Honors Contracts Due Friday 1/29

Honors ContractIf you’re taking a contract course, make sure to get your Honors Contract complete.
How do you know if you need to complete an Honors Contract? If any of these apply to you:

  • Internship for Honors credit,
  • Undergraduate Research,
  • Research Assistantship,
  • Senior Thesis (Not the same as Special Honors in your degree — that’s a different form found here)

Get the RTF-EZ here and the Contract Form here.  Don’t forget your proposal!
You’ve got until COB Friday, January 29th, 2016.
Confused?  Make an appointment.

New Spring Class and SR&D Update

Check out our recently added Self and Society course, as well as changes to a Scientific Reasoning and Discovery section (with the changes in red!), just in time for Spring 2016 registration!


Gender Activism in the Muslim World

Professor Kelly Pemberton
HONR 2048.MV – 3 Credits
CRN: 77947
R 1:00-3:30 PM
Course Description:  This undergraduate course is suitable for students who have little to no background in Islamic studies or the Muslim world. It focuses on women’s rights activism and activists in Muslim-majority countries and Muslim communities in the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and North Am. We will explore this activism with respect to the intersection of history, society, and geopolitics, using the theoretical lens of socio-cultural anthropology, and in consideration of of cultural complexes and social relationships within their particular historical contexts and geographic environments. These perspectives will give us a unique vantage point for exploring some of the present characteristics of women’s rights activist communities in Muslim-majority lands and communities, including coalitions among secularists, Islamic, and non-Muslim religious groups, while we investigate some of the major cultural and ideological factors that are shaping these movements. The course will feature at least one guest speaker who is a Muslim activist for women’s rights, and will also offer an opportunity for an off-campus visit to a local mosque or Muslim community center.


Human Biology- The Nutrition Edition

Professor Carly Jordan
HONR 1034:MV2 – 4 Credits
CRN: 77382
TR 9:00-10:50 AM
Fulfills: CCAS: Natural/Physical Science with Lab, ESIA: Science, GWSB: Science
Course Description: Every day we hear all sorts of claims about how to live a healthy life. From what to eat to whether or not to get a vaccine or take a certain drug, we are constantly bombarded with advice about how to live our lives.Who do you listen to? How do you know if the claims you hear are true? In this course, you will develop science literacy and critical thinking skills necessary to make sense of the information you encounter every day. You will learn quantitative skills and basic statistics that will help you interpret data. The major project in this course will be to find a claim and investigate its validity. You will determine the legitimacy of its makers, learn where to find primary sources to support or refute the claim, propose additional studies to help clarify confusing information, and create a dissemination piece to share your understanding with your peers. In this course, we will analyze serious medical claims and silly urban legends, but we will do it all using sound logic and the scientific method. At the end of the semester, you will be armed with the knowledge and skills to make informed decisions about your health.
Note: Spring 2016 will focus on the science of nutrition, metabolism, and exercise.

Travel to China over Spring Break!

If you’re in CCAS or ESIA and you’re interested in traveling to China over Spring Break, check out this course offering from former Honors faculty member Prof. Shepherd.
Spring Course Offering: CCAS Dean’s Scholars in Globalization
Anthropology 3705.10, Contemporary Chinese Culture & Society
This course examines the ongoing social, economic, and political transformation of China through an anthropological lens. More specifically, we will read, watch, think about, analyze, discuss and write about a selection of recent ethnographies, research essays, and films that take as their subject ‘China’. Our purpose is to understand how the revolutionary transformation of everyday life in China since the 1980s has affected the lived experiences of citizens. As part of this course, the class will travel as a group to Beijing over Spring Break, March 11th-19th. Travel costs will be subsidized by CCAS.
This course has no pre-requisites. However, enrollment is capped at fifteen and is limited to ESIA and CCAS students. In addition, an interview with the instructor is required. For more information, contact Prof. Robert Shepherd at rshepher@gwu.edu.

