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Learning Communities
Comprehensive
Studies Program (CSP)
G155 Angell Hall; (734) 764-9128
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/csp/
The Comprehensive Studies Program (CSP)
provides support services to more than 2,000 University of Michigan
undergraduates, 500 of them first-year students. Intensive course
sections, smaller than most classes, are enriched classes that
meet an additional hour each week. These introductory classes
are offered in biology, chemistry, English, mathematics, physics,
and Spanish. In addition, CSP provides tutorials for several
LS&A courses in which students can benefit from personal
attention, such as courses in foreign language, the natural sciences,
economics, math, and accounting. Academic advising and personalized
counseling happens frequently if you participate in CSP. An advisor
will be assigned to you who will help you explore your interests,
aptitudes, needs, academic goals, and career objectives. You'll
probably meet with the same counselor from the time of your orientation
to the time you graduate. Many of the advisors have specialized
training so they can help on a wide range of practical and personal
issues.
Honors is a four-year program that provides
opportunities to students with superior ability for greater depth
of study throughout the undergraduate years. Among the features
of the Honors Program are special honors courses and honors sections
in regular courses, opportunities to participate in the research
projects of faculty members, or in individual research, faculty-student
seminars, special academic advising, and summer independent reading
for academic credit. Students are admitted to the Honors Program
by invitation of the Director, though inquiries are welcomed
from any highly motivated student.
Lloyd
Hall Scholars Program (LHSP)
Alice Lloyd Hall; (734) 764-7521
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/lhsp/
The Lloyd Hall Scholars Program offers
a collegial, interdisciplinary, academic environment in which
entering students can enjoy the personal and intellectual advantages
of a small group setting while exploring the resources of the
larger University. A number of LS&A courses are taught in
the Hall, usually by instructors who themselves live in the Hall.
Sound academic counseling and a strong range of co-curricular
activities are key aspects of the Program. An historic leader
of multicultural understanding on this campus, the Program admits
each year over 300 first-year students, more than 50% are out-of-state
and international students.
Michigan
Community Scholars Program
Couzens Hall
1200 East Anne Street
(734) 647-4860
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mcs/
The Michigan Community Scholars Program
provides an academic experience for tomorrow's leaders in a diverse
world. The Michigan Community Scholars Program offers advantages
of close contact with staff and a friendly social environment
while enhancing access to the numerous resources of the University
of Michigan through unique activities. The seminar is a weekly
opportunity to explore issues of importance to students during
their undergraduate years. The subject mastery workshops (in
math, chemistry, English, and physics) emphasize collaborative
learning. Students applying to the Program agree to a five hour
a week commitment to participate in a seminar and workshop and
live in Mary Markley Residence Hall.
The Residential College (RC) is an academic
unit within the College of LS&A, with more than 50 faculty
and about 900 students, which offers a four-year liberal arts
education in the context of a unique living-learning experience.
RC students are encouraged to develop their individual interests
and talents while pursuing academic excellence; they benefit
from being members of a small college community with full access
to the resources of a world-class university. RC courses tend
to be small and informal, with free and lively exchanges of ideas
between faculty and students. RC first-year and second-year students
live in East Quadrangle, where RC professors and academic advisors
have offices and where RC classrooms, art studios, drama and
music practice and performance sites as well as a library,
a language lab, a computer center, an auditorium and an art gallery
are located.
Undergraduate
Research Opportunity Program (UROP)
715 North University Avenue, Suite 201;
(734) 998-9381
http://www.umich.edu/~urop/
UROP is an opportunity for first- and
second-year students to form research partnerships with leading
U-M faculty engaged in original research. The program features
over 600 research projects covering most academic disciplines.
Special student services include peer advising, research peer
groups, academic and career workshops, and the opportunity to
earn either academic credit or work-study pay for conducting
research.
UROP
in Residence (UIR)
Mosher-Jordan Hall; (734) 936-6536
UROP in Residence
(UIR) offers 135 students all the benefits of the Undergraduate
Research Opportunity Program (UROP) plus the chance to live together
as a small, supportive community on the third floor of Mosher
Jordan Hall. UIR students can elect special sections of English
Composition, mathematics, chemistry, and engineering courses
and all UIR students enroll in an interdisciplinary course, Introduction
to Research. Students in this course have had the University
Art Museum opened exclusively to them to participate in a seminar
and gallery talk about Surrealism and the next week have learned
about the Human Genome Project and how one can extract DNA in
one's kitchen. Students in the program take leadership writing
for the UIR newsletter, organizing community service projects,
attendance at cultural events and participation in intramural
teams.
Women
in Science & Engineering Residence Program (WISE)
Mosher-Jordan Hall; (734) 936-6536
http://www.umich.edu/~umwise/
The Women in Science and Engineering
Residence Program is designed for students concentrating in science,
mathematics, or engineering. Students live together and are invited
to participate in a number of varied academic and social activities
throughout the year. Among Program offerings: course sections
specifically reserved for Program members (math and chemistry);
academic and career workshops; study groups; and awesome tutors
Students completing their first year who remain in the program
may become Big Sisters to new first-year students.
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