Ladies in Leadership

Young women learning to lead

The Alumna Book Club, a Barnard Tradition

with one comment

Arriving on campus can be an exciting and intense experience for new Barnard students. Designed to ease the transition is the New Student Orientation Program (NSOP), which guides incoming first-years as they figure out where they fit in among their new peers and in their new home.

Barnard’s Class of 2013 comes from 41 states and 23 countries, from public and private schools, and with a huge range of experiences under their belts. NSOP helps students find common ground and navigate the university. One NSOP offering is the Alumna Book Club, which ensures that new students have more than their love of Barnard over which to bond.

Audience

Beginning with the Class of 2004, all incoming first-years have participated in the Barnard Alumna Book Club by spending the summer reading a book written by an alumna and chosen by the Book Club committee. When they arrive at Barnard, they have the opportunity to discuss the book with their classmates and attend the Alumna Book Club Forum, where the author speaks to the students about the book and her experiences as a Barnard student and as a writer.

The committee comprises of one Barnard student who serves as an NSOP program coordinator, one representative from Alumnae Affairs, two professors from the English department, and one representative from the College Activities Office. This year before the committee met, Elizabeth Glynn, the representative from Alumnae Affairs, compiled a list of recent publications by alumnae authors and a brief summary of each book. The committee then narrowed down the list to a few finalists. Professors Margaret Vandenburg and Laurie Postlewate were the first to review the books and the NSOP program coordinator, Shilpa Guha ’12 this year, had the final vote.

This year’s selection was Special Topics in Calamity Physics the first book of Marisha Pessl ’00. It is the story of Blue Van Meer, a Harvard-bound high school senior who works to untangle a web of secrets in the sleepy mountain town where she spends her senior year. Guha says Special Topics was chosen because “it seemed fitting in many ways. For one, it targeted the correct age group. Also, it was a dense but fun read, and it could apply to a wide range of readers.”

“The Alumna Book Club committee was very mindful of the type of book we chose,” says Hayden Greene, associate director of the College Activities Office. “We knew that students were about to be inundated with heavy reading for classes so we wanted to provide a book that would be enjoyable to read over their summer.”

The James Room overflowed with students who gathered at this year’s Forum to hear Pessl read selections from the book, reflect on the writing process, and offer advice to aspiring writers. Perhaps, she suggested, more than a few in attendance would one day be candidates for the Alumna Book Club themselves.

Marisha Pessl ’00 chats about her time at Barnard and offers words of wisdom to aspiring writers.

Written by Martina

October 1, 2009 at 8:58 pm

Posted in Students

Kathryn Kolbert to lead the Athena Center for Leadership Studies

leave a comment »

Kitty Kolbert New York, NY – Barnard College announced this week that renowned civil- rights attorney Kathryn Kolbert will lead a key new program designed to significantly broaden and deepen society’s understanding of women and leadership. The Athena Center for Leadership Studies, launching this fall, will draw upon the resources of Barnard, the premier women’s college, as well as partner organizations and successful women around the world to develop this innovative interdisciplinary program that will encompass both academic and experiential study.

A public-interest attorney, journalist, and visionary in the not-for-profit world, Ms. Kolbert brings to Barnard an extraordinary depth of experience in collaborative leadership, educational programming, and civil-rights advocacy.  The former president of People For the American Way, a nationwide organization dedicated to progressive activism, Kolbert has been recognized by The National Law Review as one of the“100 Most Influential Lawyers in America,” and by The American Lawyer as one of 45 public- interest lawyers “whose vision and commitment are changing lives.”  She was credited with saving Roe v. Wade after arguing the landmark case Planned Parenthood v. Casey before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1992, utilizing what legal journalist Jeffrey Toobin called, “one of the most audacious litigation tactics in Supreme Court history.”

via Barnard College Newscenter

Written by Martina

September 17, 2009 at 3:02 pm

The Athena Center for Leadership Studies

leave a comment »

Students crossing Broadway

Introducing The Athena Center for Leadership Studies

via The Athena Center for Leadership Studies.

Written by Martina

September 17, 2009 at 2:18 am

Welcome to Ladies in Leadership

leave a comment »

Ladies in Leadership is a blog dedicated to telling the stories of contemporary women in leadership. Who are the Hatshepsuts of today and the Queen Elizabeths of tomorrow?

Barnard College, the liberal arts college for women in New York City, is introducing The Athena Center for Leadership Studies this Fall. Barnard is committed to shaping young women into leaders and is dedicating this new center to achieve this goal. Through this blog, I hope to share the stories of inspirational women who are participating in the Athena Center and who are emerging as leaders in their communities.

Written by Martina

September 17, 2009 at 1:58 am

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.