Jamaica and South Africa Service-Learning Opportunity

One Heart Source is currently accepting applications for their 2016 Volunteer Programs. They are offering immersive 1, 2 and 4 week service-learning programs in Jamaica and South Africa this summer!

As an OHS Volunteer you will:

  • Develop the international experience graduate schools and employers look for
  • Gain skills in academic tutoring, international communication, and community outreach
  • Mentor students to realize academic growth and cultivate lifelong relationships
  • Partner with local communities to experience a global perspective
  • Connect to an international network designing global uplift

One Heart Source is an international 501(c)3 non-profit focused on collaboration, design, and implementation of programs focused on student mentorship, intercultural experience and dialogue in South Africa and Jamaica. Since 2008, over 1,000 students from 100 universities have participated in our programs.
To apply for the program, click here by this FRIDAY, March 25!
For questions, contact Callan Hajosy at info@one-heart-source.org.

Fall 2016 Registration Essentials

GET EXCITED! It’s almost time to register!  But before you can register for next semester’s classes, you have some housekeeping to do.  Find out how to get your holds removed and where to find the best courses for you next semester.
Registration Schedule
***Friday, April 1: Honors Freshmen (Privileged Registration)***

April 4
Monday
90 or more hours (credits) earned
April 5
Tuesday
70 or more hours (credits) earned
April 6
Wednesday
50 or more hours (credits) earned
April 7
Thursday
30 or more hours (credits) earned
April 8
Friday
0 or more hours (credits) earned

Registration is open from 7AM-10PM.
Sophomores, worried about registering without privileged registration? Read these Peer Advisor words of wisdom.
If you’re not sure when you register, you can check your earned credit hours in GWeb using the following path: Student Records & Registration Menu > Student Records Information Menu > Transcripts > View Unofficial Transcripts. Make sure you’re looking at overall hours earned for the accurate total!
Urgent Hold Information
Check your record via GWeb regarding holds prior to your scheduled registration time.  Any hold on your account will prevent access to registration. You can view any holds on your account by looking at: Student Records & Registration Menu > Student Records Information Menu > View Administrative Holds.
Make sure to check now and again in the days lead up to registration. Check early, and check often! BADLY TIMED HOLDS HAPPEN TO GOOD PEOPLE. DON’T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU:registration holds
*Please note: Sophomores in the Columbian College can meet with an Honors program advisor to have their CCAS Advising holds lifted. Freshmen must meet with their POD advisors.*
Fall Registration Advising

All honors students are encouraged to see a Honors Program Officer before registration. Make sure you are preparedwith a tentative course schedule using the Fall 2016 Schedule of Classes and Honors course descriptions. As new course information and revisions become available we will update the website. Please re-check the information on the Schedule of Classes and the Honors site before you register to ensure that you’re up-to-date!
Please use our wide selection of dates to your advantage – plan on meeting with an advisor at a time that is most practical given your registration date. Students may discuss registration (and remove an advising hold, if applicable) by one of the following options:

  1. Attend an advising pizza party in the Honors Townhouse Club Room:
    Tuesday, March 22nd from 12 to 2 p.m.
    Wednesday, March 23rd from 12 to 2 p.m
    Monday, March 28th from 4 to 6 p.m. (CANCELLED)
    Thursday, March 31st from 12 to 2 p.m
  2. Make an appointment with an advisor online at honorsprogram.gwu.edu/make-appointment.

Food for Thought with Prof. Kung

Join us in the Club Room on Friday, March 25th as noon as Professors Kung and Smigrod (Professor of Photography at the Corcoran School of Arts & Design) discuss “Paper Space, The Intersection of Reality & Imagination”
Based on the scientific predictions of Professor Kung, Professor Smigrod  created images that simulated her perception of specific astronomical events such as the transit of Mercury, solar eclipses and the possibility of an asteroid passing nearby Earth. In response to these predicted events, Prof. Smigrod used a combination of the light of a photographic enlarger with appropriated materials and the photographic chemistry to produce a visual response to these events. During this luncheon, we hope to engage the entire group in a discussion about the relationship between scientific truth and photographic fiction.
Please make sure to RSVP!

The Extra-Curricular: Phi Sigma Pi National Honors Fraternity

The following post was written by Peer Advisor Lindsey O’Connell, a CCAS sophomore studying Art History and Spanish. Find out more about Lindsey by visiting her Peer Advisor profile page here.

Hey everyone!

First off, here’s hoping that your mid-terms are going well! And if they aren’t, remember that Spring Break is just days away, and the UHP Townhouse has plenty of coffee and tea to get you through in the meantime 🙂 Woo!

My Fraternity Family!
My Fraternity Family!

