“PHRE Class of 2012” advice for PHRE majors
May 2, 2012Members of the Spring 2012 Philosophy and Religion Senior Seminar recently devoted a class meeting to the offering of advice for PHRE majors. Included below are some of the bits of sage wisdom that they had:
Senior Seminar preparation
- Try to get in to the specific required PHRE courses as soon as possible
- Try to have a light course load in the semester you take Senior Seminar
- Have the sense of a trajectory toward Senior Seminar so that you are prepared for your Senior Seminar topic
- Think in advance about the selection of your Senior Seminar thesis director and topic
- Regularly put files in the Truman portfolio vault for future use
- Be pragmatic about the direction of your thesis project
Course planning
- Take early on the courses in logic and Methods & Theories in Religious Studies
- Take a course early on in the “other” area (philosophy or religious studies) that you don’t think you are interested in (but may be)
- Take courses from a diversity of faculty, who have differing methodologies and interests
- Make a multi-year plan using the course listings on the PHRE website
- Distribute well your LSP, PHRE courses in your plan
General course-taking tips
- Get comfortable doing a lot of writing
- Develop a thick skin and a willingness to learn from constructive criticism
- Write down one comment you want to make / one question you want to ask in preparation for each of your class sessions
- Budget your time for assignments early on
- Anticipate the density of PHRE readings, and allow yourself enough time to do the reading slowly and carefully
Research and the general scholarly life
- Save up for applications for grad school
- Don’t limit yourself to a single database for research (for example, JSTOR)– take the library science course to learn about the library’s resources
- Use Google Alerts to keep abreast of new development in your topics of interest
- Take advantage of the extracurricular activities promoted in the PHREmail email list
- Go to NCUR
- Talk to your fellow majors– make friends in the major