Posts Tagged ‘university of kansas’

Facebook College Class of 2015 Pages

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

It’s that time again! My College Guide makes it easy to connect to the college or university that you are planning on attending. These college and university Facebook Pages are official – and give you the perfect opportunity to find out about new student events, dorm housing application deadlines, and connect with your future classmates.

Some may serve as a starting point for college admission hopefuls, for those that are simply curious about the school, or for those who have been accepted! On a few of these college Facebook Class of 2015 Pages you may need to request permission to join the group (when they say admitted students only, they mean it!).

As on any social network, use common sense. Schools can take back their offer of college admission (and yes, it really has happened). Be polite, don’t be afraid to reach out to others, but keep overly personal information to yourself. If you need a bit of guidance, My College Guide has a few Facebook tips just for you!

Acadia University New Mexico Tech
Alfred University New York University
Anna Maria College Nichols College
Arcadia University Northeastern University
Benedictine University Northern Kentucky University
Bob Jones University Olivet Nazarene University
Boston University Oxford College of Emory University
Bowling Green State University Pratt Institute
Bradley University Seton Hall University
Bryn Mawr College Skidmore College
Bucknell University Southern Methodist University
Butler University St. Ambrose University
Carnegie Mellon University St. Lawrence University
Catawba College Stonehill College
Cleveland State University SUNY Fredonia
College of Charleston Tufts University
Colorado State University University of Alabama
Dickinson College University of Chicago
Emerson College University of Cincinnati
Florida Southern College University of Illinois
Fordham University University of Kansas
Gettysburg College University of Miami
Grinell College University of Minnesota
Illinois State University University of Rochester
Illinois Wesleyan University University of Scranton
Indiana State University University of Toledo
Indiana University University of Virginia
Johns Hopkins University University of Washington-Madison
Kansas State University Vanderbilt University
Marquette University Washington and Lee University
Marshall University Western New England College
Michigan State University West Virginia University
Monmouth University Whittier College
Montana State University William Jewell College
Mount Saint Mary College Xavier University

Who We Are: Information you can trust. For 20 years My College Guide has produced an annual magazine chock full of free college info for high-achieving high school sophomores. Check out our participating colleges. If you’re a student, enter for a chance to win an Apple iPad or iPhone or cash!

How to Not Look Like a College Freshman or Learn the University of Kansas Fight Song Clap

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Just when you thought you had it all covered: you memorized the campus map and you know how to get from Point A to Point B to keep from looking like a college Freshman — My College Guide had to throw one more curve ball at you: do you know the campus traditions?

Nothing says, “Freshman” like a student who doesn’t know the college campus legends and superstitions – don’t walk through that gate or use those stairs or stroll under that campanile! Why not see if your college or university has a dedicated page of campus traditions? Here’s a great example of how colleges are helping students get on-board – using YouTube videos! If you go to the University of Kansas, you might want to learn the Rock Chalk Chant and how to clap to the fight song, you know, before the big game! Watch KU Traditions: The Fight Song Clap on YouTube or below.

Second Life and Higher Education: Endless Possibility

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Second Life is a fun way for colleges to engage, connect, and keep costs down – and that’s good news for everyone!  It’s no wonder that it is quickly becoming the go-to platform for colleges to reach out to the higher ed community.

The Sistine Chapel recreated on Vassar College's Second Life Island

Gary Hayes/Gary Hayes

From interacting with the world or just a select few, Second Life lets colleges choose who has access to what, which makes seminars and classes possible — and stops griefers (a term to describe attention-seeking, and unwelcome, SL users).

Colleges are incorporating elements of campus life into Second Life. The University of Kentucky isn’t the only college to embrace the possibilities of Second Life.  For example, The University of North Carolina Pembroke has over 50 different Second Life locations that range from a wheat field to an art gallery in addition to the usual computer labs and classrooms.

The University of California Irvine has created a virtual library on Anteater Island, which faculty and students have integrated into University of California Irvine college classes, like Reasoning and Modeling with Graphical Models and Computer Games as Art, Culture and Technology.

