EVS Internal Transfer Fall Info Sessions

Want to major in Environmental Studies?

Information about the EVS internal transfer application can be found on our new and improved website. The application will be available next semester, but applications for non-major seats in EVS 311 (Field Seminar in Sustainability) will be available online starting November 1st. I will host some more info sessions in the spring leading up to the internal transfer application.

Dept. of Art + Art History potential internal transfers

BFA Design, BFA + BA Studio Art, BFA Visual Art Studies and BA Art History will be options for potential internal transfers applying only in spring semesters for fall admission.

The department will be opening the change/add major portal on December 2, 2015, for spring 16 applications for fall 16 admission.

The deadline to apply is March 1, 2016.

Important change/add major information can be found here:

http://www.utexas.edu/finearts/aah/admissions/undergraduate/change-addition-major

New Course: AMS 370 The History and Future of Higher Education

The History and Future of Higher Education

EDA 391S and AMS 370

Julia Mickenberg (American Studies) and Rich Reddick (Educational Administration)

mickenberg@austin.utexas.edu                  richard.reddick@austin.utexas.edu

This experimental and experiential course examines the university in American life, past and present, as a means for imagining its possible futures.

This course is a prototype for the type of research-based learning community that we hope to foster through a new Innovation Center on campus. Working collaboratively, undergraduates and graduate students will conduct original research on the role of colleges and universities in American life, past and present. Students will also engage with members of the university community and beyond through guest speakers, and a culminating conference during which class members will present their research to the public. Students will be active players in all aspects of the course. Admission requires permission of instructors. Qualifies for writing and independent inquiry flags.

 

Likely course texts:

Andrew Delbanco, College: What it Is, Was, and Should Be

Zadie Smith, On Beauty

Lucas, C.J. American higher education: A history

Additional readings as assigned

 

Requirements:

Active participation

Two short papers

Research paper

Reading/research diary

Public presentation

Two Events for the Dalit Women Fight Tour

Join us for a historic evening in Austin at Monkeywrench Books, where Dalit women activists from the frontlines of the Dalit Women’s Self-Respect movement will join host Dalit-American artist Thenmozhi Soundarajan to break the silence on caste apartheid in India and the diaspora.

Follow up event: An informal discussion on leadership and organizing strategies with the #DalitWomenFight tour on campus. Refreshments will be provided.

Declaring Economics Major?

The Economics Department will have internal transfer restrictions starting in the spring 2016 semester.

During the fall 2015 semester, current UT students will be able to declare an Economics major after attending a mandatory internal transfer information session. Be aware, space is limited and students must RSVP! See details here: http://www.utexas.edu/cola/economics/undergraduate/advising.php

If/when our fall sessions fill, the next opportunity to declare will be in the spring 2016 semester.

Starting in spring 2016, current UT students will need to submit an application by stated deadlines and meet eligibility requirements in order to declare an Economics major.

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

Completion of the following courses with a grade of at least C minus in each:

·         ECO 304K & ECO 304L

·         M408K & M408L (or M408C and M408D, or M408N and M408S)

APPLICATION DEADLINES

·         Summer/fall admission: March 15

·         Spring admission: October 15

Optional information sessions and the required application will be available starting

January 2016: http://www.utexas.edu/cola/economics/undergraduate/advising.php

The Americas Project 2015-2016

Dear All,

We hope this message finds everyone settled into the new semester.

We write today to invite you to join us for The Americas Project 2015-2016 events. We introduced TAP last year as an effort to highlight American literary studies at all levels of our department and to bring undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty into conversation with our field’s leading scholars. This year, we’ve scheduled a slate of events to continue and build on that effort. More specific details will follow.

David Kornhaber, Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at UT Austin, will circulate a work in progress for the second TAP Faculty Workshop on Wednesday, October 28 from 4:00-5:30pm at the Carillon (AT&T Center) . David is the author of The Birth of Theatre from the Spirit of Philosophy: Friedrich Nietzsche and the Development of the Modern Drama, forthcoming from Northwestern University Press, as well as articles on Tony Kushner (PMLA) and George Bernard Shaw (Modern Drama) and many pieces in the theatre sections of The New York Times, The Village Voice, and The New York Sun. Two weeks prior to the event, we will request RSVPs and send David’s work to all participants.

