Word: adviceã
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...listed key pieces of advice??looking to the long-term, resisting the “hot job,” and maintaining “a moral compass”—and concluded that balance was integral to personal satisfaction...
...intention of warning admissions officers off other such conceited types. On a basic level, it is hardly a shock to learn that proctors are, and reportedly have been for centuries, monitoring their entryways. Among the variety of tasks assigned to them—from invigilating exams to providing academic advice??keeping an eye on students’ well-being is naturally a high priority. But, as well as filling in a once-a-term evaluation, proctors have been told to relay both their gratitude and angst to the admissions office for admitting both their “favorite?...
...same time, maybe we as students should reevaluate what we’re asking our advising system to do for us. If we don’t want help charting our course through college, we can hardly blame others for its absence. But if we do want advice??and more importantly, if we need it—we have to be willing not just to ask for help, but also to put in the effort ourselves. After all, even if your partner’s the best rope-puller of them all, winning your dinner still takes...
...Coming two days after Bok e-mailed a “request for advice?? to faculty, students, and staff, yesterday’s resolution also established a seven-member undergraduate committee that will issue a “substantive report” on its criteria for the next dean...
...interweaving demands of exploring Harvard for the first time. Those who argue that freshmen advising is too complex or too large a task to saddle upon those currently involved in planning study breaks, either underestimate the capabilities of eager Harvard students or overestimate the difficulty of providing basic directional advice??explaining the difference between Ec1010 and Ec1011, where to find departmental advising—to freshmen who currently lack it. The training for such a position is expected to be rigorous; it needs to be if the program is to succeed. But upperclassmen have proven themselves receptive...