Honors Contracts Due in 2 Weeks

Honors ContractIf you’re taking a contract course, make sure to get your Honors Contract complete.
How do you know if you need to complete an Honors Contract? If any of these apply to you:

  • Internship for Honors credit,
  • Undergraduate Research,
  • Research Assistantship,
  • Senior Thesis (Not the same as Special Honors in your degree — that’s a different form found here)

Get the RTF-EZ here and the Contract Form here.  Don’t forget your proposal!
You’ve got until COB Friday, September 12th, 2014.
Confused?  Make an appointment.

Last Chance for Honors Sophomore Housing

Your fabulous new home?
Your fabulous new home?

The deadline to sign up for honors sophomore housing in Amsterdam Hall next year is THIS Thursday, February 6th!  Don’t miss out!
You may request desired roommates if you wish. All roommates must be members of the Honors Program and each roommate must submit a separate form – no one can be signed up by proxy. Students can apply for sophomore housing individually to be placed in a quad with other students that applied individually or in groups smaller than 4.
To apply: submit the sophomore Honors housing application, available right now online, by Thursday, February 6th, 2014 at the stroke of midnight. Spots are limited, and housing assignments will be made on a first-come, first-served basis. Those assigned to Honors housing will be notified via email shortly thereafter and their names will be submitted to GW Housing Programs.
Please note that different dorms have different prices, you can find a list for housing rates here. Only sign up for housing with the UHP if you actually intend to live there.
If you have any questions, please contact us at uhp@gwu.edu or 994-6816.

Tell Your Friends: Apply to the UHP

color-logo-copyFreshmen in their second semester can apply to join the Honors Program. The deadline is February 14th, 2014.
Students accepted will start in the UHP the beginning of their sophomore year, and are required to take a special class during the fall 2014 semester.
If you’re not in the UHP and you want to be, please apply!  If you’re already in the UHP — we know you’ve got friends that would be perfect for the UHP, so encourage them to apply!
More details below; find the application here.
When/where/how to apply?
Applications are available online.  Complete it and return it to the UHP Office at 714 21st Street NW by 5pm on February 14th, 2014.
What are the requirements to apply?
The specific application materials are described in the application.  Second-semester freshmen with strong GPAs should apply — the UHP requires its students to maintain GPAs high enough so that it’s mathematically possible to graduate with a 3.4.  Please note that student schedules must allow for the student to take HONR 2016 Enlightenment East & West in fall 2014.
When are decisions announced?
We’ll notify applicants this semester, before registration.

Meet the Professor: LaTisha Hammond

How on Earth does my watch keep the time? Let me open it to find out. Why are maggots and flies always around one another? Let me keep tabs on that dumpster over the next few weeks to figure it out. Why are crystals always so geometric? Let me grow some. The left side of my brain controls the right side of my body?? Awesome!…But why?? Let me do some research. It’s 3 o’clock in the afternoon – what does that mean? Time to watch Bill Nye the Science Guy, of course!

Professor LaTisha Hammond
Professor LaTisha Hammond

That was me as a kid, constantly curious about something or another. As such, science was always very interesting to me, and learning about living things and how they worked was always my favorite part of science. I also developed a deep fascination with the ocean and the creatures within. Yes, bears, lions, butterflies, and trees were all very interesting, but the organisms that lived in the ocean were mindboggling to me. Organisms came in all different shapes, sizes, and colors. Some of them had symmetries you never saw on land (i.e. the sea star…it’s shaped like a star AND it’s a living animal?? Is this real life???). Some of the organisms weren’t even symmetrical! Wait, animals can breathe oxygen in water, but some with gills instead of an air hole? Some of them don’t even “breathe” oxygen?? (Looking back on this time through the lens of a science educator, what was taking place was a significant breakdown and rebuilding of my conceptual framework for what was considered a living organism. At the time, though, this shift was experienced as a collection of mind explosions, if you will, that were ever more spectacular each time I learned about a different type of marine organism.)
I was born and raised mostly in Los Angeles, CA. However, my family moved to Las Vegas, NV when I was in high school, where my obsession with the ocean and my desire to be a marine biologist made little sense to my peers and some teachers. (For the record, because I always get asked – living in Las Vegas was very normal. In fact, it was quite boring, compared to the typical outsider’s view of Las Vegas. When asking, people often forget that I lived there as a teenager, which meant I was under 21, which meant I could not partake in any of the typical Las Vegas things, except Cirque du Soleil or other age-friendly shows).
I decided to go back to California for undergrad to study marine biology. During my first year at University of California, Santa Barbara I became a docent (educational guide) for the aquarium on campus. Giving educational tours to elementary and middle school kids was a highlight for me. Aside from learning child management and preventing enthusiastic little children from getting their fingers bitten off in the fish tanks they mistakenly thought were touch-tanks, this experience was when I knew I wanted to make a career out of teaching.
Also during undergrad I decided to partake in undergraduate research, which was one of the best things I could have done. I liked all of my biology/aquatic biology courses and getting first hand experience with some of the marine organisms in lab, but doing research was fulfilling (and challenging) in an entirely different way. I got to assist in ongoing research projects and then come up with questions and hypotheses of my own. This allowed me to go on road trips to field sites and learn about organisms in their natural habitat. I worked mainly with organisms that lived in the rocky intertidal and in tide pools (e.g. sea stars, mussels, snails, sea anemones, sea urchins), so I spent many bleary-eyed mornings watching the sun come up as my mentors and I collected organisms and data along the West Coast during low low tide (not to be confused with regular low tide). Sometimes we did this, all while trying to steer clear of wild boar (yes, wild boar on the beach of central California is as odd as it sounds). My experience doing research as an undergrad, exploring the fine-tuned relationship organisms have with the environment, and delving into the specific physiological mechanisms organisms have developed to respond to their environments, confirmed my decision to go to graduate school to study physiological ecology in marine invertebrates (purple sea urchins, to be exact). I had many more questions about this relationship that needed answers.
I spent the bulk of my time in graduate school researching and publishing papers on the physiological impacts of global climate change on marine invertebrates, specifically the impacts on growth and gene expression in purple sea urchin embryos and larvae. I also taught various lab and field courses during this time. Because I was very interested in education and teaching, and given my strong desire to participate in work that increases the engagement of diverse and underrepresented groups in science, I was also involved in science education research projects and a lot of science outreach with middle and high school students. My experiences in all these arenas ultimately led me to do research full-time in environmental science education after I finished my PhD. The science education research allowed me to combine my passions for science, education, and overall science literacy. My interest in science literacy stems from my belief that there is much to be gained from understanding the basics of science, how science works, and having the basic tools to grasp how science functions in society.
Now I am here at GW, where I am happy to be teaching in the Honors Program and Biology department. I’ll be teaching some of the Scientific Reasoning and Discovery courses with a focus on biology. Topics will range from general biology and society to more specific topics like marine biology and global climate change biology.
Please feel free to stop by my office in Ames 101P if you ever want to have a cup of tea and talk about biology, science, or just chat!

