Tag: AY1314
Do these things this week to graduate.
Visit the Commencement Fair (March 25-29) at the GW Bookstore and take care of all of your Commencement needs — here’s what you can expect:
- Save $25 in online shipping charges by pre-ordering your cap and gown (regalia) at the GW bookstore;
- take your Cherry Tree Yearbook photo (undergraduates only);
- make your Senior Class Gift;
- learn more about the GW Alumni Association;
- Green Graduation Pledge/Green Move-out;
- Career Services programs;
- find out about Grad Week;
- and enter daily drawings to win regalia, a diploma frame and other great prizes! For more information, visit commencement.gwu.edu.
Need Quick Cash? Try out Hallway Monitoring for Inbound Secondary School Programs
Sick of being a broke college student? Great at staying up late from those many long nights in Gelman? American Councils is seeking individuals to remain awake and monitor high school students’ area of the hotel in Chevy Chase Maryland during the 2014 Re-entry Workshop for Inbound Secondary School Programs on the nights of March 27th-29th and April 10th- April 12th from 10pm to 7am. Each shift pays $120 plus transportation costs.
To apply:
Email Emily Danyluk at edanyluk@americancouncils.org with your full name, phone number, statement of interest, and confirmation of availability on the above dates. Please include “Inbound Hallway Monitor” in the subject line. All hallway monitors must be over 18 and undergo a background screening.
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#HonorsProblems–Registering for Classes Without Privileged Registration
Today’s #Honorsproblems post is written by Kate Kozak, a junior majoring in psychology!
As a junior who did FOFAC (Focus on Fall Abroad Community) last semester, I’m definitely getting a little anxious about my first time not having privileged registration. Getting to register before nearly everyone else on campus had two main advantages: first, getting into courses that tend to fill up really quickly, or that are near-impossible to get into as a freshman or even as a sophomore; and second, getting into the Honors Department classes I wanted before the juniors and seniors had a chance to register (excepting, of course, those upperclassmen who have privileged registration for other reasons).
While I was coming up with my potential schedules for next fall, I realized that not having priority registration really isn’t that big of a deal. Here’s what I’ve figured out that makes losing privileged registration less of an #HonorsProblem and more of an #HonorsInconvenience.
Registering on the “normal” day isn’t a problem for other students, it’s just how things work. I talked to several friends across majors and departments who said that they have literally never had a problem registering for classes. One friend even missed her initial registration day, getting into all her courses when open registration began weeks later.
Past Me was smarter than I thought, and I planned ahead pretty well. Perhaps by mistake, I set myself up pretty well for my last few semesters of undergrad at GW. The requirements I have left include a few GPAC courses and a few upper-level major credits—in other words, I’ll be competing mostly with freshmen. And let’s face it, I’m still registering days before them, so it isn’t even a competition. To any freshmen or sophomores, I don’t recommend loading up on tough classes just because you can. Nevertheless, I do think it’s a good idea to get in those UHP requirements while you have the upper-hand in registration.
Things generally work out in the end, even if you have to watch Banweb for an open spot in a class. There’s a whole army of help in the UHP between Catherine, Mark, and the SPA, so there’s always someone to bounce ideas off of or to help weigh the pros and cons of rearranging your schedule in a particular way. And my biggest pro-tip would be to wait before giving up on a high-demand class, because someone is bound to drop their spot eventually. I’ve gotten into classes that were previously full simply by checking periodically and pouncing as soon as an opening came up.
Scheduling can be scary when we have requirements to fulfill, or when we’re generally anxious about having to make compromises because of what classes we can get into. Not having an opportunity to register early certainly makes it feel like we’ve lost a little bit of control. But we all know that things work out in the end, despite these nerve-wracking few weeks of hoping beyond hope that Registration Day is as easy as punching in the courses we’ve painstakingly chosen and going back to bed.
From Just About Everywhere With Love [Study Ablog]
Red Cross Global Refugee Simulation and Conference
This post is written by Rebekah Johnson, a senior in the Elliot School and a SPA.
Do you like a challenge?
Do you like mud?
Have you ever wanted to try to cross an international border accidentally?
Have you ever wanted to understand what it’s like to be a refugee?
Have you ever imagined fleeing a zombie apocalypse?
Are you interested in international humanitarian law?
If you answered yes to any one of these, sign up for American Red Cross’s largest youth event this calendar year— the Global Refugee Simulation and Conference (GRSC).
This Simulation will occur on the 29th of March in Bull Run Regional Park and the digital Conference will follow on the 30th at American Red Cross’ National Headquarters.
