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News News: German Studies Spring 2014 More

Mack ’15 awarded Gates Scholarship

Headed to Germany to study | Terrence Mack '15 is the second recipient of the Robert M. and Rebecca W. Gates Summer Scholarship, and will use it to continue his pursuit of a career teaching German.
Headed to Germany to study | Terrence Mack ’15 is the second recipient of the Robert M. and Rebecca W. Gates Summer Scholarship, and will use it to continue his pursuit of a career teaching German.

Terrence Mack ’15, a double major in German studies and international relations, has been awarded the Gates Scholarship for study abroad, generously donated by Chancellor Robert M. Gates ’65 and his wife, Rebecca. Mack will study abroad this summer in Potsdam, Germany, with William & Mary’s faculty-led program there.

For Mack, a Hampton (Va.) High School graduate, choosing to major in German studies became an obvious choice when he realized he was seeking out YouTube videos in German and studying the language on his own. Mack also credits William & Mary professors Bruce Campbell and Robert Leventhal, both of the Modern Language and Literatures Department, for helping him develop his interest in German and international relations.

Studying abroad will also give him a boost when it comes to choosing his future career path, Mack said. His goal is to become a professional interpreter, and he also plans to pursue a master’s degree in education so he can teach high-school students German. Mack plans to continue working as a Teaching Assistant during his senior year, and he hopes to help other students, especially other people from traditionally underrepresented groups, have the confidence to pursue their passion.

“I want to congratulate Terrence Mack ’15 on receiving a Gates Scholarship to study in Germany this summer,” Gates said. “I admire his aspiration to become a high school foreign language teacher, especially because the United States lags so badly behind other developed countries in this area. I am proud to have someone of Terrence’s commitment and character receive a Gates Scholarship.”
Chancellor Robert GatesChancellor Robert Gates

Finding the right balance between his studies and holding several jobs wasn’t always easy, though, Mack notes. He struggled at first to find his place at William & Mary when his initial plan to go in the business school didn’t work out. Mack’s college experience, however, is defined by perseverance: finding a new avenue to succeed when failure looms large.

“‘Where is your place at this school with all of these smart, intelligent students from all around the world?’” Mack remembered asking himself.

He found the answer in German studies.

“It took me a while but I’m glad I finally figured it out,” he said.

Mack has already developed a strong set of language skills during his career at W&M, and he serves as a Teaching Assistant in the German language program.

“I’ve started to feel more fluent in German, started to understand it more,” he said. “I can hold conversations in German, think in German.”

This summer Mack plans to spend the entirety of his study abroad experience doing just that: living, speaking and thinking in German. He is confident that being immersed in a German-speaking environment will perfect his fluency, and he is looking forward to all of the cultural insights he will gain on his first trip out of the United States. Mack acknowledged that for him, studying abroad wasn’t a possibility without the Gates Scholarship.

“So much weight has been lifted off my shoulders,” he said. “I want the scholarship to not only affect me but the rest of the community.”

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News News: Japanese Studies Spring 2014 More

Kinyo Prize Awarded for Excellence in Japanese

The Japanese section is pleased to announce the recipients of this year’s Kinyo Prizes for Excellence in Japanese.  The Kinyo Prize has been established through the generous support of Mr. Kazuo Nakamura of Kinyo Virginia, Inc., to recognize the hard work and achievement of the top student at each level of William and Mary’s Japanese program. This year’s recipients are: in first year, Anastasia Rivera; in second year: Won Kun Lee; in third year, Jiaqi, Zong; and in fourth year, Andrew Runge.  Throughout the year, these four students distinguished themselves by their diligence and their accomplishment in Japanese language. 皆さん、おめでとうございます!

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News News: Japanese Studies Spring 2014 More

Eight Inducted into Japanese National Honor Society

Congratulations to the eight new members of the Japanese National Honor Society!  Among this year’s graduating class, eight students have been inducted into the society.   The inductees have met several demanding criteria: completion of five semesters of Japanese language study (or their equivalent), all taken for a grade (rather than audited or pass-fail); a grade-point average of at least 3.5 in Japanese language courses; and an overall GPA of at least 3.0. The following students met the grade:

  • Tara Naughton
  • Jeffrey N’gare
  • Steven Pau
  • Dylan Reilly
  • Andrew Runge
  • Amanda Schiano di Cola
  • Xiaorui Tong
  • Jiaqi Zong

If you see them at Commencement wearing the distinctive red-and-white cord around their neck, please join us in congratulating them!

