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Students can earn academic credit for experiences working off campus in career and community
service settings. To gain hands-on experience, students can intern with a
business or non-profit agency in their major field of study or volunteer to
help a community by, for instance, building houses for Habitat for Humanity. On
campus, the Oswego Peer Education Network offers 11
peer education opportunities for students to assist other students. They may
also help fellow learners by tutoring through the Office of
Learning Services.
Research Opportunities
Undergraduate research
opportunities exist in all departments. Many students engage in their own
research or work with a faculty member. Students share the results of their
research annually at Quest,
Oswego’s forum for scholarly and creative activity.
The Collegiate Science
and Technology Entry Program (CSTEP) provides support and encouragement to
students pursuing programs that lead to a professional license and/or careers
in scientific, technical, business, educational and health-related fields.
The Ronald E. McNair
Postbaccalaureate Achievement Award Program, named for the astronaut who
died in the 1986 Challenger space shuttle explosion, increases participation
from underrepresented groups in the ranks of the nation's college professors.
The McNair program aims to prepare students for doctoral studies by involving
them in research and other scholarly activities.
Rice Creek Field
Station provides support of academic instruction, research and public
service in all aspects of natural history, especially the natural sciences and
environmental education.
Cross-Divisional Opportunities
SUNY Oswego provides additional opportunities beginning in the freshman year
through our First-Year
Programs. FirstChoice
is a selection of courses for first-year students that focus on issues
associated with coming to college. Students really get to know their
professors, make new friends and learn about everything that Oswego has to
offer.
Oswego's residential opportunities include two Living
and Learning Centers that incorporate academic life. The First-Year
Residential Experience in Johnson Hall allows first-year students to become
part of a special community and become involved in the academic and social life
of the campus. The Hart Hall Global Living and
Learning Center provides a unique environment based on international
understanding and community service.
Studying abroad
comprises an important part of learning the language and culture of another
country. SUNY Oswego offers a wide variety of programs in a number of
countries.
The SUNY Oswego
Honors Program courses draw ideas and information from many fields,
addressing concerns common to all disciplines to show there are no boundaries
to thought and inquiry. These classes examine the historical and intellectual
origins, and growth and development, of today’s issues, with a focus on the
connections among them and their consequences for tomorrow. The program
emphasizes small classes and the lively exchange of ideas.
Cultural Opportunities
There are many opportunities for SUNY Oswego students to both express their
creativity and abilitiesexperience high-quality entertainment.
Artswego,
a special performance and arts program, draws high-caliber arts events for the
campus and community. It is designed to contribute positively to the
extracurricular experience for SUNY Oswego students and to enhance cultural
offerings for the community.
Each year, the Oswego Reading Initiative
-- guided by a committee of faculty, staff, community members and students --
chooses a book for the entire campus and community to read during the summer.
This book becomes the focus of many activities, both inside and outside
classrooms, for the following academic year.
For the 2005-06 academic year, the
Arts and Psychology programming series offers related events on creativity
and cognition.
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