UHPers Meet NC State Honors Students!

Students from NC State University’s Honors Program visited D.C. during their Fall Break, from October 6th-9th. During their visit, they met up with students from our Honors Program to make connections, explore the city, and see GW’s campus!

On Sunday, students from both programs met in the UHP Townhouse and then walked over to the Renwick Museum to explore the galleries. The next day, the NCSU students returned to campus to meet more of our students and hear from Katie Hendrickson, the Deputy Chief of Staff at the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). Students learned about the function of the USTR, working for the federal government, and were given occupational and networking advice, all while enjoying Chipotle!

Thank you to our friends over in the NCSU Honors Program – we hope to see you in D.C. again soon!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Celebrate National Voter Education Week with GW Votes!

October 2nd through 6th is National Voter Education Week! GW Votes will be tabling, sharing resources, and hosting interactive activities with the GW community on getting registered, navigating mail ballots, creating a vote plan, understanding what’s on the ballot, and more!

Join us at Anniversary Park on Thursday October 5th, from 10am-3pm, or on the Mount Vernon Campus Quad on Friday October 6th, from 12:30-3:30pm!

Major issues don’t take years off. Vote in your 2023 state and local elections to make your voice heard! Statewide elections are occurring in Virginia, New Jersey, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania this November. Ohio, Texas, and Maine will also have statewide referendums on the ballot!

Get #VoteReady this week with GW Votes while enjoying free food and giveaways!

We hope to see you there, and most importantly, we hope you join us in celebrating by registering or requesting your ballot with TurboVote!

Contact gwvotes@gwu.edu with any voter questions.

Join Provost Brand’s Food for Thought: AI Does My Homework. What’s the Problem?

Event Details: This event will take place on Friday, October 6 from 12 pm until 1 pm in the UHP Townhouse. This event requires an RSVP so please fill out this form to let us know you are coming!

Title: AI Does My Homework. What’s the Problem?

Description: With suitable prompting, Generative Artificial Intelligence (GAI) tools such as Bard and ChatGPT can produce content that receives passing grades – even good grades – in some high school and college courses.  GAI tools raise many important questions, some of which we should be asking anyway.

Is it unethical for you to use GAI tools in ways your instructor or GW explicitly forbids?  Is it unfair to other students who choose to refrain from such prohibited uses?  Do prohibited uses somehow wrong your instructor or GW?  Do they make you complicit in questionable practices or systems?  How likely is it that you’ll be caught and sanctioned?  Assuming you get away with it, is it in your long-term self-interest to keep doing it?

These questions lead to deeper ones.  How will your college experience figure in your life after graduation?  What purposes does college serve?  Should college as we know it continue to exist?  What’s your responsibility to future generations?

Breakfast with the Director (September 22, 2023)

Do you have any ideas or suggestions about the Honors Program that you’d like us to hear? Do you have any questions? Whether you’re a first-year student or nearing graduation, come join the UHP Director, Professor Kung, for a “Breakfast with the Director” event on Friday, September 22nd at 11 am in the Foggy Bottom townhouse Club Room. Please RSVP with the form below:

Food for Thought with Professor Sharon Hill!

Join us Friday, March 10th, from 12-1PM in the townhouse Club Room with Professor Hill to discuss: Leading the Virtual Workforce. RSVP Here

Title: Leading the Virtual Workforce

Description:

Over the last few decades, there has been a significant growth in virtual/remote work (i.e., interactions between employees that are not in person and occur using technology-mediated communication), which was further accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Numerous studies show that the shift toward virtual/remote work is one of the most significant trends for the future. My research primarily focuses on how leaders can promote positive work outcomes for their employees and teams in virtual settings. This includes pressing issues for leaders such as facilitating effective teamwork, fostering employee well-being, and ensuring equal career outcomes for all employees regardless of their work arrangement. My research shows that virtual work can be a double-edged sword; thus, as organizations accelerate their implementation of virtual work, leaders must understand how to leverage its benefits while mitigating its negative effects.

2023 Dupont Summit on Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy

The Policy Studies Organization is hosting a summit on science and technology! Below is more information pulled from their website:

“The purpose of the Dupont Summit is to promote interdisciplinary conversation about pressing issues related to the politics and policy of science, technology and the environment. The conference mirrors the interest of the PSO and its partners in promoting conversation about current policy concerns. The conference brings together academics, government, business and social leaders from a variety of backgrounds.

Thanks to the kindness of our sponsors, the registration fee is waved, but registration is still important so that seating and other arrangements (such as catering) can be confirmed. For more information, please contact Executive Director of the Policy Studies Organization Daniel Gutierrez at dgutierrezs@ipsonet.org.”

TOPICS:

  • Cybersecurity
  • Energy
  • National Security
  • Information and Telecommunications
  • Environment, Climate Change
  • Biotechnology
  • Intellectual Property
  • Genetics and Stem Cells
  • Resource Management
  • Science Research and Education
  • Innovation
  • Ethical, Legal & Social Implications
  • Health
  • Security and Surveillance

Breakfast, lunch, and refreshments will be available throughout the day at no cost.

Date: Friday, February 17th
Place: Online, and at the Historic Quaker Meetinghouse, 2111 Florida Ave. NW, Washington DC
Program and RSVP: https://ipsonet.org/conferences/the-dupont-summit/

Food for Thought with Professor Thiago Moreira!

Join us next Friday, November 11th, from 12-1PM in the townhouse Club Room with Professor Moreira to discuss: The world’s oldest profession: how systematics helps us to understand biodiversity.  RSVP Here
Description:
“Much is said about how our biodiversity is important and its fast decline will bring dire consequences to the planet and to humankind. But whose job is to understand and document biodiversity? How it is done? I would like to invite you to know a bit more about Systematics: A branch of biology that uncovers the depth of our world`s biodiversity and how all living things relate to each other and a bit of my contribution as a systematist to further our understanding of our fauna.”

2022 Julian Clement Chase Prize Award Ceremony

Hi UHPers!  Are you interested in attending The Julian Clement Chase Prize Award Ceremony?  It will be held in-person this year on Thursday, October 13, from 4-6pm in the GWU Textile Museum (701 21st Street NW). We especially encourage students who are working on or anticipating working on capstone projects to attend, as the Prize is a great opportunity for undergraduate students to be recognized for their work, and the Ceremony is a great opportunity to see what is possible!

The ceremony and reception honor exceptional research writing about the District of Columbia.  Tom Sherwood, the keynote speaker, is a Resident Analyst for The Politics Hour with Kojo Nnamdi and a Contributing Writer for Washington City Paper.

This year’s Julian Clement Chase Prize winner is Izy Carney, ““Dirty Work” Pay: Environmental Racism and the 1970 Washington, D.C. Sanitation Strike.

Honorable Mention goes to Wyatt Kirschner “45 Hardcore, Ass Bustin’ Radicals” and Three Infiltrators: Students for a Democratic Society at George Washington University and the FBI’s Counterintelligence Efforts Against Them.

Advanced registration is not required to attend in person, but RSVPs are appreciated.  To receive the Zoom link to join virtually, please RSVP by October 9.   If you have any questions about the award, please contact Phyllis Ryder.