Food for Thought w/ Prof. Kung

Join us in the Club Room on Friday, November 17 from 12-1 PM for our third Food for Thought of the semester with Professor Kung, who will be giving a brief talk over catered lunch! Be sure to RSVP here to save your seat (and your lunch!). More information about Professor Kung’s discussion is below.

“Gravitational Waves, Colliding Neutron Stars, and Secrets in Science”


In August 2017, LIGO and Virgo observatories detected the first ever gravitational wave signal from the collision of two neutron stars. This event was quickly associated with electromagnetic radiation (light!) from a new source in a relatively nearby galaxy, NGC 4993. Rumors — and tweets — immediately began to fly through the astronomical community. But as more than 70 observatories watched the event and hundreds of papers were furiously drafted, the media and the general public was kept in the dark — even while the earlier detection of gravitational waves from colliding black holes won 3 scientists the Nobel Prize! In this talk, I’ll discuss what gravitational wave are and how they are detected, describe this exciting binary neutron star merger event, and discuss the reasons for, and ethics of, secrecy in modern science.

#HonorsProblems: I’VE MESSED UP EVERYTHING OH NO

The following blog post was written by Peer Advisor Ryan, a CCAS sophomore studying english, creative writing, and history.
My name’s Ryan. That’s me, dressed up for Halloween in a tribute to one of mankind’s greatest works, Jason Bateman’s Teen Wolf Too. And if there’s one thing you should know about me, it’s that I make lot of mistakes.
Mistakes? I hear you asking. Why, you’re an Honors student! Don’t you endlessly perseverate upon mistakes so that you never make them again? What could this be?!
Well, inquisitive voice, I’m glad you asked.
Let me weave you a tale of a recent goof, one involving an essay. Back at the beginning of the year, I found myself in a class in which a paper was assigned on the first day. Which, yeah, that was awesome. But, anyway, the assignment was only two pages, the topic seemed easy enough, and I had two weeks to do it.
Ha! thought I. What paltry errands lay here![1]
At least, that was what I thought.
A week later, I sat down on Sunday night to write a paper for that Monday/Wednesday class, because, I thought, why would a paper for a Monday/Wednesday class be due any day besides Monday/Wednesday? So I logged in to Blackboard to look at the rubric, and that’s when I saw something funny.
Hm, it’s already on Blackboard. Weird.
Hm, it says it’s been graded as a zero. Weird.
Hm, it says that it was due last Thursday. And that it’s ten percent of my grade.
OH.
CUT TO: me, frantically emailing to my professor to vigorously apologize, and subsequently being told that, for parity’s sake, she wouldn’t accept late assignments. Then: one minute later, me, frantically making an appointment with Mary, inserting in the Tell me about this problem section a thematically-appropriate GIF:

After that, I took some time to have a slight meltdown, panicking and thinking that, because of this one assignment, I’d end up failing, ruining my four-year plan, dropping out of school, living in the back of a garbage truck with a mean and not-very-conscientious raccoon as a roommate—typical stuff.
That’s when I had to stop myself.
I was doing, I realized, what thirteen years of high-achieving academic culture had conditioned me to do. I’d made one mistake and was mercilessly beating myself up over it, worrying about how my life theretofore would become a dumpster fire because of it.
But I didn’t need to do that. I just had to stop worrying and focus on what to do next.
I stopped dwelling in my mistake, and instead started thinking constructively. I found that there was plenty of extra credit in that class, so I could still get an A, and that—somehow—life would go on if I didn’t get an A. So, by the time I went into Mary, I met her not as the screaming Patrick GIF but as Jason Bateman from Teen Wolf Too:

Everybody makes mistakes, and Honors students are no exception. In fact, mistakes can be extra tough as an Honors student, because you’ve likely been trained to beat yourself up over them ad nauseum. But, as I learned, the important thing is not to punish yourself for a mistake—it’s to accept that it happened, recognize that it’s probably not a world-ending mistake, and remember you can always recover from it.

