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...trying social challenges, but we’ve also had direct access to some of the most unique thoughts, people, and experiences in the world. So as my own Harvard career draws to an end, I’ll close with the advice that my time here has taught me: open your eyes while you still have the chance, and really see what’s been around you for four years. Once you do that, you can proudly put on your suit, jump on a plane, or buy books for graduate school to begin to fulfill the legacy...
...Faculty craft 15 to 20 interdisciplinary foundational courses in general education. These classes would not be compulsory, but would be available to students interested in a solid introduction to their disciplines as well as satisfying divisional requirements. One enticing example is a course on odysseys to be co-taught by Bass Professor of English and American Literature and Language Louis Menand and Cogan University Professor of the Humanities Stephen J. Greenblatt. We look forward to portal courses such as these and, more broadly, the reforms proposed by the Committee of General Education.Some of the reforms suggested by the curricular review?...
...mother, Elaine. As an undergraduate, Scott lived in Canaday Hall and Leverett House and concentrated in history. “The thing I loved most about Harvard were the classes and the sheer availability of libraries. I loved that I could take such obscure and interesting subjects taught by people who spent their lives studying those subjects,” she says. Scott, who was on the junior varsity fencing team, suspects that her freshman dormmates were assigned to Canaday according to their first names. She says, “On my floor we had two Lisas, a Louisa...
...Dillon Professor of International Affairs Jorge I. Domínguez, who taught Kristof in Government 20, “Introduction to Comparative Politics,” recalls that, even as a freshman, Kristof was “already a superb writer” who had the markings of a budding journalist...
...Computing” was the second-largest class at the College, reported the names of a few of the suspected cheaters to their senior tutors and advisers.Only a week later, 13 students in Science B-16, “The History of the Earth and Life,” taught by late professor of Geology Stephen J. Gould, were caught cheating on their take-home midterm and received zeros, according to a Crimson article.These incidents caused little stir on campus, but for some, they exposed a competitive atmosphere at the College that can push students to cheat in extreme circumstances.Bradford...