For this week’s “Extra-Curricular,” I want to talk about something near and dear to my heart: Phi Sigma Pi National Honors Fraternity (because apparently, I just can’t get enough of that #HonorsLife).
Phi Sigma Pi, or PSP, was founded in 1916 upon the ideals of Scholarship, Leadership, and Fellowship. This gender-inclusive Fraternity uses this “Tripod” of values as a way to guide brothers through our academic, professional, and social lives.
Some of) the Alpha Tau initiate Class, Fall 2015
Some of) the Alpha Tau initiate Class, Fall 2015

Now, you’ve probably heard of PSP before, right? That is because all UHP students (excluding students in their first or last semesters) should receive semesterly invitations to participate in our rush process. That is, if you don’t assume the email is spam and throw it in your junk mail (which of course I totally did not do). Students must have earned a 3.0 GPA or higher in order to become a brother of PSP–which means UHPers automatically qualify!
Personally, I never imagined myself as someone who would go Greek, and yet since I became a brother in Fall 2015, Phi Sigma Pi has become a cornerstone in my college experience.
As my health took a downwards turn at the beginning of this year, minimizing my participation in my Honors course first semester and restricting me from taking further courses this semester, I found myself sorely missing the sense of community and camaraderie I experienced when I was able to fully immerse myself in UHP activities. While I could not handle the courseload, I still wanted to be around other academically minded, interesting, and just plain awesome people.
UHPers and PSP brothers Lindsey and Conor having lunch at Jetties
UHPers and PSP brothers Lindsey and Conor having lunch at Jetties

For me, becoming a brother of PSP has allowed me to bring the best parts of the UHP–the sense of community, the shared values, the common understanding–into a fun and flexible extra-curricular. Unlike other extra-curricular activities I have previously participated in, Phi Sigma Pi’s focus on scholarship ensures that my academics are never put on the back burner.
Not forgetting about the other parts to the Tripod, PSP’s wide arrange of events and activities for brothers includes museum outings, workshops, movie nights, and more! I have found so many wonderful people through this organization, and I am glad to have had the opportunity to get to know them in such a meaningful capacity.
If you think that Phi Sigma Pi could be a good fit for you, look out for the Fall Rush invitation! And maybe bookmark this page, because if you’re like me, you’ll totally forget by then 🙂
Have an awesome break!!

2016 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:

Steven Kelly
Sophomore
“Moderating Negative Responsibility”
Written for Prof. Ralkowski’s “The Death of God” Origins class

Runners Up:

Victoria Leoni
Freshman
“Plato’s Theory of Love: Flawed Regardless of Interpretation”
Written for Prof. Ralkowski’s “Wisdom” Origins class
Jarrod Carman
Sophomore
“Justice and Syrian Refugees:  What’s the Right Thing To Do?”
Written for an Honors Internship contract course, supervised by Prof. Ralkowski
The first place winner will receive a $100 gift cards and the runners up will each receive $50 gift cards. Congratulations!

Poetry Lecture Series with Prof. Soltan

Have you taken a class with Professor Soltan yet? If not, you’re missing out! Come see what all the hype is about!
Honors Professor Margaret Soltan will be doing a three-part lecture series at the Georgetown Neighborhood Library in celebration of National Poetry Month. We encourage you to attend Saturday April 2nd, 9th, and 16th, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
soltan resized
Lecture One: Winter kept us warm: Poetry as Paradox April 2, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
In a year that began with a great blizzard in Washington, we’ll look first in this lecture series at what poetry makes of the snow: as an image, a symbol, a mood, a setting.  We’ll focus on three poems – T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, Louis MacNeice’s Snow, and Hayden Carruth’s The Curtain – and ask not only what sort of utterance poetry is, but also what it offers us intellectually and emotionally as we experience the power of nature.
Lecture Two: Stirring dull roots with spring rain: Poetry as Life Itself April 9, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
April is the month of these lectures; April is National Poetry Month; April marks the renewal of life in the spring season.  That all sounds great, yet Eliot calls April “the cruellest month.”  Our focus in this lecture will be James Schuyler’s exuberantly long poem, Hymn to Life, which is set in Washington DC in the spring.
Lecture Three: Flying off into nothing: Poetry as Death April 16, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Our final two poems, Gerard Manley Hopkins’ Spring and Fall, and Sylvia Plath’s Berck-Plage, complete our seasonal exploration of what poetry is, and what it can do by way of clarifying our relationship to our lives in nature.

Although drop-ins are welcome, we ask that you please call or email to RSVP: 202-727-0232 |georgetownlibrary@dc.gov
The library is located at 3260 R St. NW Washington,  D.C.  20007.

Islam in France and Britain

dudeJoin the UHP and the Institute of European Russian and Eurasian Studies on Thursday, March 24 from 12:30-2:00pm for an engaging talk by John Bowen about Islam in France and Britain. Dr. Bowan is a leading authority on Islam in Europe, and wrote a great book about the headscarf issue in France. He has become a regular contributor to public debates about the various controversies roiling European countries about their Muslim populations.