[1] Accurate inner monologue
 

2nd Annual Ready Set Grow! Career Conference

Still looking for that summer internship? Need a professional headshot or some career guidance in general? Come to the 2nd Annual “Ready Set Grow!” Career Conference to hear from esteemed professionals about their experience across various fields:
With the support from the F. David Fowler Career Center, Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta Sigma Pi proudly present the 2nd Annual “Ready Set Grow!” Career Conference on November 10th!
In addition to panels on Consulting, Accounting/Finance, Law & Public Policy, Entrepreneurship, Sport Event & Hospitality Management, and Marketing, participants can get a professional headshot, network with panelists, meet recruiters, and learn about many student organizations in and out of the business school. Firms represented include Ernst & Young, Accenture, PWC, Deloitte, KPMG, DoJ, World Bank, National Geographic, Washington Redskins and many more!

This is a free event, but registration is required. Registration to this event includes admission to the keynote speech, chosen panel and networking reception & free food!!
Where: Duques Hall
When: November 10th, 12:30 – 5:00 PM
Dress: Business Professional
Registration –
Consulting & Advisory Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97588
Finance & Accounting Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97615
Entrepreneurship Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97622
Law & Public Policy Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97633
Sport & Event Management Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97636
Marketing Panel: https://gwu.joinhandshake.com/events/97646

We hope to see you all on the 10th! If you have any questions feel free to contact Ellen Boyer at etboyer3@gwmail.gwu.edu.

Office of Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici (OR-01)

The office of Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici (OR-01) is seeking interns for winter/spring 2018. Interns in the Washington, D.C. office will gain valuable experience supporting legislative staff and will learn about the operations of a congressional office. Responsibilities will include: conducting legislative research, providing office support, answering phones, assisting with constituent correspondence, leading tours of the U.S. Capitol, and assisting staff with projects as assigned. Interns in the district office in Beaverton, Oregon will assist the outreach staff and caseworkers, research policy issues, help with constituent communication through mail and phone calls and attend meetings with the Congresswoman. Successful candidates will demonstrate professionalism, strong communication skills, and an interest in learning more about the legislative process. Candidates with Oregon ties are strongly encouraged to apply. Applications for the winter/spring 2018 internship are due Friday, November 17th. To apply, please visit https://bonamici.house.gov/services/internships

December Grads: Special Honors Verification

Hey Seniors!
Are you pursuing Special Honors in your major this semester? Don’t forget to submit your  Special Honors Verification form to ensure that the work you’re doing for Special Honors will count towards your UHP graduation requirements!
If you’re a senior that will be graduating this fall or spring and are pursuing Special Honors in place of taking HONR 4198 THIS FALL, please make sure to submit this form to the UHP front office by 5 PM on Friday, November 17th.
You’ll need to get your form signed by your faculty advisor in your department (not Mary), so please don’t wait until the last minute to get started on your application!

#HonorsProblems: How to Get Over That Post-Midterm Drag

The following blog post was written by Peer Advisor Melanie, a junior studying political science and international affairs. 
So, midterms are winding down. You’ve been stressed out for weeks. Hours and hours in Gelman and cups and cups of coffee. You’ve taken two midterms on one day and turned in those three papers that you had due all at once. And its finally over. What now?
We at GW have a knack for doing the most. We strive to be the best. And while being able to thrive under pressure may be a great asset, we sometimes forget how to relax. The stress of midterms can be overwhelming at times, and when were done with them we can find ourselves in a sort of limbo, waiting for the next exam or project, instead of taking the time we have off to just breathe. This is the time of year that we decide to join another club since we have some extra time, or pick up that extra project.
If there is anything that I have learned in the last couple of years, its how to multi-task. But on top of that, I have begun to learn how to take advantage of the minute I have to relax when I can. I say “begun” because even as a junior, I struggle with this. My Honors mindset always has me searching for the next opportunity and next way to rise above the competition. Us honors kids are professional over-achievers. Freshman year I stressed about everything and anything, and even when I had nothing going on, I was stressing about a future project that hadn’t even been assigned yet.

