Snow-capped mountains
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a photo of yellow flowers with a forest and the blue sky in the background.

Fall is an unmistakable time at Dartmouth. The trees stand out bright yellow in the morning fog. Mid-day, the sky is intense blue, and it's still warm enough for you to wear a T-shirt. At night, the chill makes you notice that it's no longer summer.

A photo of a man in glasses and a hat, holding a bow next to a sign saying Archery.
This is my friend, Shawn, at the Dartmouth Club Fair, on behalf of the Dartmouth Archery Club (DOC subclub).

Everyone is busy and excited. For half of Dartmouth students, that's their first term ever. Everyone is getting started with their classes. Opportunities pop up all the time. There are new Dartmouth Outing Club trips on Trailhead (the online platform where DOC trip leaders post trips and students can sign up for trips). There are new clubs at the fair.

A photo of a girl in a hat with a butterfly on it, holding a sign saying, Flora & Fauna & Fungi & Fun Rocks and Friends.
This is my friend, Evalynn, at the Dartmouth Club Fair, on behalf of the Flora and Fauna Club.

Often, you end up pursuing so many interests that fitting them all into your schedule becomes a delicate game.

My junior fall, I'm taking three classes: one computer science class (COSC 50 Software Development and Implementation); one quantitative social science class (QSS 45 Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning for the Social Sciences); and one neuroscience class (PSYC 35 Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience). Two of these classes will directly count toward my CS and neuroscience majors. The third class counts indirectly—after a term of full-time research at Professor Emily Finn's FINN Lab, I decided I needed to invest more in my data science skills.

A photo of a blond man in sunglasses, in front of Rauner Library, holding a sign saying, Dartmouth Linguistics Club.
This is my friend, Ford, at the Dartmouth Club Fair, on behalf of the Dartmouth Linguistics Club.

My research at the FINN Lab continues this term as well, part-time. Undergraduate Research Assistantship at Dartmouth (URAD) is a Dartmouth program that gives undergraduates stipends so they can work with a faculty mentor on a research project. I have been working with Professor Finn and my amazing graduate student mentor, Kathryn O'Nell, since my first spring.

Tuesday nights, you can find me at the Dartmouth Climbing Gym, sitting behind a desk and letting people in—or climbing downstairs.

This term I'm also part of another exciting Dartmouth project. The National Education Equity Lab, a non-profit determined to give high-school students from underrepresented backgrounds access to higher education, teamed up with Dartmouth's Psychology and Brain Sciences department to offer PSYC 6 Introduction to Neuroscience to high-school students. Professor Shawn Winter recorded the PSYC 6 lectures that Dartmouth students listen to in class, and every Thursday, I and the other Teaching Fellows meet online with the students to discuss difficult concepts and any questions they might have.

A photo of a blond man in sunglasses, in front of Baker Tower, holding a sign saying, Dartmouth Comedy Network.
This is my friend, Scott, at the Dartmouth Club Fair, on behalf of the Dartmouth Comedy Network.

On weekends, I try to go on DOC trips—the Dartmouth Outing Club, run by students, overseen by the Office of Outdoor Activities, runs multiple trips a week–sometimes multiple trips a day–to mountains, cabins, bird-watching sites, and even the ocean.

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