In the spring, Leonard Cassuto, Professor of American Literature at Fordham University will visit as a special guest of TAP from February 18-20. Cassuto is an expert on both crime fiction and academic culture. In addition to Hard-Boiled Sentimentality: The Secret History of American Crime Stories (Columbia, 2008), Cassuto edited The Cambridge History of the American Novel (2011) and The Cambridge Companion to Baseball (2011). Earlier this month, he published The Graduate School Mess: What Caused It and How We Can Fix It (Harvard, 2015). In it, he observes that “to pursue a professorship at the expense of all other options can hardly be called rational” and argues for a much more student-centered graduate education.

Rebecca Walkowitz, Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the English Department at Rutgers University and current President of the Modernist Studies Association, will join us for the TAP Distinguished Lecture Series on Friday, April 1 at 4:00pm in CLA 1.302E. Walkowitz has published Cosmopolitan Style: Modernism Beyond the Nation (2006) and, this year, Born Translated: The Contemporary Novel in an Age of World Literature, in which she argues, “Like born-digital literature, which is made on or for the computer, born-translated literature approaches translation as medium and origin rather than as afterthought.” Walkowitz’s visit is co-sponsored by the Program in Comparative Literature.

Finally, Matthew Taylor, Associate Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will give the second TAP Distinguished Lecture of the year on Friday, April 22 at 4:30pm in CLA 1.302E.  Taylor’s Universes without Us: Posthuman Cosmologies in American Literature (Minnesota, 2013) situates Edgar Allan Poe, Henry Adams, Charles Chesnutt, and Zora Neale Hurston in an alternative posthumanist tradition in which “both our separation from the universe and our identity with it are exposed as fantasies.” Taylor’s visit is co- sponsored by TILTS: Environmental Humanities.

Please see below for the vital information on the events. We encourage you to circulate it widely.

And we hope to see you there,

Jim Cox and Cole Hutchison

The Americas Project 2015-2016

TAP Faculty Workshop

David Kornhaber, The University of Texas at Austin

Wednesday, October 28, 2015, 4:00-5:30 PM, Carillon (AT&T Center)

TAP Special Event

Leonard Cassuto, Fordham University

Friday, February 19, 2016, TBD

TAP Distinguished Lecture Series

Rebecca Walkowitz, Rutgers University

Friday, April 1, 2016, 4:00 PM, CLA 1.302E

Co-sponsored by Comparative Literature

TAP Distinguished Lecture Series

Matthew Taylor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Friday, April 22, 2016, 4:30 pm, CLA 1.302E

(Co-sponsored by TILTS 2015-2016)

Texan Talks

Join The Daily Texan for its weekly speaker’s series, The Texan Talks! This week, we are focusing on student political engagement on the national and state scales, and specifically, how students can influence policies through the upcoming elections and political process. Please join Daily Texan Editor-in-Chief Claire Smith and Forum Editor Walker Fountain for a moderated discussion in the Texas Union Sinclair Suite at 11 a.m. on Thursday, October 15.

Texas Phanos

CoLA is launching a new leadership opportunity for Liberal Arts undergraduate students called Texas Phanos (Greek for torches). Students that are invited to become members will represent our College in various capacities including recruiting new students, fundraising, assisting with official college events, and serving as student representatives to alumni and stakeholders.

More specific information about membership duties, benefits and qualifications can be found as an attachment to this email and online at http://www.utexas.edu/cola/student-affairs/student-programs/student-organizations/texas-phanos/index.php .

The deadline to complete an application is 5pm on 11/6/15, and the application can be found online at: https://utexas.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_1Mow44xgHrk6bbf

Clements Center’s Maymester in London Information Session

All UT undergraduate students are invited to join the Clements Center for National Security for an information session on its Maymester in London titled “The U.S., U.K., and World Order” TOMORROW, October 13th at 12:30pm in SAC 2.120. Please note the room location for this session has changed! Lunch will be provided!

If you are unable to make the session but want to learn more, please email Jacqueline Chandler at jchandler@austin.utexas.edu.

Latin American Studies Travel Scholarships

The Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies is now offering a number of travel scholarships for study abroad in Latin America for spring 2016 only.  No applications will be accepted for summer or for any future semesters.  The Institute is offering five $5,000 travel scholarships.  Students must attend degree-granting institutions in Latin America this coming spring and return with at least 12 hours of college credit.

Applications and letters of recommendation are due on November 9, 2015, without exception.  Please follow the link to the scholarship portal:

http://bit.ly/WNaeWm