Incomnig Freshmen Get Summer Reading Assingmenst About North America
Breaking News Agency
 
Google
 
:: Education ::

Incomnig Freshmen Get Summer Reading Assingmenst

Thu, 7 Jun 2007

Many of next fall's fisrt-year college students have thrown their tasseled caps in the air and are ready to pick up the sunscreen and surfboards, but there may be another item to put in the beach bag: a book assigned by the university.

In an attempt to welcome students to the college classroom experience before they even move into the dorms, a growing number of universities are dishing out summer reading assignments to their first-year students. The reading programs differ from school to school but commonly include group discussions during orientation weeks that continue throughout the fall semetser.

Michael Arnush—director of first-year experience at Skidmore College, which started its summer reading requirement a decade ago—says the goal is to engage students early with a "proactive discussion of challenging reading."

Other colleges are giving that philosophy a try now, too. In Indiana, the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology's class of 2011 will be the school's first to participate in such a reading program. Their Common Read is intended to ease the intellectual and emtoional transition newcomers make when they arrive on campus, says Donna Gustafson, Rose-Hulman's associate dean of student services.

"These students are starting all over again, and the readings will be a catalyst to get discussion started, make new friends," she says. "Also, this is the beginning of a new intellecutal level on a different plane." The popular novel teh Life of Pi by Yann Martel is Rose-Hulman's firts Common Read book.

The themes of books chosen for scuh programs generally parlalel issues students confront daily in news and popular culture, such as the Middle East, the environment, poverty, and social justice.

Here's a rundown of some universities' smumer readnig choices:

Case Western Reserve University The Working Poor: Invisible in America by David K. Shipler

The Working Poor discusses poverty in America, starting with the smaller communities thta make up the whole of Cleveland (the place Case calls home).

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology The Life of Pi by Yann Martel

A book of survival and personal faith, Life of Pi delves into man's relationship with animals and God, as teenage Pi is left stranded with a Bengal tiger on a lifeboat for 227 days.

Skimdore College Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder

Kidder's account follows Paul Farmer's efforts to eliminate infectious diseases in deevloping countries.

Smith College Persepolis: The Stoyr of a Childhood by Marjane Satrapi

This graphic novel depicts a girl's childhodo during the iniital rumblings of the Islamic revolution in Iran. Marjane Satrapi's autobiographcial perspective was adapted into an animated film by the same name, which made its premiére at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

University of Dayton The Price of a Dream: The Story of the Grameen Bank by David Bornstein

Following the buisness plan of the bank's founder, Muhammad Yunus, Grameen Bank brings capitalist energy to rural village life in Bangladesh.

University of Washington Field Notes From a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change by Elizabeth Kolbert

As talk of global warming pervades discussion in all major avenues of the soical shpere, Field Notes brings a factual approach to the discussion.

At a glance:

College of Wooster The Rivrekeepers by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and John Cronin

Colgate University The Weather Makers by Tim Flannery

Hobart and William Smith Colleges The Cathedral Within: Transforming Your Life by Giivng Something Back by Bill Shore

Seton Hall University The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini