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January, 2010:

Career Services Program Schedule — Spring 2010

Please see the following attachment that lists the programs and events sponsored by the Office of Career Services: CS calendar spring 2010

Please note the following important note from this announcement:

Space is limited, so you must sign up for all workshops (excluding the fairs). Please register for workshops through your personal student account on eRecruiting/Experience or call 654-1022 to sign up and receive location information. If you require special accommodations to attend a workshop, please call Career Services five working days prior to the event date.

Register for workshops online: http://mary-washington.experience.com/

Writing Intensive Program’s 19th Annual Student Writing Contest

UMW’s Writing Intensive Program is accepting submissions to its annual writing contest. If you have a research paper you would like to submit to this competition, please do so before February 15. There is a $100 prize for the best paper in each category of the content. For more information, see http://www.umw.edu/cas/writing/contest/  Papers for this contest must have been written over the course of the 2009 calendar year.

Summer Field Schools in Historical Archaeology

The University of Virginia is proud to sponsor summer archaeological field schools at three of Virginia’s premier historic sites: the first permanent English settlement atJamestown, Thomas Jefferson’s primary home at Monticello, and Jefferson’s personal retreat and plantation at Poplar Forest. These field schools offer a unique opportunity for students to make a contribution to the research and interpretation of early American history. Students receive graduate credits (Anthropology 589) from the University of Virginia.

Each field school provides a foundation in current methods and theories of historical archaeology, and offers both the untrained and experienced student the opportunity to learn the practical skills of site survey, excavation, recording, and laboratory procedures. A good part of each day is spent doing excavation which requires physical endurance and excellent health. On-site instruction, lectures, discussion sessions, and field trips to other archaeological sites complement the field work.

Click on the icons below for more information.

Call for Papers — 22nd Annual Graduate History Forum, March 26-27, 2010

The Graduate History Association at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte is hosting its Annual Graduate History Forum on March 26-27, 2010. The forum is open to both graduate and undergraduate students who wish to present their papers at this conference. For more information on how to submit your paper, see the attached announcement and go to http://www.sco.uncc.edu/gha/index.htm.

Deadline for submitting papers and curriculum vitae: January 31, 2010.

GHA announcement: Call for Papers

Historic Deerfield — Summer Fellowship Program, June 13-August 14, 2011

Historic Deerfield is offering fellowships for 6-10 undergraduates (junior or senior status) to work and study in their museums in Deerfield, Massachusetts. Application deadline: February 25, 2011. For more details, go to www.historic-deerfield.org/summer-fellowship-program.

European Capitals: Summer 2010

LONDON, PARIS, VIENNA, PRAGUE, AND BERLIN

UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON

SUMMER EUROPEAN STUDY PROGRAM

“European Capitals”

YESTERDAY AND TODAY

2010

A TWENTY-SIX-DAY, SIX-CREDIT, STUDY ABROAD OFFERING IN EUROPE

The Departments of History and American Studies and Political Science and International Affairs regularly sponsor a six-credit course that takes a limited number of students to Europe for a twenty-six day period each summer.  Participants can experience the Europe of yesterday, today, and tomorrow by visiting London, Paris, Vienna, Prague and Berlin.

Between mid-May and mid-June, participants visit various cultural, political and historical sites in or near the five cities listed above.  The group also attends a number of artistic performances (either theatrical or musical) during the trip.  There are also a number of one-day excursions to sites in the outlying suburbs or within an hour train or bus ride.

COURSE REQUIREMENTS AND FACULTY

The unique nature of this educational experience, with its emphasis on “experiential” learning outside the formal classroom setting, makes inappropriate the utilization of such traditional measures of student achievement as tests and term papers.  Instead, a student’s final grade in the course is determined by the quality of their performance in class participation, the compilation of a course journal, and their knowledge of assigned course readings.

The faculty teaching European Capitals have a wide range of expertise in modern European history and politics and extensive experience in European travel.  John Kramer, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, is Mary Washington’s resident expert on modern European politics, with an emphasis on the former Soviet Union and Eastern European.  Porter Blakemore, Associate Professor of History, is also a modern Europeanist whose teaching and research fields include diplomatic, military, German and contemporary history.  Both Mr. Kramer and Mr. Blakemore have traveled widely throughout Europe and have taken student groups abroad on more than fifteen earlier occasions.

FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:

PROFESSOR JOHN M. KRAMER

DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON

FREDERICKSBURG, VA 22401-5358

(540) 654-1495;  E-MAIL:  JKRAMER@UMW.EDU

or

PROFESSOR PORTER R. BLAKEMORE

DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND AMERICAN STUDIES

UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON

FREDERICKSBURG, VA 22401-5358

(540) 654-1588;  E-MAIL:  PBLAKEMO@UMW.EDU

Moore Undergraduate Research Apprenticeship Program

UNC Chapel Hill has an undergraduate summer research fellowship opportunity for rising junior and seniors who are interested in pursuing a career in academia.  Please see the attached word document or you can follow the link to the MURAP program here:

http://www.unc.edu/depts/murap/student-apply.html

2010 Phi Beta Kappa Lecture

Helen Thoreau’s Anti-Slavery Scrapbook

Robert A. Gross
Draper Professor of Early American History,

University of Connecticut

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

5:00 – 6:30 p.m.

Chandler 102

2010 Phi Beta Kappa Lecture

Sponsored by Phi Beta Kappa; the Department of English, Linguistics, and Communication; the Department of History and American Studies; and the Simpson Chair in English

Summer Museum Internship

Flyer for Camp Culley Interns 2010The Museum of Culpeper History is offering a six-week 2010 summer internship for third and fourth year History students as well as Education and Art majors. Interns will work with kids in history and arts programs organized by the Museum as part of their Camp Culley program. For details and contact information, click the attached flyer image to the right.

History 485 – Spring Semester Meeting Scheduled

A happy New Year to all as we start the Spring 2010 semester next week!

A reminder — all students who are doing senior theses this coming semester are required to attend a mandatory meeting on Monday, January 11th at 5 pm in Annex A, rm. 114. At the meeting, you’ll be provided with an introduction to the syllabus and process of engagement with History 485 as well as an opportunity to share your own questions.