So I challenge you, in this time between midterms and finals, to take a weekend (or even a week if you’re feeling bold) and do something that you’ve been wanting to do but just “haven’t had the time”. Go to that movie you’ve been dying to see. Go to that restaurant across town that everyone’s been raving about. Lay in bed and take that three-hour nap you’ve been pushing off since you got here. Its time to take some time for YOU. Treat yourself. I promise that when you wake up from that nap or get back from that trip, everything will be just as you left it and you’ll be able to pick up where you left off, with a much clearer head. Some quality R&R can do an immeasurable amount of goodness in the long term. It brings us back to reality as we step back and evaluate what we’ve got going on in our lives. Trust me, you’ll enjoy college much more once you begin to take a breather.

Independent Research: A Beginners Guide Written by a Beginner

Until freshman year of college, I was skeptical of so-called “eureka moments”. It seemed like a convenient way for freakish geniuses like Archimedes and Newton to avoid social ostracism by showing they did normal things: bathe, sleep, etc. That skepticism collapsed though, after my own eureka experience. While maybe not comparable to radically altering the scope of physics, my revelatory moment importantly change how I understood the opportunities of college.
Like all great events in human history, the setting was a disheveled dorm room. I was at my desk, dutifully completing an International Affairs reading. Then, I snapped. The reading I decided with conclusive bitterness, was irreparably “stupid”. By that I didn’t mean it was pointless, tedious, or confusing like I normally did. This time, it was flat out dumb. The premises of the argument were opaque, its conclusions unfounded and the evidence irrelevant. I was unaccustomed to being so censorious. It wasn’t my place to judge right? And then it hit me. It was my place to judge. The insights came in an avalanche. It wasn’t only my place to judge the stuff I read. It was my opportunity, no it was my responsibility, to create stuff worth reading to spare future college students from reading stupid articles.
With this sequence of impeccable logic, my ambition to produce scholarly research of my own was born. Given that professors critiqued my early essays as “argumentatively convoluted and rhetorically bulbous” (comments like those stick with you), the start was less than promising. But I persevered, and painfully I improved. Developing an ardor for philosophy, I pored over every book I found, detained professors long after class in discussion, and began to form my own ideas.
These ideas finally came to fruition in a flurry of research papers I wrote first semester sophomore year. One of my professors, normally as cheerful as the Undertaker, praised the argument in one such paper as “delightfully perspicacious” (I looked up that word) and encouraged me to submit it a philosophy conference. So I did. It turns out nerd conventions are awesome, and I’ve been attending them and churning out research papers ever since. The opportunities that pursuing independent research have opened for me are manifold. I’ve traveled to Portland, New Orleans and Ottawa to present papers, completed research internships at the Library of Congress and American Enterprise Institute, and, to some modest extent, can actually call myself an expert in the little corner of academia I work in.
So research has been enormously important and beneficial for me. As a bright and ambitious UHPeer, it easily could be for you too. That’s why I’m now a member of the Elliott School’s Student Research Forum (SRF). We help students in the hardest part of becoming a social science researcher: getting started. Then we help with the next hardest part: keeping it going. The SRF provides informal and accessible introductory workshops on the critical skills of social science research—discourse analysis, fieldwork, conducting interviews, statistical analysis. We also provide a venue for the exchange of ideas between students, letting them contribute to one another’s research goals and methods through mutual evaluation. And at the end of the process, we provide a platform for students to publicize what they’ve accomplished; organizing research conferences that draw together student presenters with audiences of scholars, professionals and peers (and snacks!).
Too many students are discouraged from pursuing their projects because they can’t locate the structure and resources needed to cultivate them. Independent research’s situation is no different. I doubt I’m the only undergrad to shout “this is stupid” in exasperation over a reading, confident I could produce something better. Unfortunately, I doubt that it’s more than a select few students who were lucky enough to receive the support and opportunities that propelled me down the path to research success. The SRF exists to make this degree of support and opportunity readily available to all GW students. All you need to do is come to us with passion, and carry on with persistence, to realize your research goals,
Look for SRF updates in further Newsflashes!

#HonorsProblems: Admitting You're Doing Too Much

The following blog post was written by peer advisor Chrissy, a CCAS sophomore studying english and creative writing, German, and maybe film studies (but maybe not).

