Freshman Information
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Please refer to the Continuing JSP Course Registration page for this upcoming Spring Semester.
Freshman Resources around campus.
A Message from the Directors
Welcome to the Jefferson Scholars Program! Our program is just a few years old, but what it contains is something that has provoked, challenged, and inspired many generations of students seeking a liberal education: a first-hand, rigorous encounter with the great books that helped to make our world what it is, and that can equip you to face new challenges well.
The Jefferson Scholars Program will educate you as leaders and as citizens, but first of all, as human beings. Prepare to be startled, puzzled, and disturbed. Prepare to question what you think you know, but, also perhaps, to discover in your own minds the first stirrings of wisdom about things you may have thought no one could know. Prepare to listen, to take risks, and to enter into debates with your classmates, your professors, your books, and, not least of all, with yourselves.
There is a great deal of talk these days about the economic value of an education. You have perhaps also heard that UT Austin is a great party school. Learning how to think is always useful, and college should certainly be fun. But most of all, college should be a time to enjoy a precious kind of freedom, rare in human history, rare even or especially in modern day America, with all of our incredible busy-ness and networking and multi-tasking and start-ups and connectivity—and that is the freedom of true leisure. The ancient Greeks asked themselves what was most worthwhile in life, after we set aside the work we must do out of necessity and the play we need in order to relax from work, and their answer was: serious leisure, at the heart of which they put the pursuit of learning.
You will soon be arriving on the campus of a great university, a place where you can follow your curiosity about almost anything in the world, study it at the highest level, and discuss it with like-minded students. You have probably never been so free as you soon will find yourselves. Once all life’s responsibilities begin to crowd in on you after graduation, you may never be so free again. Make the most of it!
Our best,
Lorraine Pangle Thomas Pangle
Professor of Government Joe R. Long Chair in Democratic Studies,
Co-director, Thomas Jefferson Center Department of Government
Fall 2024 Jefferson Scholars Activities and Events
Thursday Lunch Seminar Series
Throughout the year we will have professors give short, informal talks over lunch on topics related to your coursework in the program. These will all be on Thursdays from 12:30 to 2, so please keep that time free in your schedule if possible.
Peer Mentors
As part of our effort to create a small-college learning experience within the large university that is UT, we would like to encourage all freshman Jefferson Scholars to take advantage of the opportunity to be paired with a peer mentor. Mentors are current Jefferson Scholars who will have a fund that they can draw on to take you to lunch, coffee, recreational events like hikes, Frisbee, and bowling, and cultural events on and off campus. You can choose your own mentor by visiting our peer mentor page, or request a mentor by emailing us at cti@austin.utexas.edu.
Jefferson Book Club
The Jefferson Book Club meets approximately every 2 weeks for an informal discussion of a short work or selection from a great book. This fall the meetings will be held on Mondays at 5 pm.
Overview of Jefferson Scholars Coursework
The Jefferson Scholars Program consists of six related courses, leading to the Certificate in Core Texts and Ideas. This sequence of courses, which can be completed in your first three semesters or spread out over as many semesters as necessary to accommodate the needs of your major, will serve several functions in your academic program.
First, the program gives you the foundation for a rich liberal education with an in-depth exploration of major questions, ideas, and books that have shaped the modern world. The program includes one course in each of four areas, covering the philosophy and literature of ancient Greece, the Bible and its various interpreters, the history of political philosophy, and the founding principles of the United States, plus two electives.
Second, these same course will give you a coherent path through the UT core curriculum. Depending on your selections, you can satisfy the following UT Core requirements with your JSP coursework:
UT Core Courses |
UT Flags |
Signature Course |
Writing |
Social Science |
Global Cultures |
Visual and Performing Arts |
Ethics |
US History |
Cultural Diversity |
US Government |
|
Third, when you complete the six courses you will earn the Certificate in Core Texts and Ideas, which will satisfy the minor/certificate requirement for majors that require one, and will provide an additional credential for students in other programs.
