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East Asia Concentration?

Posted in Life at Cornell by Cornell's Most Infamous on September 16th, 2006.

I’m not sure how concentrations formally work at Cornell University, but because I took two courses in Chinese language at six credits a pop, and another course on Chinese History, I may be eligible for a concentration in East Asia studies:

Each year, the East Asia Program must report the number of students who took at least fifteen credits in courses containing East Asian content to the U.S. Department of Education as a part of the funding requirements for our National Resource Center grant. You are receiving this letter because your registrar reports show that you have taken a minimum of fifteen credits in such courses, which makes you eligible for a East Asia concentration.

I suppose I also could qualify for a concentration in English, since I took at least another 15 credits in that area–more if you count the courses under the 300 level.

This entry was posted on Saturday, September 16th, 2006 at 1:58 pm and is tagged with east asia program, east asia studies, national resource center, cornell university, asian content, u s department of education, chinese history, chinese language, u s department, department of education, concentration. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback.

One Response to “East Asia Concentration?”

  1. mn says:

    Might as well add it to the resume. Although I am not certain if the English Department offers a similiar concentration

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