Chrissy in action! (She’s about 85% large blonde hair)

I’ve recently decided to consider dropping my minor. I know it’s the right thing to do, but a part of me is still clinging to the feeling of accomplishment that comes with saying, “Hi, I’m Chrissy, and I’m double majoring in English and Creative Writing and German and minoring in Film Studies.” So many of us are trying to do as much as humanely possible in 4 years, and I’m sure I’m not the only one who struggles to admit that I’m doing too much.
It was actually the Honors small group slide about “bad reasons to do a minor” that caught me, and not as an over-enthusiastic freshman rearing to make the perfect, packed, flawless 4 year plan, but as a sophomore peer advisor thinking about what advice I’d give to my freshman. I probably wouldn’t recommend double majoring and minoring because it’s exhausting and a lot of work, especially if you struggle with time management like I do. More than once, a friend has introduced me to their parents as “the one who sleeps less than I do.” As amusing as this is, I realize that I should take my own advice and drop my credit count.
I applied to college as a double major English and German, and have only continued to add activities since then. First it was the creative writing aspect of the major, then Honors classes, then a “just-for-fun” film class at CI registration that turned into a minor when I made my 4-year plan. I auditioned for orchestra and not only joined, but volunteered to be a librarian. I joined GW Dems and the National Society of Collegiate Scholars. I began looking into study abroad options in Germany, and became a peer advisor at the end of freshman year. This year, I am Secretary of the GW Orchestra, in addition to librarian.
I put a double major and a minor and honors classes and studying abroad and orchestra (are you out of mental breath?) into my 4-year plan and decided that that was my course, that while the order of the classes might change, my next 4 years were set. This was my over-excited freshman-self focusing only on taking 18 credits every semester (until I was cut off and pushed down to 17) and cramming as many classes as possible in. I didn’t consider that I might want to leave my room on a weeknight and actually do something, or that, to quote Ed Sheeran, “two hours ain’t enough for me,” of course referring to sleep.
These are my words of wisdom: remember that the 4-year plan is not set in stone. Remember that 4 years is a long time and that we will change and so might our goals. Realize that everyone has a different level of “too much,” and that we need to focus more on finding our own abilities than comparing ourselves to others. Don’t forget to enjoy the college experience and leave the dorm room!

UHP Trivia Night

Who was the legendary Benedictine monk who invented champagne? Which Shakespeare play features Shylock? What are the two top candy-producing companies in the U.S.?
That’s right, the UHP is hosting a trivia night!

What year was Finding Nemo released in theaters?

Join us on Friday, November 3rd for UHP trivia from 7-10 PM. We’re bringing in a professional trivia host and filling up Marvin 309 to give YOU the opportunity to show everyone how much stuff you know! I bet you know SO much stuff!
Except to which Icelandic city the volcano known as Eyjafjallajokull is closest.

Tables at the event will hold teams of up to 10. If you’re signing up with a team, each person will need to sign up individually – make sure you decide your team name before signing up! Single players or smaller teams should sign up and will be grouped together to form a full table. Snacks will be provided, as will prizes for the winning table! This event is alcohol free. This event will be capped at 100 students, so sign up sooner rather than later!

Sign up here by Wendesday, November 1st 

"Ex Machina" Film Screening w/ Prof. Aviv


Join Professor Aviv on Friday, 10/27 at 7 PM in the Club Room for a screening of Ex Machina followed by a brief discussion, titled:
Personhood and Artificial Intelligence in Ex Machina
Should we have moral obligations toward artificial intelligent humanoids? Progress in AI is already so advanced that some, like Stephen Hawking, warn that “the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.” As the models we build become more and more like us, should we consider them persons? Do they have rights? These question and others animated the 2015 thrilling sci-fi Ex Machina directed by Alex Garland. The movie tells the story of Caleb Smith, a programmer in a software company who wins a contest to spend a week in a secluded resort working with the company CEO, Nathan Bateman. Nathan builds a humanoid robot named Ava and Caleb’s job is to find out whether the robot is capable of thoughts and consciousness. Nathan is also interested in whether Caleb can relate to Ava as a person. Sounds easy, but turns out that playing God is not that simple. Things get out of hand pretty quickly. After the movie we will have a discussion and snacks. Only humans this time, no robots are invited!
Sign up herehttp://movienight2.youcanbook.me