In this Simulation, you will have to flee rebel militias, convince border guards to let you enter a new country, and find family members lost and detained along the way. Think you can figure out how to settle in a refugee camp after all of that? Try it. Professionals from the U.S. Marines, United Nations High Commission for Refugees, and American Red Cross will be on hand to make the Simulation as realistic as possible.
The deadline to sign up at grsc2014.org is March 22nd, this Friday. This weekend is all student-planned, and several Honors students have worked on this for months. We’re having a little bit of a competition to see who can bring in the most participants, so sign up and email one of the people below!
Rebekah Johnson- Class of 2014- rjohnson.grsc@gmail.com
Hannah Dannenfeldt- Class of 2016- hdannenfeldt.grsc@gmail.com
Jack Keenan- Class of 2016- jkeenan.grsc@gmail.com
Pooja Shivaprasad- Class of 2016- pshivasprasad.grsc@gmail.com
Lillie Zacharakis- Class of 2016- lzacharakis.grsc@gmail.com
Eunice Lee- Class of 2017- elee.grsc@gmail.com
Michael Martino- Class of 2017- mmartino.grsc@gmail.com
For more information, and to sign up, go to grsc2014.org.
2014 Strasser Winners Announced!
Congratulations to the winners of this year’s Strasser Writing Prize competition! We have one first place winner, and two runners-up!
1st Place:
Frankee Lyons
Sophomore
“On the Outside Looking In: Charlie Chaplin’s Cinematic Conscience”
Written for Origins with Aviv
Runners Up:
Fatema Ghasletwala
Sophomore
“When Marcuse Met Freud: Why Platonic Friendships Are Possible”
Written for Origins with Winstead
Nicole DiSarno
Junior
“Meursault the non-Dasein: A Heideggarian Critique of Albert Camus’ The Stranger”
Written for Ralkowski’s Existentialism class
The winners can retrieve their gift cards ($100 for first place, $50 for each runner up) from the UHP office starting Wednesday, March 20th, 2014!
Sit n' Knit This Wednesday! [Grassroots Event]
Two of your lovely SPA, Penina and Kate, are hosting a Sit ‘n’ Knit (and Crochet) this Wednesday, 3/19 from 6:30-8 in the Club Room. Bring whatever project you’re working on, or Kate will have extra materials to teach people how to crochet. If you aren’t into fiber crafts, there will be coloring pages and markers as well. Feel free to drop in for a relaxing break from studying, or stay for awhile to gossip about the latest midterm drama. All Honors students are welcome!
OMBlog: Research Days at GW
Though not quite comparable to the high-stakes security protocol I witnessed during my brief time as a student-intern at the CIA, the OMB’s standards of info classification are among the highest in the government. Producing research based only on publicly available, non-Executive Branch-specific material forced me to view the OMB not from the perspective of an intern with (albeit limited!) securities clearances and privilege, but from the perspective of an American answering email from a non- eop.gov email address from anywhere other than a cubicle in NEOB.
As part of my faculty-supervised HONR2182 internship at the Office of Management and Budget, I am doing research that I will present at the University’s Research Days, which run from April 1st-2nd this year. The project—titled, “OMBlog— The Efficacy of Government Blogs: Exploring the Intentions of Internet-based PR, its Audience, and its Future”— explores government employment of social media and of the public relations wisdom in the literature that serves as the PR beacon of private sector self-promoters in a comparative and analytical sense. With the help of a Trachtenberg professor, I have been working towards a comprehensive project about the motivations of agencies seeking to engage the public online as well as about the challenges agencies face in incorporating modern technology in a way that produces ideal outcomes for specific federal agencies looking to accomplish their unique, PR-related goals.
Material electronically disseminated by the OMB, such as the Google-able “OMBlog” was my springboard for comparing the OMB’s online presence with other organizations’. By framing OMBlog, the White House Blog, and other federal agencies’ similarly intended posts, sites, and pages in the context of PR theory, I have noticed stark contrasts in the degree to which certain online efforts are useful, understood, or apparently interesting—among other metrics—to the audience the government has so far engaged online.
While the deadline to present at Research Days 2014 has passed, look out for the opportunity when it comes around next year, and check out other students’ projects at Research Days next month.
http://research.gwu.edu/research-days-2014
Sign up for Food for Thought Today!
Professor David Fontana on
“Government by Location”
March 21st at 12:30pm in Ames 101Join the UHP for lunch to discuss Prof. Fontana’s research on the importance of location in governance. What if we moved the capital of the United States to Wyoming instead of Washington? Or what if we moved the Congress to San Francisco and kept the White House in Washington? Where government is located is a big part of how government operates, and Professor Fontana will talk about the many reasons that is the case.