Study Abroad Info Session

YES WE CAN (go abroad as Honors students)

CALLING ALL SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS (AND ENTERPRISING FRESHMEN) WHO DEFINITELY MAYBE WANT TO STUDY ABROAD

The UHP will be hosting a Study Abroad Info Session for Honors students on Wednesday, October 3rd at 5PM. We’ll be joined by an advisor from the Office of Study Abroad to talk through deciding to go abroad, picking a program, applying, paying for it, and more! It’s never too early to start planning for study abroad and it’s also probably not as expensive as you think.
We’ll also hear about a brand new study abroad exchange program in England that’s exclusively open to UHPers!
This session is particularly valuable for students planning to go abroad in fall or spring of next year. We’ll see you in the Honors townhouse on 10/3 at 5!

Honors Fall Hike *NEW DATE*

The fall 2017 hike was hopping! Not literally of course, that would be horribly dangerous.

After being cancelled in anticipation of a hurricane (casual), the annual Honors Fall hike has been rescheduled!
On Sunday, October 14th, the Honors Program is hosting a $5 hike with your classmates, Prof. Ralkowski, and UHP staff, led by certified TRAiLS guide and peer advisor extraordinaire Rachel!. We’re going to Harpers Ferry, a historic town in West Virginia, complete with actors in historic garb and a big ole mountain to climb!
We’ll meet in the Foggy Bottom townhouse at 8:30 am, and the hike should last most of the day, returning to campus in the early evening. Whether you are a professional hiker or have never even scaled an escalator, come out, enjoy the fall sunshine, and get to know UHPers outside the classroom. We’ll provide lunch and guides, you provide insightful mountain talk and witty banter.

Sign up here by 10/11, and make sure to bring your $5 in cash to the Honors townhouse!

Announcement: Normandy Class for 2019

The Price of Freedom: Normandy 1944 (History 3044W)

Announcement of History Study Abroad Class

Application Deadline: 5 pm, Friday, October 26 (before normal registration) – to Professor Long (Phillips 320)
Information Meeting:  Friday, October 5 (Phillips 411) at 12:30 pm or 6:30 pm __________________________________________________________________
Again this spring the History Department will be offering an unusual class that gives each student an opportunity to learn about a soldier from his or her hometown who died in the Normandy Campaign and is buried in the American Battlefield Cemetery at Omaha Beach. It is History 3044W, “The Price of Freedom: Normandy 1944,” taught by Professor Long.
The class will explore the causes, conduct, and consequences of the Normandy Campaign, examining the impact on individuals, communities, and the nation. The course is an intensive regular history department course with lectures, discussion, and film viewings. It will meet for lectures on Tuesday and Thursday from 4:45 to 6:00 pm, discussion on Thursday from 6:00 to 7:00 pm, and on Thursday, after discussion, for watching films from 7:00 until 9:30  pm or so. The course will carry 4 credits, satisfy a WiD requirement, and meet GPAC elements for Global Perspective, Oral Communication, and Critical Thinking. The course will be limited to 14 students.
Then, on Friday night, March 8, 2019, the beginning of spring break, the class will fly to Paris, arriving early in the morning on Saturday. Then everyone will board a bus and, before noon, arrive at Pegasus Bridge, where British Airborne troops landed at 16 minutes after midnight on D-Day – 6 June 1944. From there the class will conduct a rigorous “staff ride” (that’s army-speak for a participatory, educational tour) of the entire campaign – all the way from the beaches back to Paris.
Each student will conduct a briefing about some element of the campaign at the appropriate location.  The trip will conclude its visit to the actual landing beaches by laying a wreath at the memorial in the American Cemetery at Omaha Beach and having each student present a eulogy for his or her soldier at the soldier’s graveside.
The only way to apply for the course is to submit a written application and a completed RTF-EZ to Professor Long by 5pm on Friday, October 26, 2018. You can obtain the Application on the table outside the History Department Office (Phillips 335), or from Professor Long (Phillips 320).
It is anticipated that the additional expense associated with the travel element of the course will be about $3,500 for items like airfare, hotels, some meals, bus transport, etc. You should plan on taking about $350 – $400 to cover the cost of 4 lunches, 5 dinners (plus any spending money). You will be required to make a $300 deposit when you are accepted for the course. One half of the balance will be due on January 18, 2019, and the balance on February 12, 2019. A limited amount of scholarship money is likely to be available for students who require assistance to be able to participate. Please try to evaluate your circumstances carefully.
Professor Long will conduct information sessions to discuss details of the course on Friday, October 5 from 12:30 to 2 or from 6:30 to 8 pm in 411 Phillips Hall. If you are interested in the course, you it is important that you attend one of them, even if you have already submitted your application.
Remember, the only way to apply is by submitting your application (with an RTF-EZ) to Professor Long by October 26.  His office is Phillips 320.
If you have questions, please come to see Professor Long. His office hours are Monday and Wednesday 9:30 – 11 am. Or you can e-mail him at tomlong@gwu.edu.

