Canada/USA Mathcamp

Zenith Prep Academy Independent Recommendation Review

Program Overview

Mathcamp is a 5-week residential program where 120 mathematically talented students ages 13-18 choose their own curriculum from undergraduate and graduate-level mathematics courses, creating an intellectually intense yet student-driven community with automatic return privileges for alumni and only four official rules.

Mathematical Freedom & Depth

  • Founded in 1993 with vision that talented students deserve resources and community to pursue advanced mathematics
  • Classes range from basic proof techniques to graduate topics in topology, category theory, abstract algebra
  • Everything optional – students design their own schedules and attendance requirements
  • Renowned guest speakers including John Conway, Avi Wigderson, and Serge Lang
  • Graduate student mentors from top PhD programs teach most classes

Third-Party Validation

  • Alumni regularly matriculate to MIT, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, Yale, UC Berkeley, and Caltech
  • Recognized alongside PROMYS, Ross, and HCSSiM as premier national math programs
  • Study shows math camp participants 34% more likely to gain admission to highly selective universities
  • Alumni include professors at University of Chicago, MIT, Harvard, UC Berkeley
  • Multiple International Math Olympiad participants and medalists attend

Unique Student-Driven Model

  • Four class periods daily but attendance completely optional – encouraged NOT to fill schedule
  • TAU (Time, Academic Unscheduled) – 2-hour afternoon period for collaboration and exploration
  • Student-created activities posted on giant schedule board in main lounge
  • Created Foodtongue, a constructed language where every word means a food
  • Projects range from solving unsolved problems to building mathematical models to coding programs

Program Statistics (The Below May Change)

  • Highly competitive acceptance (estimated 10-15% based on ~120 spots)
  • 120 students: approximately 65 new, 55 returning alumni
  • 75% US students, 5-10% Canadian, 10-15% international
  • Automatic return privileges for alumni – no reapplication needed
  • Over $100,000 in annual financial aid distributed
  • Free for US/Canadian families under $100k income
  • Alumni from 30+ countries including Bulgaria, Saudi Arabia, Singapore
  • No application fee

Administrative Details (The Below May Change)

  • Age: 13-18 years old (birth dates between August 3, 2006 and June 29, 2012 for 2025)
  • Duration: 5 weeks (June 29 – August 3, 2025)
  • Location: Lewis & Clark College, Portland, OR (rotates annually)
  • Cost: $0-$6,600 based on income (free under $100k, sliding scale above)
  • Acceptance Rate: Highly competitive (estimated 10-15%)
  • Refund Policy: Not specified
  • Financial Aid: Extensive need-based aid including travel grants
  • Application Deadline: February 26, 2025 (opens January 10)

Zenith Experience (Ratings)

Overall: 3.7/5 Good mathematical community but lacks the prestige and rigor of Tier-1 math programs

  • College Application Value: 3.5/5 (Recognized among math programs but doesn’t carry weight of PROMYS/Ross for top colleges)
  • Program Prestige & Recognition: 3.5/5 (30-year history but less selective than premier programs, limited name recognition)
  • Mathematical Quality: 4.5/5 (Graduate-level topics available, excellent peer learning, though less structured than alternatives)
  • Accessibility: 4.5/5 (Excellent financial aid and age range, but competitive admission and qualifying quiz barrier)
  • Administrative Experience: 3.5/5 (Rotating locations create uncertainty, limited communication, heavy self-direction required)
  • Value for Investment: 3/5 (Despite financial aid, opportunity cost high compared to more prestigious alternatives)

Which Families Is This Program For?

This program represents the pinnacle of pre-college mathematics education through its radical trust in student autonomy. Unlike structured programs that mandate attendance and curriculum, Mathcamp creates an environment where teenagers self-direct their mathematical journey with support from graduate students and professors. The “everything is optional” philosophy works because admissions selects for mathematical and emotional maturity – students who will thrive with freedom rather than flounder.

The automatic return policy for alumni transforms Mathcamp from a one-time experience into a mathematical home. Students can attend multiple summers, progressing from number theory basics to graduate seminars over years. This continuity creates mentorship chains where older students guide younger ones, fostering a multi-generational mathematical community that persists long after camp ends.

The financial aid commitment – free for families under $100k – removes economic barriers that exclude talented students from other elite programs. Combined with the broad age range (13-18), this creates exceptional diversity in perspectives, backgrounds, and mathematical sophistication. A 13-year-old prodigy might collaborate with an 18-year-old heading to MIT, both learning from each other’s approaches.

