group outing.
    2019 Schedule
    June 2 – Strings program
    June 9 – Brass
    June 16 – Big Band
    June 23 – Strings
    June 30 – Woodwinds
    July 7 – No Concert
    July 14 – Brass
    July 21 – Big Band
    July 28 – Woodwinds
    August 4 – Strings
    August 11 – Brass
    August 18 – Woodwinds
    August 25 – Big Band
    Parking is available at One Texas Center located on Barton Springs Rd. @ S. 1st St. for $8
    *Paid parking is available at the Palmer Garage for $8

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Nature Night: Geology, Fossils, and Caves 06/13/19

The Wildflower Center offers different themes for their free Nature Nights. 06/13/19 from 6-9 p.m. focuses on Geology, Fossils and Caves. More info at https://www.wildflower.org/featured-events.


Wednesday, June 5, 2019

*NEW* Rivet, a Free Reading APP Designed by Google

Rivet, a free reading app designed by Google for children, makes reading practice easy with 2,000+ books, reading support, and lots of fun! Check out their website for general information at https://rivet.area120.com/ and visit the Google Play store or iTunes store to download the Rivet app.