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Fostering Community

Across departments small and large, concentrators find varying levels of camaraderie

“It’s interesting working with [classmates] on harder physics problems so you know how they think and how they tackle problems,” said Farzan Vafa ’15, a physics and math concentrator.

When he was a sophomore, human developmental and regenerative biology concentrator Theodore A. Peng ’13 and some of his peers formed an email group, the HDRB Study Buddies, to discuss the assigned problem sets in their tutorial. The email list quickly grew into more than just a study group, and this year, some of the Study Buddies as well as other HDRB concentrators coordinated seeing the midnight premiere of The Hunger Games together.

“Having p-sets has definitely contributed to us getting to know each other,” Peng said.

While science and other quantitative concentrators are vocal about the strength of their communities, HDRB professor and Eliot House Master Douglas A. Melton said that it is not just classes with problem sets that can bring students together.

“Almost all subjects must have some sort of projects, be they p-sets or outings or work projects,” Melton said. “If learning occurs better in a group environment, then we should try more ways of doing that.”

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History and Literature exemplifies this model with one mandatory, concentration-wide book assigned each semester. Because the concentration is split into specialty regions, such as modern Europe and Latin America, the assignment lets concentrators engage with students of other geographical and historical areas whose paths might not otherwise cross. In the new sophomore tutorials for History of Science, students often work in groups and present to one another.

In Romance Languages and Literatures, students choose a language as the centerpiece of their curriculum, and concentrators said they feel less camaraderie because each student studies a different language and begins at a different level.

“There’s kind of a different bond since a lot more people who do those concentrations travel, and then they can compare study abroad stories,” said Erik T. Olsen ’15, who focuses in Italian.

COMMUNITY CONVERSATIONS

Not every student looks to his or her concentration as a primary community. Some even find little need to branch out from their House communities.

“You have a very deep connection to your House, which takes away from something, and one of those things is your connection to your concentration,” said Mahzarin R. Banaji,a professor of social psychology.

While House community has become a staple of the undergraduate experience, department heads are still trying to develop academic community without treading on the extracurricular commitments and social lives of students.

“We want to strike the right balance between providing events or activities that students are excited about and want to attend and not organizing too many events where students feel spread too thin to attend or feel that they will not gain anything from them,” Yetman said of community-building efforts in psychology.

In some cases, professors find that capitalizing on the strength of the House system can actually enhance concentration-specific activities.

“[Physics Night] grew up by accident 14 years ago because I started teaching Physics 16 at the same time I became Leverett House Master and at the same time that our dining hall opened up 24 hours a day,” said Leverett House Master, Physics professor, and Director of Undergraduate Studies for Physics and ‘Chemistry and Physics’ Howard M. Georgi ’68 in an email to The Crimson. “The combination was magical.”

Melton said he envisions spreading the model established by Georgi to more houses and fields, and led his own evening sessions on biotechnology in Eliot last year.

“Almost any job or activity you have will involve working as part of a team or as part of a community,” Melton said of the importance of developing camaraderie. “The more we can prepare people to think about that—how they interact with other members, bosses, subordinates, equals—the better off we are.”

—Staff writer Jessica A. Barzilay can be reached at jessicabarzilay@college.harvard.edu. Follow her on Twitter @jessicabarzilay.

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