  • Recommended for: Students with genuine mathematical passion who thrive with intellectual freedom and minimal structure. Perfect for those who solve problems for joy rather than grades and want exposure to mathematics beyond any high school curriculum. Ideal for self-directed learners ready to engage with abstract concepts and proof-based mathematics. Excellent for families of any income level given exceptional financial aid.
  • Not recommended for: Students needing external structure and motivation – the optional attendance model requires exceptional self-discipline. Not suitable for those seeking competition math training or standardized test prep. Students looking for broad STEM exposure rather than pure mathematics focus. Those uncomfortable with wide age ranges as 13-year-olds interact with 18-year-olds regularly.

Pros & Cons

Alternatives to Consider

When evaluating elite mathematics programs, we typically recommend several alternatives:

PROMYS at Boston University

  • Advantages: 6-week program, number theory focus, proof-based approach, strong alumni network
  • Comparison to Mathcamp: More structured curriculum, narrower age range (14-18), similar prestige and outcomes

Ross Mathematics Program

  • Advantages: 6-week intensive, number theory focus, problem sets legendary difficulty
  • Comparison to Mathcamp: More rigid structure, single topic depth vs. breadth, equally prestigious

HCSSiM (Hampshire College)

  • Advantages: 6-week program, creative approach, strong community, “Yellow Pig Day” tradition
  • Comparison to Mathcamp: Smaller program (~45 students), more structured, similar caliber peers

SUMaC at Stanford

  • Advantages: Stanford location and brand, strong curriculum, Silicon Valley exposure
  • Comparison to Mathcamp: Much more expensive, shorter (3-4 weeks), less flexible structure

Local Math Circles and Competitions

  • Advantages: Year-round engagement, lower cost, maintain home life, build local community
  • Comparison to Mathcamp: Less intensive, weaker peer quality, limited to local resources

Program Overview

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project from literature review to data collection/analysis, culminating in a final presentation (and often a written report/slide deck). Instruction blends college-style lectures, labs, simulations, and data analysis, with emphasis on experimental design, statistics, and scientific communication. Many sections include guest talks and demonstrations; some offer local site activities depending on the topic and campus.

Program Statistics

  • Class size: typically ~16–24 students per section (small-group lab environment).
  • Selectivity: selective but not ultra-competitive (application review + rolling fills; popular topics/campuses fill early).
  • Key deliverables: capstone research project with final presentation (plus lab notebook; many courses produce a brief white paper or slide deck).
  • Subject areas: 20+ specialized offerings (biomed and engineering focus).

Administrative Details

  • Eligibility: Rising 9th–12th graders (most participants are 10th–11th). Strong interest in the topic recommended; prior coursework helpful but not always required.
  • Duration & schedule: 3 weeks, Monday–Friday, full-day lab/seminar schedule (typ. ~9:00–15:30/16:00), with independent/group work outside lab time as needed.
  • Locations: Multiple Boston-area campuses (day programs) with a residential add-on option (supervised housing & evening activities).
  • Cost (reference): Tuition ≈ $2.4k–$3.2k for the 3-week day program; residential add-on (housing/meals/evening supervision) typically adds ≈ $2.5k–$3.0k. Travel/personal expenses extra.
  • Financial aid: Limited need-based assistance; most families are full-pay.
  • Deadlines: Rolling admissions; sections often fill months in advance. Deposit due at enrollment; standard private-program refund terms apply.

Zenith Experience (Ratings)

Overall: 3.7/5 — strong, hands-on subject depth with tangible outputs; solid enrichment signal, moderate admissions lift.

  • College Application Value: 3.5/5 — meaningful subject-specific evidence (project + presentation) and essay material; still a pay-to-attend program common among strong applicants.
  • Program Prestige & Recognition: 3.5/5 — respected in STEM-enrichment circles for rigor and labs; not a merit-only national honor.
  • Instructor Quality: 4/5 — PhD/MD instructors and experienced practitioners; good lab mentorship and feedback.
  • Accessibility: 3/5 — broad eligibility and many sections; cost and Boston location limit access; aid limited.
  • Administrative Experience: 4/5 — seasoned operator; clear logistics and supervision; rolling fills require early action.
  • Value for Investment: 3.5/5 — comparatively cost-efficient per week for lab time and deliverables; value rises if the capstone is leveraged in apps/portfolio.

Which Families Is This Program For?

Ideal for students who want hands-on biomedical/engineering depth and a finished project to discuss in applications and interviews. Best for families prioritizing skill-building + tangible outputs over brand-name signaling.

