Word: predictabilities
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...HRDC) Co-Director Sonia K. Todorova ’07 says of modern dance. “It becomes something that originates in the choreographer’s mind and then transforms into what the dancers give to it.” The result? “Nobody...can predict the end.” For the HRDC, tonight is that unpredictable end. This weekend, the company’s straightforwardly titled “Spring Concert of Modern Dance” is set to overtake the newly built Harvard Dance Center (HDC). Although this is a year of challenges...
...mail that he did not believe the current tutorial will have any effect on the number of concentrators. “Government declarations have grown every year that I have been at Harvard. Why should that cease?” Andersen disagreed. “I predict a high number of social studies applications this year,” she said. —Staff writer Jillian M. Bunting can be reached at jbunting@fas.harvard.edu...
Researchers working with Mobius created a labor market where employers had to predict the maze-solving ability of prospective applicants...
...adds that the communication is part of a broader effort to determine how admitted students fare. Fitzsimmons says the admissions office conducts “validity studies” to assess how well test scores and grades predict students’ success at Harvard...
...department has yet to work out the details, secondary fields might be offered in neuroscience, developmental psychology, social psychology, and other areas. Knafel Professor of Music Thomas F. Kelly said the Music department is considering possible secondary fields in music performance, analysis, composition, and jazz. It is difficult to predict how the implementation of secondary fields will affect the overall patterns of student concentration choice, said Putnam Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology David A. Haig, an EPC member. ”I think this will encourage students to try some of the smaller concentrations, knowing that they can take...