Sometimes higher education takes Second Life construction beyond anything you would find on campus!  You can view the beauty of the Sistine Chapel without ever leaving home – if you head to the Sistine Chapel on Vassar Island.  Indiana University, and the IU-based Synthetic Worlds Initiative, has created a slew of virtual reality worlds, from Shakespearean Arden and the Victorian-era LondownTown, to Greenland, which investigates trade and diplomacy in the Stone Age, and United Islands, a more modern look at government.

Unusual or everyday, the main point of higher education on Second Life is to enhance learning.  As the University of Oregon (and its partners) know, learning languages can be rough, especially with a tonal language like Chinese.  So – they created MyChina Life, a Second Life world to help students study the Chinese language by actually interacting with Chinese speakers!

North Carolina State University Second Life Campus

orionpozo

Second Life is becoming almost indispensable to Health related industries.  In a very real, as it happens kind of way, the platform provides a way to test trainees on reaction and knowledge.  The University of Kansas Medical Center’s uses Second Life simulations for its Nurse Anesthesia Education Program.

The University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health created a program to test public health officials at their ability to handle various disasters (think small pox or anthrax).  Idaho State University uses SL for its bioterrorism awareness and preparedness program – testing response reactions to man-made or nature related crises.

Want more?  The University of Texas purchased over 50 Second Life regions in 2009 for a campus-wide (and beyond) level of learning and sharing – and to help the university “go green.”  Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, Buena Vista University, and Montana State University’s Creative Research Lab are a handful of other colleges that have become a part of Second Life!  The State University of New York doesn’t have a campus wide presence just yet – but they do have plenty of sub-groups!

Colleges and universities are interested in spreading knowledge too – and host virtual events!  Drexel University recently hosted the virtual symposium Education for EveryoneEmerson College provided a place on its island for the Floating 6 Event to take place, an event that encourages discussion regarding art and video games.

There are many ways that colleges and universities are using Second Life – it’s unbelievable!  These are just a few examples – know of any others?  Share your observations in the comments section below.

Kiss a Tree? Bribe a Statue? College Superstitions Revealed!

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010
John Harvard's Shiny Foot

Chaval Brasil

Groundhog Day: all eyes are glued to a fat, furry little critter that is supposed to predict whether or not we endure winter or welcome in the Spring.  Punxsutawney Phil got us thinking.  We’ve all heard about college athletic superstitions but what about those found at the colleges and universities themselves?

You may have thought you only had to worry about finding your classes…turns out you also have to worry about how you get there!  Legend says that undergraduates should avoid entering the arches at the University of Georgia, the FitzRandolph Gates at Princeton University and the Van Wickle Gates at Brown University or they won’t graduate from college!  If there is an inlaid seal like at the University of Chicago or Roanoke College, don’t step on it!

Wise students would do well to avoid the Campanile (bell tower) found at the University of Kansas (it’s supposedly bad luck) though at Iowa State University, you aren’t “officially” considered an ISU student until you receive a peck underneath the Campanile at midnight.

Thinking of waiting for this guy to cross your path?

KT Shiue

Need a little good luck? Who doesn’t!  According to legend, you could kiss the Stanford Tree at Stanford University during the Full Moon on the Quad Celebration, touch the foot of John Harvard (according to Harvard University campus tour guides) or Theodore Dwight Woolsey’s toe at Yale University for a boost in the luck factor.  Want to do great on that exam?  Rub the 4.0 Ball found in front of the Campanile at the University of California Berkeley – it’s not called 4.0 for nothing!

If that’s still not enough, you could hope that the albino squirrel crosses your path during finals week at the University of North Texas, hope for the “disco tray” — a glittery 60’s relic at the Hendrix College cafeteria, or bribe the powers that be with a small gift (like pennies or chocolate) for the Athena statue at Bryn Mawr College.

Want to tie the knot? Smooch in the gazebo at the University of Richmond, steal a kiss on pretty Crim Dell Bridge at the College of William and Mary, or under the Upham Arch (when the lantern light is on) at Miami University and you’ll hear wedding bells ring-a-ding-ding.

Sit at the Class of 1912 Memorial with your sweetie at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign or stroll from the East side of the Oval, the center of Ohio State University, all the way west to the Main Library, and you and your significant other will be together forever, as long as you remain holding hands, that is!

Did we miss a good urban legend or superstition?  Please share it in the comments section below – we love a good story!