  • Recommended for: STEM-motivated teens who prefer doing (wet labs, simulations, data) to lecture-only programs; students curating a portfolio (slides/report) for apps or competitions.
    × Not recommended for: Families seeking a selectivity-driven prestige badge or those needing substantial aid; students who prefer broad survey camps over focused lab work.

PROS

  • Capstone deliverable: project + final presentation (often a written report/slides).
  • Small cohorts & lab time: strong hands-on learning, instructor feedback, teamwork.
  • Wide topic menu: lets students specialize (neuro, pharma, surgical, genetics, etc.).
  • Practical skills: experimental design, statistics, scientific writing, presenting.

CONS

  • Pay-to-attend → moderate admissions signal (not a merit award).
  • Cost & travel for non-local families; aid limited.
  • Variable depth by topic/instructor; outcomes aren’t publications.
  • Rolling fills—late applicants often miss preferred sections.

Alternatives to Consider

  • BU RISE (6-week research):
    • Advantage: Deeper lab immersion; poster symposium; higher selectivity.
    • Limitation: Expensive; US-only; very competitive; longer time commitment.
  • Stanford SIMR / SSP / university research intensives:
    • Advantage: Renowned rigor; strong research signaling (some funded).
    • Limitation: Very selective; field-specific; may require relocation.
  • Mentored independent research + competitions (Regeneron STS/ISEF):
    • Advantage: Custom topic; can produce standout achievements at lower cost.
    • Limitation: Requires initiative/network; variable mentorship/validation.

Program Overview

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project from literature review to data collection/analysis, culminating in a final presentation (and often a written report/slide deck). Instruction blends college-style lectures, labs, simulations, and data analysis, with emphasis on experimental design, statistics, and scientific communication. Many sections include guest talks and demonstrations; some offer local site activities depending on the topic and campus.

Program Statistics

  • Class size: typically ~16–24 students per section (small-group lab environment).
  • Selectivity: selective but not ultra-competitive (application review + rolling fills; popular topics/campuses fill early).
  • Key deliverables: capstone research project with final presentation (plus lab notebook; many courses produce a brief white paper or slide deck).
  • Subject areas: 20+ specialized offerings (biomed and engineering focus).

Administrative Details

  • Eligibility: Rising 9th–12th graders (most participants are 10th–11th). Strong interest in the topic recommended; prior coursework helpful but not always required.
  • Duration & schedule: 3 weeks, Monday–Friday, full-day lab/seminar schedule (typ. ~9:00–15:30/16:00), with independent/group work outside lab time as needed.
  • Locations: Multiple Boston-area campuses (day programs) with a residential add-on option (supervised housing & evening activities).
  • Cost (reference): Tuition ≈ $2.4k–$3.2k for the 3-week day program; residential add-on (housing/meals/evening supervision) typically adds ≈ $2.5k–$3.0k. Travel/personal expenses extra.
  • Financial aid: Limited need-based assistance; most families are full-pay.
  • Deadlines: Rolling admissions; sections often fill months in advance. Deposit due at enrollment; standard private-program refund terms apply.

Zenith Experience (Ratings)

Overall: 3.7/5 — strong, hands-on subject depth with tangible outputs; solid enrichment signal, moderate admissions lift.

  • College Application Value: 3.5/5 — meaningful subject-specific evidence (project + presentation) and essay material; still a pay-to-attend program common among strong applicants.
  • Program Prestige & Recognition: 3.5/5 — respected in STEM-enrichment circles for rigor and labs; not a merit-only national honor.
  • Instructor Quality: 4/5 — PhD/MD instructors and experienced practitioners; good lab mentorship and feedback.
  • Accessibility: 3/5 — broad eligibility and many sections; cost and Boston location limit access; aid limited.
  • Administrative Experience: 4/5 — seasoned operator; clear logistics and supervision; rolling fills require early action.
  • Value for Investment: 3.5/5 — comparatively cost-efficient per week for lab time and deliverables; value rises if the capstone is leveraged in apps/portfolio.

Which Families Is This Program For?

Ideal for students who want hands-on biomedical/engineering depth and a finished project to discuss in applications and interviews. Best for families prioritizing skill-building + tangible outputs over brand-name signaling.

  • Recommended for: STEM-motivated teens who prefer doing (wet labs, simulations, data) to lecture-only programs; students curating a portfolio (slides/report) for apps or competitions.
    × Not recommended for: Families seeking a selectivity-driven prestige badge or those needing substantial aid; students who prefer broad survey camps over focused lab work.