Academic Travel Opportunity- "The Price of Freedom: Normandy, 1944"

This post and  photo were provided by Samantha Lewis, a Peer Advisor and junior in CCAS, studying political science and communication. 
Over Spring Break of last year, I stood in the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial and gave a eulogy for my fallen soldier. I was telling my classmates how Julian “Rex” Buzzett had a history, a family, and a life outside of serving his country. I was recounting the letter he had written home to his family on the night of the invasion, the same letter that his family had sent me a copy of, when I broke down into tears.
If you had asked me whether I thought I’d end up taking an upper level history class at GWU when I came here, I probably would have laughed at you. I’m not a history major– memorizing dates, times, and proper nouns is not my forte. But I found myself interviewing with Dr. Tom Long when I heard about the Price of Freedom in Normandy class. The email had said students would find a soldier from their hometown who died on D-Day to research, and after learning about the war from a bottom-up perspective, we’d trace the Normandy campaign over break.
After visiting Utah, Omaha, Juno, Sword, and Gold beach, I could picture what the invasion might have looked like.  After visiting countless battle sites, various churches, and small towns, I had a better understanding of what happened in the Normandy Invasion than even some history majors. Most importantly, after seeing the expanse of the Normandy American Cemetery, I understood that the price of freedom is never cheap.
The Normandy class is happening again this Spring, and I feel as though I have a responsibility to let people know about it. I almost didn’t end up signing up for the class because I “didn’t do” history, so this is my shout out to everyone saying “THAT’S OKAY”! There are a few info sessions this Tuesday (Sep. 29 1-3pm and 6-8pm in Phillips 329) that I strongly encourage honors students to attend. If you’ve been in the Townhouse recently, I’m sure you’ve heard me obsessing over this class. I promise it’s for good reason, so if you don’t believe me, check it out yourself. And if you have any questions, I’d love to answer them for you.
I recently have been emailing my soldier’s family, including my soldier’s brother who also fought in the war, to make edits to my paper about Rex. By this time next year, it will be sitting in the cemetery’s archives. And that’s amazing because I am not a history major, and I never will be. But after a semester in one of the most academically and emotionally rewarding classes, I can say that there’s more to history than just the battles and commanders. Soldiers fought and soldiers died, and they deserve to be honored.

Visiting the Normandy American Cemetery
Visiting the Normandy American Cemetery

Still Tweaking Your Fall Schedule? Take a Second Look at These Classes

Still trying to ensure the perfect fall 2015 schedule? Take a look at some of these Honors courses with open seats!
HONR 2048:11 – Islamic Economics, Finance and Development: Theory versus Reality w/ Prof. Askari
CRN: 65653; R 12:45-3:15 PM
Islam is an immutable rules-based system with a prescribed method for humans and society to achieve material and non-material development grounded in rule-compliance and effective institutions. The collection of rules from the Quran and the life of the Prophet Mohammad, which in turn defines institutions, afford guidelines for economic and financial systems and for development. We survey the essential features of Islamic economic and financial systems, and the Islamic vision of human and economic development. While the ideal is not in place anywhere in the Muslim world, we endeavor to explain the divergence from the ideal in human, economic and political development in the Middle East region (or their “Islamicity”).


HONR 2048:12 – The Way We Now Think w/ Prof. Grier
CRN: 67219; W 3:30-6:00 PM
Much of how we approach daily life, how we conceive the activities of our day and how we respond to events, has been shaped by the literature of production. This literature has been largely ignored in the academy. We teach the newest and latest theories of production as the most efficient ways of running a company and the best changes of making money, but we dismiss the older ideas as out of date or, at times, wrong. This course considers the literature of production as a coherent body of knowledge and shows how this literature has shaped our organizations and the way that we think. It considers older workers in this literature in the same kind way that we consider classic fiction and poetry, as exemplars of their time and as building blocks for our modern approach to production. Because of this approach, the course stops substantially short of our age. The newest literature it considers comes from the late 1980s and early 1990s.


HONR 2048W:80 – Race, American Medicine, and Public Health: African-American Experiences w/ Prof. Gamble
CRN: 66977; MW 12:45-2:00 PM
This course focuses on the role of race and racism in the development of American medicine and public health by examining the experiences of African Americans from slavery to today. It will emphasize the importance of understanding the historical roots of contemporary policy dilemmas such as racial and ethnic disparities in health and health care. The course will challenge students to synthesize materials from several disciplines to gain a broad understanding of the relationship between race, medicine, and public health in the United States. Among the questions that will be addressed are: How have race and racism influenced, and continue to influence, American medicine and public health? What is race? How have concepts of race evolved? What are racial and ethnic disparities in health and health care? What is the history of these disparities? What factors have contributed to these disparities? How have African Americans, the medical and public health professions, and governmental agencies addressed disparities in health and health care? What have been the experiences of African Americans as patients and health care providers?


