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All Government Concentrators From: The Undergraduate Program ...

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CONCENTRATION ADVISER OFFICE HOURS: <strong>The</strong> permanent schedule of Concentration Advisers’<br />

fall term office hours will be posted on the department webpage at<br />

http://www.gov.harvard.edu/undergraduate-program/people/undergraduate-concentration-advisors-houses<br />

For those of you who are new to the department, our Director of <strong>Undergraduate</strong> Studies (DUS) is<br />

Professor Cheryl Welch. She will have frequent office hours in CGIS and can be consulted on general<br />

advising issues or specific matters relating to transfer students, petitions for <strong>Government</strong> credit from other<br />

FAS departments or through cross-registration at other Harvard schools, independent study, joint<br />

concentrations, and study abroad.<br />

OFFICE HOURS FOR THE DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES (DUS)<br />

Professor Welch’s office hours in the fall term are: Tues. 1-5; Wed. 9-12; Thurs. 2-4. Please call the<br />

<strong>Undergraduate</strong> <strong>Program</strong> Office (5-3249) or email tvio@gov.harvard.edu to schedule an appointment<br />

during these hours.<br />

Seniors: You will receive an individualized electronic “Requirements Remaining” form via e-mail<br />

outlining which courses have fulfilled specific requirements and which requirements remain unfulfilled.<br />

If you have not received this form via e-mail by Registration or notice any inaccuracies, please contact the<br />

<strong>Undergraduate</strong> <strong>Program</strong> Office. It is your responsibility to make sure that the information on your form is<br />

correct, so it is imperative that you let us know immediately if you think there might be an error. You<br />

must sign this form and submit it to your CA or to the <strong>Undergraduate</strong> <strong>Program</strong> Office to signal your<br />

agreement that the information is correct.<br />

Juniors: <strong>Government</strong> 94 (<strong>Undergraduate</strong> Seminars) have replaced both <strong>Government</strong> 98 (Junior<br />

Research Seminars) and <strong>Government</strong> 90 (<strong>Undergraduate</strong> Departmental Seminars). Going forward, Gov<br />

94 and Gov 98 will be equivalent. If you have not yet taken a seminar and wish to write a thesis, you must<br />

take a Gov 94. If you have already taken a Gov 98, you have fulfilled the existing seminar requirement<br />

for thesis writers, but are welcome and encouraged to take a Gov 94.<br />

In addition, new Research Practice Courses (Gov 61, 62, and 63) will be offered this year and are<br />

strongly recommended for prospective thesis writers who wish to learn more advanced research methods<br />

beyond Gov 50. Research Practice Courses do not count as seminars, but they do count as <strong>Government</strong><br />

electives. In the fall, Gov 63 (Recent Political <strong>The</strong>ory: Topics and Resources) will be offered for students<br />

writing theses in contemporary political theory. Formerly taught as Gov 98vg, its aim is to help students<br />

make the transition from being critical readers of political thought to being independent contributors to<br />

debates. Gov 61 (Research Practice in Quantitative Methods) and Gov 62 (Research Practice in<br />

Qualitative Methods) will be offered in the spring semester.<br />

<strong>All</strong> <strong>Concentrators</strong>. Beginning this year, instead of a petition process to count Harvard Kennedy School<br />

(HKS) courses for concentration credit, there will be a list of HKS courses pre-approved for Gov elective<br />

credit. Although you do not have to petition courses on the list for Gov credit, you still must have the<br />

cross-registration form signed by the <strong>Government</strong> <strong>Undergraduate</strong> Office before registration in order to<br />

count the course for concentration credit and thus in your GPA. You are allowed to take up to two HKS<br />

courses for Gov elective credit towards your concentration requirements. If you would like Gov credit for<br />

a non-HKS course (e.g. a Graduate School of Education course), you still must petition the DUS.<br />

Good luck to all in the fall term!

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