A sampling of current Harvard undergraduate courses

A sampling of current undergraduate courses

Illustration by Tom White/9 Surf Studios

Illustration by Tom White/9 Surf Studios

Short of taking a sabbatical and enrolling in the College for a semester, how can you know what undergraduates study today? Enter The Harvard Sampler, a collection of essays by faculty members derived from or about their courses in the Core Curriculum or its successor, the General Education curriculum (first implemented in 2009, with many Core and departmental offerings carried over, plus dozens of new ones; see www.generaleducation.fas.harvard.edu)—intended  to  broaden liberal-arts studies in eight fields. The volume, edited by Jennifer M. Shephard (in the division of social science), Stephen M. Kosslyn (a psychologist and former dean of social science, now director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford), and Harvard College dean Evelynn M. Hammonds, includes a dozen chapters, in disciplines ranging from evolutionary biology and human rights to global history and psychology. Excerpts from five of the essays (minus their references to the underlying academic literature) follow. The book will be published by Harvard University Press in October.      

~The Editors

Adapted from The Harvard Sampler: Liberal Education for the Twenty-First Century, edited by Jennifer M. Shephard, Stephen M. Kosslyn, and Evelynn M. Hammonds, to be published October 2011 by Harvard University Press. Copyright © 2011 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved.

 

Enhancing Religious Literacy
by Ali S. Asani 

 

Asserting Power Over Technology
in an Era of Leaky Bits

by Harry R. Lewis

 

Literature and the Environment 
by Lawrence Buell

 

Why the Finns Do Not Drink but Die
and the French Drink but Do Not Die

by Karin B. Michels 

 

Accounting for a Good Life
by Thomas M. Scanlon Jr. 

Related topics

You might also like

Ronny Chieng Tells Harvard to ‘Destroy AI’ as Graduates Cheer

The comedian and The Daily Show host gave the keynote address for Class Day 2026.

Phi Beta Kappa Speakers Call Out a ‘Deeply Troubling’ Moment

Former Harvard President Lawrence Bacow and poet Meghan O’Rourke urge graduates to focus on character and “radical attention.”

‘Effort Still Matters’ in AI Age, Garber Tells Harvard Graduates

In his Baccalaureate address, the University president urged a mindful—yet open—approach to the technology.

Most popular

An animal’s journey from grief to love shows how much humans need each other, too.

The former economics concentrator brings his talent for crunching numbers to netminding.

The retired government professor has been a rare conservative voice on campus for decades.

Explore More From Current Issue

Label showing the anatomy of a worker bee, featuring a detailed illustration.

Science and art capture the microscopic natural world.

Star-filled night sky with the Milky Way arching over a rocky silhouette.

There’s a growing movement to curb light pollution. It starts on your front porch.

Black and white photo of Joseph Murray in a white lab coat sitting in an office.

Nobel Prize recipient Joseph E. Murray dedicated much of his career to organ transplant surgery.