HONR 2053:MV – Past and Future, w/ Prof. Caws
CRN: 67224; W 11:10-1:00 PM
According to one well-known theory of time, past and future do not exist. The present is all that exists (or all that exists is in the present); the past once existed but does so no longer, the future will exist but not yet. According to a rival theory everything exists all at once and it is only our position in this totality that makes some events appear past and some future. There are problems with both of these theories, and one of the tasks of the seminar will be to look for answers to them. Past and future, however, have content and meaning far beyond academic exercises in the theory of time. They pervade our lives, which are continually in transition from the one to the other. There are many pasts, personal, familial, social, institutional, national, all the way up to galactic or cosmic, and as many futures, feared or conjectured or hoped for. People troubleshoot when the past delivers an unacceptable present, or strategize when deciding what to do now about an uncertain future. They reminisce, or they plan. How much of the past (how far back) can we recall, or recover? How much of the future (how far off) can we foresee, or prepare for? From tradition to prophecy, from historical novels to science-fiction fantasies, from the Big Bang to the eventual dissipation of the universe, there are enough puzzles and projects in this domain to keep conversation going for the rest of our lives, let alone a semester. The seminar will as always be driven, once it has gotten underway, by the interests of its members, but perhaps it will help us to find some point of reflection and understanding that will make sense of our complex relation to such a perennial topic. There is a statue of “The Future” outside the National Archives, bearing the Shakespearean inscription “the past is prologue.” Whoever chose it cannot have read Shakespeare very carefully – or maybe it represents only too accurately a particularly American attitude. In any case it is an example of how past and future penetrate public space. A good one to begin with.

Freshman Origins Opportunities

Hey Freshmen!
As you finish ironing out your schedules, make sure to give a special look at the following sections of Origins. If you’d like a closer relationship with your professor or a smaller class size, many of these sections are worth your consideration!
HONR 1015:MV2 – Our Ancestors, Ourselves: Exploring the Roots of the Human Story
Professor Carr’s Origins section will explore what it means to be human—what humans value and how they demonstrate that, what it means to be mortal, what humans expect from life and through what means and at what cost they try to achieve those expectations—through some of the world’s oldest works of literature.  This class meets Tuesday and Thursday from 2:30-3:45, with a discussion section Thursday at 11:30.
HONR 1015:MV3/MV8 – Harmony
Professor Trullinger’s sections of Origins will address questions of harmony, as posed by the artists, historians, leaders, and thinkers of the ancient world. Section MV3 meets Tuesday and Thursday from 10:00-11:15, with a discussion section on Wednesdays at 10. Section MV8 meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1:00-2:15, with an 11:30 discussion section on Wednesday.
HONR 1015:MV6 – Wisdom
Professor Ralkowski, professor-in-residence on the Mount Vernon Campus, will be covering the subject of Wisdom in his Origins class. What is happiness, and how can I live a life that will make me happy? How should I cope with the fact that I am going to suffer and die, along with everyone I love most? Explore these questions on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10:00-11:15, with a discussion section on Fridays at 11:00.

To Democracy or Not to Democracy? [SURE Stories]

The following post was written by UHP student and SURE Award winner Jenny Hamilton.
Research doesn’t always go as planned.
That’s what I learned with the help of a UHP SURE Award, and it is a valuable lesson to be sure. My research explores the impact of popular definitions of democracy on democratic legitimacy – essentially, it investigates the idea that how people define democracy impacts whether they consider it to be the best form of government.
I applied for the SURE Award last fall to finance electronic crowd sourcing of a survey in the United States. Most of my data came from Afrobarometer, a survey conducted in thirty-three African countries. I wanted to create a matching dataset for the United States, so that I could have a consolidated democracy as a comparison case. After considerable research, I decided that electronic crowdsourcing was the way to go. The results would not be nationally representative, but they would be as close as you could get on a budget. Having secured the funding, I looked up coding to create the survey. I obtained permission from Afrobarometer to use items from their questionnaire and worked with GW’s Internal Review Board to ensure the project met ethical standards. After a beta round and a few modifications, I launched the survey and results poured in. Everything went (roughly) according to plan.
A few weeks later, I presented my thesis for peer review. During the session my friend said, “Jenny, I’m going to tell it to you straight. The United States does not belong in your paper.” I has a sinking feeling, but I knew she was right. Almost an entire continent reduced in comparison to a single country… it had seemed like a good idea, but now I wondered I had been thinking. A few weeks later, my friends celebrated when I told them I had excised the United States from my draft.
Even though it won’t be in my paper, I know that my data is not useless. Obtaining that data taught me how to deal with ethical review forms, how to apply for funding, how to construct a survey, and a little bit of coding. It made me a more capable researcher. I also know that the data still has an interesting story to tell, perhaps in another paper.
Despite your best laid plans, you never know where your research will lead you. But almost always, you will discover something new, even if it’s not what you intended.

