Word: chooseã
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...Students Choose?? exhibit might have looked unwelcoming, tucked away in the Sert Gallery in the Carpenter Center. But this Visual and Environmental Studies exhibit was just the way to remind Harvard students of the power art can have and its sophisticated way of providing both artists and viewers an alternative way to explore and express.The first segment of the two-part exhibit ran from January 20-30—the second part is currently on exhibition through February 13—and featured the work of 13 student artists from various fall semester VES studio classes. Each...
...conversations of late. While the recently-concluded curricular review dithered about outlining a vision for general education in the 21st century, most students’ complaints continued to center less on pedagogical philosophy than on the paucity of options for fulfilling Core requirements. Incoming students no longer have to choose??as we seniors, the last of an older generation, had to—their concentration in their freshman year, ostensibly to permit, through more freedom to sample various disciplines, thus a more meaningful choice of study. Departments did not delay to follow suit—the History Department...
...diverse student population, so often being out is a challenge for students due to factors such as ethnicity, race, class, and religion,” according to Kimmel. “I work with an increasing number of students of color who express feeling like they have to choose??either be connected with a gay community or be connected to their racial or ethnic community and desperately struggle to find a way to remain connected with both.”TIME LAPSENo matter how far the Harvard gay community has come since the days of President Lowell...
...Stilgoe, “very few” VES grads become professional artists, “because you can’t get the training at a liberal arts college that you would at an arts college.”However, VES has three tracks from which concentrators choose??studio and film, environmental studies, and film studies—and students do receive the training and skills that allow them to pursue careers in fields that are not strictly artistic. “A big chunk of VES these days is not studio art or even film production...
...influence of eating clubs on campus, according to the Daily Princetonian. (Perhaps the eating clubs had something better than fast food on the menu.) The 15 students who did show up expressed concern that the four-year residential colleges, set to debut next year, will isolate students who choose??whether for financial or social reasons—to distance themselves from "The Street," as Princeton's eating clubs are collectively known...