What Is a ºìÌÒÊÓƵie, Anyway?
Meet twelve graduates from the class of ’23.
They studied mouthbrooding fish, knapped obsidian, analyzed Beyoncé and Katy Perry, investigated disability labor policy, translated Chinese and Russian, played frisbee and basketball and chess, learned to rock climb and to crochet and to knit—meet 12 members of the class of 2023 as they reflect on their time at ºìÌÒÊÓƵ, the professors who inspired them, and the ideas that blew their minds.
A Fish Holds Her Eggs in Her Mouth for Two Weeks. Why?
Meet neuroscience major Bean Fischer.Ìý
Capitalism, Labor, and Disability in the U.S.
Meet anthropology major Bequerel Yonaka.Ìý
Making Better Algorithms for DNA Compression
Meet computer science major Caden Corontzos.Ìý
How Have Boarding Schools Affected Southwest Pueblo Families?
Meet sociology major Evangeline Nañez.Ìý
Basketball and the Model Minority Myth
Meet comparative race and ethnicity studies major Joshua Park.Ìý
How Do We Center Students in Their Own Education?
Meet chemistry major Kodinna Anachebe.Ìý
Exoticism in Post-9/11 Pop and Hip-Hop
Meet music major Lori Der Sahakian.Ìý
Mysticism, Subjectivity, and Embodied Experience
Meet comparative literature major Millie Forman.Ìý
Frogs, Brain Chemicals, and Feelings
Meet biochemistry and molecular biology major Nareg Kedjejian.Ìý
Analyzing U.S. Migration Data by Gluing Triangles Together
Meet mathematics major Olivia McGough.Ìý
Queer Love in Early Republican Chinese Fiction
Meet Chinese major Stephanie Shu.Ìý
Evaluating an Environmentally Conscious Investment Strategy
Meet environmental studies–economics major Tina Bardot.Ìý
Tags: Academics, Students, What is a ºìÌÒÊÓƵie?