gateway_programs
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====== Gateway Programs ====== | ====== Gateway Programs ====== | ||
- | Offered by invitation to first year students who are highly motivated to engage in focused study in a specialized area with a small group of like-minded students and faculty whose expertise aligns with the student’s interest, Gateway Programs are living and learning communities that provide hands-on experience in a variety of settings. | + | Offered by invitation to first-year students who are highly motivated to engage in focused study in a specialized area, Gateway Programs are living and learning communities that provide hands-on experience in a variety of settings |
- | The Cities Program is a one-year gateway curriculum providing students with the opportunity to study the city of Hartford and global cities, thereby cultivating the necessary skills to become engaged in solving contemporary urban issues. Topics studied include community development, | + | The Cities Program is a one-year gateway curriculum providing students with the opportunity to study the [[hartford|City |
- | The Community Action Gateway Program is specifically focused on the city of Hartford with a curriculum designed to facilitate community-based research and social change projects for first-year students interested in experiential learning in their local community. The program consists of one course per semester in a student’s first year, providing a comprehensive overview of theories of social change and community action and giving students the opportunity to develop and implement a social change project in the City of Hartford. | + | The Community Action Gateway Program is specifically focused on the City of Hartford with a curriculum designed to facilitate community-based research and social change projects for first-year students interested in experiential learning in their local community. The program consists of one course per semester in a student’s first year, providing a comprehensive overview of theories of social change and community action and giving students the opportunity to develop and implement a social change project in the City of Hartford. |
- | Introduced in 2019, the Global Health Humanities Gateway (GHHG) is a three-semester program specializing in the interdisciplinary approach to the social, political, and cultural contexts of health care. The arts and sciences are studied in tandem in this program, providing students with valuable cultural understanding alongside analytically rich knowledge about health care systems around the world. Developed during the COVID-19 pandemic, the program saw application numbers skyrocket as students increasingly understood first-hand the ways in which public health policy, science, culture, and class differences are inextricably intertwined when it comes to international health crises. Co-director of GHHG Erin Frymire | + | Introduced in 2019, the Global Health Humanities Gateway (GHHG) is a three-semester program specializing in the interdisciplinary approach to the social, political, and cultural contexts of health care. The arts and sciences are studied in tandem in this program, providing students with valuable cultural understanding alongside analytically rich knowledge about health care systems around the world. Developed during the COVID-19 pandemic, the program saw application numbers skyrocket as students increasingly understood first-hand the ways in which public health policy, science, culture, and class differences are inextricably intertwined when it comes to international health crises. Co-director of GHHG Erin Frymire |
The Humanities Gateway, formerly known as Guided Studies, focuses on the key themes and problems of human society through the lenses of literature, history, philosophy, and religion. Originally implemented as an experimental program in Fall 1979, the program was inspired by a 1976 faculty symposium called “The Search for Values in the Modern World: Interdisciplinary Lessons from the 19th Century.” Four of the participants--Professor of Philosophy Drew Hyland, Associate Professor of Religion Frank Kirkpatrick, | The Humanities Gateway, formerly known as Guided Studies, focuses on the key themes and problems of human society through the lenses of literature, history, philosophy, and religion. Originally implemented as an experimental program in Fall 1979, the program was inspired by a 1976 faculty symposium called “The Search for Values in the Modern World: Interdisciplinary Lessons from the 19th Century.” Four of the participants--Professor of Philosophy Drew Hyland, Associate Professor of Religion Frank Kirkpatrick, | ||
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gateway_programs.1720625627.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/07/10 15:33 by bant05