Attention UHPers: New Fall 2015 Course Added!

We’re so pleased to announce that our new and high-achieving Program Officer, Mary Rothemich, has volunteered to offer a Self & Society (2048W) course this coming Fall!

While many of you have met Mary and see a spunky, Zumba and chocolate-loving adviser, you may not know that she has an intense interest in Animal Sociology. In her spare time at American and Catholic Universities, she worked with preeminent researchers to develop a theory on the social relationships of squirrel communities.
“There are so many that live among us, even in Washington, D.C., that it is irresponsible for us to ignore the very real behavioral patterns they exhibit,” Mary writes of “Social Squirrels,” the course description for which will be available online shortly.
Mary hopes to spread awareness on each college campus where she has worked, and involves testimonies and studies conducted by other DC-based scholars, such as “Red Squirrels: Where and Why?” and “Roadkill: An Existential Crisis“.
Class activities will include observing squirrels around campus at play in trees, in mating rituals, and their patterns of food hoarding.
If you wish to enroll in “Social Squirrels,” please send an email to uhp@gwu.edu and be sure to copy Mary (rothemich@gwu.edu). All you need to apply a very short personal statement of interest! The CRN for this five-credit course is 412015. 
Strip
 
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Happy April Fools’ Day!  This course, of course, will not be offered by the UHP.  You can find all of our (real) courses for the coming semester here, or you can giggle at last year’s April Fools’ Day post.

Fall 2015 GPAC Additions/Subtractions

CCAS STUDENTS: The Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies has made several late G-PAC decisions that may impact your class selection for summer or fall. Courses have been added to various categories at the recommendation of departments; others have been removed, having been judged as not meeting the learning goals established by the Columbian College faculty.


These changes may impact your Fall 2015 registration, so please review carefully.

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There haven’t been any changes made to Honors courses, but many other departments/courses are affected. If you have questions about approved courses, please contact ccasug@gwu.edu directly. UHP Program Officers are also available if you have questions about rearranging your schedule.
 

For the full list of approved courses, view the Academic Advising website.


Added to Arts:

  • CAH 1090 “Art History I”
  • ENGL 2210 “Techniques in Creative Writing”
  • TRDA 2195 “Global Dance History”
  • TRDA 3246W “History of the Theatre II”

Added to Humanities:

  • ENGL 3446 “Shakespearean London”
  • ENGL 3910 “Disability Studies”
  • HIST 2050 “History of Jewish Civilization” also Global/Cross-Cultural and Oral Communication
  • REL 2201 “Judaism”
  • REL 2301 “Christianity”
  • REL 2501 “Hinduism”

Added to Natural or Physical Sciences with lab:

  • BISC 1007 “Food, Nutrition, and Service” also Local/Civic Engagement
  • BISC 1008 “Understanding Organisms through Service Learning” also Local/Civic Engagement

Added to Oral Communication:

  • ENGL 3620 “American Poetry I”
  • ENGL 3481 “The Eighteenth Century II”
  • FREN 2005 “Language, Culture, and Society I”

Removed from Arts:

  • TRDA 1017 “Movement Awareness”
  • TRDA 1025 “Understanding the Theatre”
  • TRDA 2185 “Trends in Performance”

Removed from Local/Civic Engagement:

  • BISC 1005 “Biology of Nutrition and Health”
    BISC 1006 “Ecology and Evolution of Organisms”

Removed from Oral Communication:

  • PHIL 1153 “The Meaning of Mind”
  • PHIL 2136 “Contemporary Issues in Ethics”

Summer Course with Prof. Christov

Looking for classes to take this summer? Check out HIST 1121, Europe’s War of Ideas, 1750-Present with UHP Professor Theo Christov. Course details are below!
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Course dates: 5/18-6/27
MTW 4-5:30 PM
3 Credits
What were the ideas that made people fight, from the French Revolution to the worldwide uprisings of the 1960s and the Arab Spring? This course will study key texts on freedom and slavery, tradition and progress, state authority and revolutionary violence that changed the modern world