Dylan Reilly
Dylan Reilly
Steven Pau, Xiaorui Tong, Amanda Schiano di Cola
Steven Pau, Xiaorui Tong, Amanda Schiano di Cola
Jiaqi Zong, Jeffrey Ngare, Andrew Runge, Tara Naughton
Jiaqi Zong, Jeffrey Ngare, Andrew Runge, Tara Naughton

 

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News News: Japanese Studies Spring 2014 More

Kinyo Prize Awarded for Excellence in Japanese

Kinyo
L-R, Winners Zong, Runge, Rivera, and Lee

The Japanese section is pleased to announce the recipients of this year’s Kinyo Prizes for Excellence in Japanese.  The Kinyo Prize has been established through the generous support of Mr. Kazuo Nakamura of Kinyo Virginia, Inc., to recognize the hard work and achievement of the top student at each level of William and Mary’s Japanese program. This year’s recipients are: in first year, Anastasia Rivera; in second year: Won Kun Lee; in third year, Jiaqi Zong; and in fourth year, Andrew Runge.  Throughout the year, these four students distinguished themselves by their diligence and their accomplishment in Japanese language. 皆さん、おめでとうございます!

 

 

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News: Hispanic Studies Spring 2014 More

Acclaimed Cuban filmmaker visits William & Mary

Prof. Ann Marie Stock introduces Mr. Carlos Y. Rodríguez at the public screening of his work.
Prof. Ann Marie Stock introduces Mr. Carlos Y. Rodríguez in Swem Library, at one of the many events during his visit.

During the month of April, 2014, renowned Cuban filmmaker Carlos Y. Rodríguez visited the College. Mr. Rodríguez is part of Televisión Serrana, a community media collective that trains young people from the Sierra Maestra mountains in video production so that they can tell the stories of their communities and culture.

After a first visit to William & Mary in 2011, he returned in April 2014 to serve as the second Swem Media Artist in Residence.  Additional support from Hispanic Studies, Film Studies and AMP (Alma Mater productions) made possible Carlos’ collaboration with students and faculty on several audiovisual projects.  In addition, Mr. Rodríguez introduced some of his films at a public screening and participated in a lively Q&A.

For Carlos Y. Rodríguez and Televisión Serrana film allows Cubans to tell their stories.
For Carlos Y. Rodríguez and Televisión Serrana film allows Cubans to tell their stories.

The director of a series of award-winning documentaries, Mr. Rodríguez is currently at work on a more personal project about his parents. Before joining the Television Serrana, Carlos worked as a Director for Cuban National Television (ICRT) and the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Arts and Industry (ICAIC), as a curator at the Provincial Center of Art, and as a Professor.

You can read the full featured story here.

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News News: French & Francophone Studies Spring 2014 More

Congratulations to this year’s French prize winners

The French & Francophone program has just awarded three graduation prizes:

Business-Graduation-cap-icon

The St.Onge prize is awarded annually to the student in French & Francophone Studies who shows the most promise for graduate-level work. It was established in May 2010 to honor Professor St.Onge’s forty years of dedication to the College. This year the St. Onge prize goes to Preston Heinlein (’14).
The Pierre Oustinoff prize for excellence in research goes to Elena Santini (’14).
The Modern Languages & Literatures book award for outstanding students who have distinguished themselves in French & Francophone Studies goes to Laura Bolger (’14). 

Félicitations!

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News News: Russian Studies Spring 2014 More

Jessica Parks and Hannah Kitchen Win RPSS Excellence Awards

jesshannah

The RPSS Executive Committee is happy to announce that the RPSS Excellence Awards for the year 2014 went to Jessica Parks and Hannah Kitchen.

The RPSS Excellence Award seeks to provide recognition for the best Russian Studies senior majors and minors who made a major contribution to the Russian Studies program in the areas of research, language and culture studies.

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News News: German Studies Spring 2014 More

Sierra Barnes awarded Austrian Government ETA for 2014-2015

Sierra Barnes (German Studies and History ’14) has been awarded an English Teaching Assistantship by the Austrian Ministry of Education and Women’s Affairs and Austrian-American Educational Commission (AAEC), sponsored and administered by the Fulbright Commission, for the academic year 2014-2015. This award includes travel expenses and a substantial monthly stipend to teach at two schools located in the Danube Valley about 31km from Linz: the Europagymnasium des Schulvereins Europagymnasium in Baumgartner and the Bundes-Oberstufenrealgymnasium BORG in Perg, Austria. Congratulations Sierra!

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News News: French & Francophone Studies Spring 2014 More

Congratulations to Elisabeth Bloxam, McCormack-Reboussin Scholar for 2014-2015

elisabethbloxam

Congratulations to Elisabeth Bloxam (’15), the latest recipient of the McCormack-Reboussin scholarship in French & Francophone Studies! Starting this summer, Elisabeth Bloxam will research an honors thesis entitled “Le Mythe et la Mémoire : Les séquelles de la deuxième guerre mondiale en France à travers ses monuments nationaux.”

This research will focus on the lasting effects of the Resistance Myth, the romanticized idea of the French Resistance as a national movement that was perpetuated by French leaders at the end of the war in an attempt to unify a nation in crisis. More specifically, her research will examine the endurance, eventual discrediting, and current status of the Resistance Myth through a study of collective memory and museums. She will examine the complex mechanics of collective memory through a study of French museums dedicated to WWII. She hopes to draw a comparison between the breakdown of collective memory in France in the 1970s and the proliferation of WWII museums erected in the 1980s.

 

 

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Photo Album Spring 2014 More

2014 Russian Language Olympics (Photo Album)