Alarms over waves of Muslim refugees entering Europe have added to what was an already rising set of anti-Islamic attitudes and false beliefs about an eventual takeover of Europe by Muslims. Missed in the media frenzy, but also absent from most scholarly treatments of the topic, are ways in which Muslims have been adapting religious practices and institutions to the conditions of each country where they have settled. This talk will discuss the contrasting experiences of Muslims in Britain and France, illustrating both the importance of these adaptive processes and the divergent trajectories of Islam in each European country.
 
John Bowen is the Dunbar-Van Cleve Professor in Arts & Sciences and Sociocultural Anthropology at Washington University. His research focuses on comparative social studies of Islam across the world, and includes ethnographic studies in Indonesia, France, and England. Bowen is particularly interested in how Muslims (judges and scholars, public figures, ordinary people) work across plural sources of norms and values, including diverse interpretations of the Islamic tradition, law codes and decisions, and local social norms. He has published numerous books and scholarly articles, and contributes regularly to public debates about Islam. His most recent book, British Islam: Religion, Law, and Everyday Practice in Shari’a Councils, was published in 2016 by Princeton University Press.
Please RSVP at http://go.gwu.edu/jbowen
The talk will take place in the Voesar Conference Room (1957 E St. NW, Suite 412) on Thursday, March 24 from 12:30-2:00pm.
 

Religious Freedom Colloquium: New Date Added!

Back by popular demand, Professor Chistov is hosting a second religious freedom colloquium.
Register here to participate in a discussion colloquium on “Religious Freedom” Saturday, April 16th in the Club Room of the Honors townhouse.
Sponsored by the Institute for Humane Studies (IHS), this day-long colloquium will center on informal, yet serious, discussion with just fifteen participants. Dr. Theo Christov and Dr. Sam Goldman will serve as the discussion leaders in order to facilitate an in-depth exploration of the questions and challenges raised by a set of readings (totaling around 150 pages), which will be provided to you to read in advance. The readings include classical texts on religious freedom from thinkers like Locke and Tocqueville, to more contemporary arguments from John Rawls, to Supreme Court cases like Burwell v. Hobby Lobby.
This is an all day event, so please be sure that your schedule allows you to arrive in time for breakfast and be present through the concluding dinner Saturday night. You will be expected to attend the full program, including discussions, meals, and socials. As compensation for your participation, IHS will provide you a $100 stipend.
We are eager to embark on this intellectual adventure with you. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Prof. Christov at christov@gwu.edu.

Food for Thought w/ Prof. Pemberton

Join us in the Club Room on Friday, March 4th for a Food for Thought lunch with Professor Pemberton, as she discusses “”Islamic Gender Activism in Indonesia: Transnational Model or Unicorn?” We’ll be starting at 12, so make sure to get there in time to grab a sandwich and a seat! Lunch will be provided, so please make sure to RSVP!

#HonorsProblems: In Praise of Failure

The following blog post was written by Peer Advisor Eamonn, a heterodoxic sophomore studying philosophy and international affairs. You can find out more about Eamonn here.

In Praise of Failure: Why the Worst is [generally] for the Best

Though we’d universally prefer another contribution to such riveting themes as “The Intern Files”, “Study A-Blog” or “The World of Dressage[1]”, this week’s post is devoted to the proverbially soft and slimy underbelly of our Peer Advisor canon of wisdom: “Honors Problems”. I suppose that’s an awfully derisive characterization. Excepting snake enthusiasts, soft and slimy aren’t generally employed as honorifics[2].

Nothing about this is attractive.
Nothing about this is attractive.