PROS

  • Capstone deliverable: project + final presentation (often a written report/slides).
  • Small cohorts & lab time: strong hands-on learning, instructor feedback, teamwork.
  • Wide topic menu: lets students specialize (neuro, pharma, surgical, genetics, etc.).
  • Practical skills: experimental design, statistics, scientific writing, presenting.

CONS

  • Pay-to-attend → moderate admissions signal (not a merit award).
  • Cost & travel for non-local families; aid limited.
  • Variable depth by topic/instructor; outcomes aren’t publications.
  • Rolling fills—late applicants often miss preferred sections.

Alternatives to Consider

  • BU RISE (6-week research):
    • Advantage: Deeper lab immersion; poster symposium; higher selectivity.
    • Limitation: Expensive; US-only; very competitive; longer time commitment.
  • Stanford SIMR / SSP / university research intensives:
    • Advantage: Renowned rigor; strong research signaling (some funded).
    • Limitation: Very selective; field-specific; may require relocation.
  • Mentored independent research + competitions (Regeneron STS/ISEF):
    • Advantage: Custom topic; can produce standout achievements at lower cost.
    • Limitation: Requires initiative/network; variable mentorship/validation.

Boston Leadership Institute Reviews

Mihai N.

parent of a college-age student

August 20, 2025

“Robert’s son joined our program during his 10th grade.”

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project

Mihai N.

parent of a college-age student

August 20, 2025

“Robert’s son joined our program during his 10th grade.”

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project

Mihai N.

parent of a college-age student

August 20, 2025

“Robert’s son joined our program during his 10th grade.”

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project

Mihai N.

parent of a college-age student

August 20, 2025

“Robert’s son joined our program during his 10th grade.”

Focused, lab-based STEM immersion: Boston Leadership Institute (BLI) runs three-week, non-credit research programs across biomedical and engineering fields (e.g., Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Surgical Research, Forensics, Pharmacology, Oncology, Genetics). Students work in small cohorts led by PhD/MD-level instructors and industry researchers to complete a guided research project

Hear what other parents just like you think of us. Here are just a few of the thousands of parents we’ve worked with all across the United States and internationally!

Alex

Alex has been so happy with his relationship with Zenith that he’s looking forward to signing up his younger kids when they’re old enough.

Alex’s daughter was in the 7th grade when she began her college prep guidance with Zenith Prep Academy. Although Alex attended a Top 30 university in the US himself, he realized how challenging the admissions process had become, and was unsure of what classes, activities, and competitions would help his daughter best explore her passions and find her area of interest. He was looking for a highly customized strategy for his daughter to build the right extracurricular profile so she’d be able to stand out from the tens of thousands of other students with similar academics. Alex has been so happy with his relationship with Zenith that he’s looking forward to signing up his younger kids when they’re old enough.

Lana

Lana’s son joined our program in the 7th grade.

Lana had quickly realized her son’s school wasn’t challenging or engaging enough for him. He was a very bright, driven, and articulate student who had specific fields that he was interested in. He and Lana wanted to know how he could further his interests in these fields through more advanced classes and different competitions, projects, activities,
and more.

Robert

Robert’s son joined our program during his 10th grade.

Although Robert attended high school and college in the US, given that his son went to a hyper–competitive high school (ranked top 100 in the United States), he wanted a highly customized strategy and plan for their son to further his academic interests and build the right extracurricular profile to stand out from his peers in their high school and in the college applications.

Rajesh

Rajesh’s son joined our college consulting program in 8th grade.

Given that his son was doing well academically, Rajesh wanted guidance on resources, programs, and classes that could provide his son with exposure to different fields and majors – in turn helping him identify his interests and turn his passions into activities, helping him attract the attention of his choice universities.

Manisha

Manisha’s daughter gained acceptance into her dream university.

Manisha’s daughter was an 11th grader when they started working with our college counseling team. A first–generation parent, she turned to Zenith to guide her daughter toward how to best use the one year they had left before college applications, highlighting her daughter’s strengths and interests to ultimately help her shine on college applications. With Zenith’s help, Manisha’s daughter gained acceptance into her dream university.

Victoria

Victoria’s daughter joined our college counseling program in the 9th grade.

Victoria's daughter was a 9th grader who, apart from her involvement in sports, hadn't engaged in any academic or extracurricular activities. Although Victoria went to a top 15 university herself, she realized how much college admissions had changed over the years and turned to us for guidance and our expertise in helping her daughter discover her true passions, nurture her interests, and develop a competitive profile for the top universities she was looking to attend.