Four Year Plan Workshops

“I’m about to write the greatest four year plan of all time…”

Does working on your four year plan have you channeling your inner Michael Scott?
Come to our Four Year Planning workshop! Join the peer advisors and freshmen of all schools and majors for two four year planning sessions:

  • Friday, 9/14, 4-6 PM
  • Friday, 9/21, 4-6 PM

We’ll be set up in the Club Room in the townhouse with snacks, advice, and all the motivation and inspiration you need to take on your four year plan.
Whether you’re mostly done, haven’t even started, or fall somewhere in between, swing by for a slice and some advice! Remember, you need to review a completed four year plan with your peer advisor and with Ben or Mary by Friday, September 28th! Smart procrastinators are making their appointments now.

Food for Thought w/ Prof. Trullinger

Welcome back UHP!  Join us for our first Food for Thought of the semester on Friday, September 14 from 12:15-1:15 PM in the Club Room at the Townhouse. Food for Thoughts are a great way to get involved with the UHP community. At these events, UHP professors give a casual presentation on their individual research over a lunch. This month, we will be hearing from Professor Trullinger. Make sure to RSVP to save your seat and your lunch!
“Are We Finished?: Hope, Utopianism, and Human Unfinishedness”
Lately there doesn’t seem to be much of a basis for hope for the future. In my talk I will discuss the importance of utopianism for Latin American liberation theology, and how it offers us intriguing philosophical and theological reflections on the possibility of hope in the midst of hopeless situations. Utopianism challenges our sense of the limit of what is possible, underscoring the need to try what seems impossible. This will be tied to Paulo Freire’s theory that human beings are (or ought to be) eternal students, and by seeing ourselves as perpetually unfinished, we remain capable of radical change without losing the humility we need to avoid self-destruction.

RSVP HERE!

Hike Harpers Ferry with the UHP

Already getting sick of the city life? Eager to explore beyond E and K streets? Love the smell of the Shenandoah river in the morning? Hike with the Honors Program!
On Saturday, September 15th, the Honors Program is hosting a $5 hike with your classmates, Prof. Ralkowski, and staff, and certified TRAiLS guides. We’re going to Harpers Ferry, a historic town in West Virginia, complete with actors in historic garb and a big ole mountain to climb!
We’ll meet in the Foggy Bottom townhouse at 8:15 am, and the hike should last most of the day, returning to campus in the early evening. Whether you are a professional hiker or have never even scaled an escalator, come out, enjoy the fall sunshine, and get to know UHPers outside the classroom. We’ll provide lunch and guides, you provide insightful questions and witty banter.

Sign up here by 9/12!

Senior Requirements Info Session

What’s a UHPer gotta do around here to finish their Honors senior requirements??

Not that kind of senior.

Come by the Club Room on Tuesday, September 11th between 6 and 7 for an info session about Honors senior requirements. Professors Ralkowski and Trullinger will be on deck to talk about the ins and outs of writing a thesis and Ben will be there to discuss all things UHP requirements.

Seriously, just google "confused stock photo." It's hilarious and you're welcome.

Seriously, just google “confused stock photo.” It’s hilarious and you’re welcome.

Juniors and seniors are (highly) encouraged to attend! If you can’t make it to this info session, you can make an appointment with Mary or Ben to talk senior reqs.

International Graduate School Fair at GWU

Join the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs at its upcoming
International Affairs and Public Policy
Graduate School Fair
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Marvin Center, George Washington University
Representatives from 25+ leading professional schools of international affairs and policy will be available to connect with prospective students. They can learn about masters, mid-career, and PhD programs around the world.
Register today and find more information at http://bit.ly/APSIADC.