That was a digression. Sorry. Yet I feel it was an illustrative one. Although we emphasize such laudable mantras as “don’t become overextended”, “know when to quit” and “you don’t need to do everything”, we value these words about as much as Ryan Reynolds does the Green Lantern Oath.[3]
At a university which fixates upon success, Honors students are liable to fetishize it[4]. As well we should, the forceful riposte goes. We were originally identified as possessing capacities deemed exceptional, should our current character not be deemed exemplary? To be less than exemplary is to fail. It is to deny the actuality of our vaunted virtues and sink insensibly into the frothing pit of mediocrity beneath us. That sounds awful, hopefully no one really thinks of it in those terms. I’m tempted to invoke Montaigne’s opinion that “all men are ineluctably stupid”, arguing humanity to be inherently fallible. Yet to do would be as indefensible as it distressing[5]. Failure will inevitably occur, but its effects needn’t be invariably detrimental. I could continue to pontificate upon how success conflates our hubris and conceals our still festering flaws. That sounds unbearably sanctimonious though. I think I’ll instead recount for you a period of my life riddled with failure: first semester freshman year.
As I imagined was the case for many of you, I found high school painless and accolades easy to attain. Although repeatedly warned of how onerous college could be, I was unabashedly blithe for the first month of class, spending more time as a tourist than a student. I remained that way until I received the grade for my first paper, a precis composed for an Introductory Philosophy course. Let’s just say the “C+” jaggedly scrawled across the paper was less than desirable. To my credit, I became a markedly more diligent student thereafter. To my dismay, it didn’t make a difference. No matter how I strained myself, I couldn’t eke out more than a B in either Origins or my Intro Philosophy course. These were the classes I enjoyed. For those I didn’t—Microecon foremost—my work was horrendous enough to make a DMV secretary blush.
I’d experienced setbacks before[6].Yet this was something dreadfully new. My talents were inadequate, my perspective was disoriented and my confidence had been thoroughly emasculated[7]. Every new grade I received was another dull blow to my already broken spirit. To compound what was academically unbearable, my social life was fast going awry as well. Acclimation into the mundane but essential responsibilities of independent living was a haphazard process at best[8], none of the clubs I had joined felt particularly rewarding, none of the girls I attempted to talk to particularly liked me[9] and relations with my roommates weren’t particularly comfortable either. Returning home for Thanksgiving break, I couldn’t identify a single moment of unqualified success over the preceding three months. I had, emphatically and unavoidably, failed.
Finis
Kidding, though at that point, I very much would have liked to cut my losses. In frankness, I can’t recall any ballast of stability which enabled me to persevere through the semester. My parents were supportive, my professors solicitous and the few friends I had made, caring. Conclusively though, nothing improved. Still no luck in the classroom, still no luck with the ladies. My final grade for microeconomics was so heinous my academic adviser thought I might be compelled to retake it.[10] I hardly crossed the 3.0 threshold for continuance with the Honors Program. These drear recollections aren’t intended as schadenfreude fodder (but if you need that go for it). Rather their purpose is to establish the context for the two qualities I came to find indispensable in rejuvenating myself academically and socially the next semester: humility and courage.
Humility is to recognize the possibility of failure. Courage is to resolutely persevere despite this possibility. My failures didn’t “teach” me this. They reduced me to it. All other considerations were remote or inconceivable. The will to try and the resolve to keep trying was my last elixir. So I took it. Happily, it was all I required. My mishaps didn’t disappear, though as I adjusted to the rigors of university coursework they did dissipate in frequency and magnitude. What truly changed was my response. Rather than treat failure as condemnation for my inadequacy, I approached it as the opportunity for growth. This maxim—often said and rarely followed—is practical only for those who have dismissed failure as a vice. Adopting humility and courage empowered me to deny failure its ferocity. Failure couldn’t hurt me, because failure isn’t final. Humility taught me to accommodate failure, courage taught me to progress from it.  

It’s one thing to discourse on elegant, airy abstractions of virtue. How do you go about practicing “humility” and “courage”? Maybe it’s tempting to treat these traits as fatalistic. We can’t control our failures in finality, so why rebuke ourselves as responsible for them? This would be misguided though. The goal isn’t to accept failure. It’s not even to unencumber ourselves of failure’s burden. Failure should sting, it should prod us sharply, it should rouse us from complacently accepting our immediate limitations. In so doing, failure should be part of a constructive process. This process is a reflective one. It consists in candid, comprehensive self-examination, coupling success alongside failure. The former reveals what we’ve mastered, the latter recommends what ought to be mastered next. Brought to fruition this process tells us where we are, where we’d like to be, and how best to get there. As it would be remiss to write for the UHP without invoking the ancients at some point, let me belatedly harken to Socrates. Before he drank the cup and kicked the bucket, the barefoot sage pronounced to his bewildered companions in the Symposium that Love, for all its virtues, was downright hideous. How could it not be? Bereaved of Beauty, Love is compelled to seek it, to exalt it, and most of all, create it. Failure in my mind, relates similarly to success. Who knows, there’s a lot lost in translation[11]

[1] UHP approval of Dressage section currently begrudged, lack of relevance to and expertise among the student body cited. Minor setback, wait until they see the Olympics.
[2] Hail Hydra
[3] “In brightest day/in darkest night/no evil shall escape my sight/let all who worship evil’s might/beware the power of Green Lantern’s light” I’m not bitter, I just would have preferred a better movie
[4] Don’t read into that
[5] Stick to German philosophy, Descartes thought he was a ghost and Voltaire couldn’t distinguish Xenophon from Xenophanes. Cogito Ergo Done with these Amateurs
[6] One time I wasn’t elected National Honor Society president, it was devastating
[7] Don’t read into that either
[8] Apparently red shirts really do bleed into white socks in the wash
[9] Open to advice
[10] Turns out I don’t…I think
[11] For a lucidly articulated account of such discrepancies in Classical scholarship, review Alan Bloom’s translation of The Republic