From Paris with Something… [Study Ablog]

It’s time for a check-in from a SPA student studying abroad. Get ready for advice and adventures from SPA! Today’s post is written by junior Thom Josephson who is studying in Paris at SciencesPo.

DSC06659
Lights

Abroad divides returners into two groups: Those who found the experience lacking and those who find the return to be so. I am of the former. I’m not going to gush forth praise and excitement. I won’t lie either.
Abroad, if you choose to go, will be hard. Being in another culture is not easy. Making friends is not easy. Adjusting is just plain hard.
But you might love it.
I found myself in a group of wonderful people, assembled from around the world. I found passionate teachers and interesting subjects. I found a city that glows, that positively sparkles, at night.
And I hit a point in my experience where I did not want to leave. I wanted to stay in Paris forever. I wanted to eat whole baguettes, drink cheap wine from the Côtes de Rhône, and glare scorn to tourists. I wanted to be French.
That desire passed for me. It doesn’t for everyone though.
Here is the truth: Go abroad. Or don’t. But don’t go because anyone told you to and don’t stay because anyone said to. Others’ experiences are not your own. Don’t trust them. Don’t trust me.
You may relish the culture, the different perspectives, the food and whatever else. Or you may find the academic difficulty lacking, the people dull, and the culture fake.
Whatever you decide to do, remember that the important thing is not where you go, but why.
I can tell you this: If you go, you will learn something. It just might not be what you thought it would; and that might not be such a bad thing.
Read my blog if you like, or don’t. I’m a blog post, not a cop.
See you all in the Spring.

About Your Writing Mistakes…

Ben YagodaDon’t miss out on discovering what embarrassing writing mistakes are making your Origins professor wince.  Get your tickets now!
Based on his new book, How to Not Write Bad: The Most Common Writing Problems and the Best Ways to Avoid Them, Ben Yagoda describes some painless ways to improve your writing–including not using the thesaurus.
Wednesday, October 23rd at 3PM
Ames Hall, B101 (Mt. Vernon Campus)

Seats are limited, register now!

This event is hosted by the University Honors Program and the University Writing Program. Please attend, your University Writing professors will thank you.
 

Four Year Plan(ning)

We're sorry, could you please clarify Step 2?
We’re sorry, could you please clarify Step 2?

Freshmen! If you’re not working on your four-year plan, don’t put it off! You’ve got until October 25th to have a complete four year plan and a 30 minute appointment with Catherine before you register for courses.
Four year plans, when finished, should be full of actual courses with departments and course numbers (HONR 1015), not general categories of requirements (math, concentration, Arts & Humanities).
Of course, you can always make appointments to help you on your way as you finalize your four year plan (for now, at least!)

Become a Research Assistant

A research assistantship is a great way to make a subject really come alive!
A research assistantship is a great way to make a subject really come alive!

Faculty look for the best and brightest at GWU to be research assistants on projects from political interest groups to advanced biology. Are you the student they’ve been looking for?
The deadline to apply to be a research assistant in spring 2014 is Friday, October 4th, 2013.
Why would you want to be a research assistant?  You get an opportunity to do advanced scholarly work, partnering with a research faculty member here at GWU.  Pick a topic that’s interesting to you (or go out on a limb and try exploring something completely new!)  Some research assistantships can even be completed for academic credit.

Check out the opportunities for spring 2014, and apply now!