My Four-Course Term Overview - 24S edition!
This past spring term, I took 4 very different courses, which were all very interesting. I thought I'd share what they're about!
- ANTH 9 Language and Culture
A classic, introductory linguistic anthropology course. What I find very interesting in this course is that we have a term-long commitment to an ethnography project specific to a community on-campus. I've decided to do the project on the Korean Student Association, analyzing codeswitching amongst Korean American individuals (between English and Korean). You learn a lot of relevant concepts about how we speak/interact on a daily basis. A rather easy but super intriguing course, so highly recommend!
- ANTH 55 Anthropology of Global Health
A higher-level global health course. I'm an anthropology modified with global health major, so this course is a must. I enjoy this course because it's very relevant to my interests—you analyze structural problems within very well-known health institutions as well as international policies. We also went to the Hood Museum of Art (on-campus) 5 times throughout the term to analyze different artworks and connect them back to themes in global health.
- CHEM 41 Biological Chemistry I
Every pre-medical student's last course in the sequence: biochemistry. To start off, very challenging. CHEM 41 feels like the hard parts of organic chemistry combined with the hard parts of biology, but definitely manageable! On the bright side, Prof. Kull and the lab instructor Molly are so understanding and kind that this course becomes manageable.
- TUCK 3 Business Management and Strategy
As I mentioned in my previous blog (go read it!) this class is pretty much what you'll do in management consulting. A lot of slide-making, quizzes about how companies can maximize their competitive advantage, etc. Students in this course are very accomplished and hard-working, so you'll be learning from your peers a lot!
I hope this shows the diverse courses you can take in a singular term at Dartmouth given the liberal arts curriculum!