Below are the four required areas for the certificate, together with the courses open to freshmen that satisfy them. Please review this tab for unique numbers, times and locations for these courses in Fall 2024:
Area 1 Philosophy and Literature of the Ancient World (choose one)
CTI 301G Introduction to Ancient Greece (carries Global Cultures flag, fulfills Visual and Performing Arts requirement)
UGS 303 The Challenge of the Greeks (carries Global Cultures flag, fulfills Signature Course requirement)
Area 2 Major Texts of World Religion
CTI 304 Bible and Its Interpreters (carries Global Cultures and Writing flags)
Area 3 History of Political Philosophy
CTI 302 Classics of Social and Political Thought (fulfills Social and Behavioral Science requirement)
Area 4 America's Constitutional Principles
GOV 312P Constitutional Principles: Core Texts (half of core Government requirement when paired with GOV 310L, carries Ethics and Cultural Diversity flags)
You can view the complete Certificate Plan and a full list of approved electives here:
Registration Information
Please show the following information to your academic advisor.
Registering for the Certificate in Core Texts and Ideas
When you come for orientation you should tell your advisor you will be working towards the Core Texts and Ideas Certificate. If your major program requires a minor or certificate, this will serve that function. Formal registration for a certificate is possible only after classes have begun, so at that time we will initiate the application for the certificate on your behalf and you will receive a secure academic note (SAN) from the registrar, prompting you to see your advisor to complete the process. Please contact your advisor as soon as your receive that SAN.
Selecting Courses
All Jefferson Scholars should begin with a course on Ancient Greece. We strongly encourage you to take this in the fall since Greek literature and philosophy is one of the best places to begin studying the great books, and since we do not offer small sections of Greece courses in the spring. Unless you are in a special program that requires its own Signature (UGS) Course, you should choose the following course for the program for Fall:
UGS 303 Challenge of the Greeks (fulfills core signature course requirement)
- 63075 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. BUR 116 F 12:00-1:00 p.m. MAI 220E Stauffer
- 63080 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. BUR 116 F 1:00-2:00 p.m. MAI 220E Stauffer
- 63090 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. BUR 116 F 3:00-4:00 p.m. MAI 220E Stauffer
- 63095 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. BUR 116 F 4:00-5:00 p.m. MAI 220E Stauffer
NOTE: As stated above, if you are in an additional program that requires you to take their Signature Course, please plan to take the alternate Area 1 course below:
CTI 301G/CC 301 Introduction to Ancient Greece (carries GC flag)
- 29125 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. GEA 114 Fallis
If you have room in your Fall schedule for an additional JSP course, we recommend *either* our Area 3 course on Texts of World Religions or our Area 4 course on America's Constitutional Principles listed below:
CTI 304/R S 315 Bible and Its Interpreters (carries GC and WR flags)
29140 MWF 12:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. BEN 1.102 Tugendhaft
29145 MWF 1:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. BEN 1.102 Tugendhaft
29150 MWF 3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. PAR 103 Tugendhaft
OR
GOV 312P Constitutional Principles: Core Texts (fulfills half core government requirement when paired with GOV 310L)
- 37210 MWF 12:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. APR 208 Rodriguez
- 37215 MWF 9:00 a.m.-10:00 a.m. GAR 0.120 Carre
- 37225 MWF 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. PAR 10 Rodriguez
- 37230 TTH 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. PAR 10 Staysa
In choosing your courses, please keep Thursdays from 12:30 – 2 free in your schedule if possible, since we often schedule events for Jefferson Scholars then.
A Message from Academic Advisor Cassadie Charlesworth
Hello Jefferson Scholars! Congratulations on being accepted into the Jefferson Scholars Program, and welcome to the University of Texas at Austin. We look forward to having you this fall.
To reserve space in the courses you have selected, please fill out the Google form that I will email you the week before your orientation session—and please let me know if you have any questions at all.
Cassadie Charlesworth, Senior Academic Advisor
Department of Government and Jefferson Center
1 University Station A1800, BAT 2.102
The University of Texas at Austin
Austin, Texas, 78712
512.232.7283
cassadie.charlesworth@austin.utexas.edu
Course Descriptions
CTI 301G Introduction to Ancient Greece
This course introduces students to the history, the culture, the religion, and above all the thought of the ancient Greeks. The material for this course will consist almost entirely of primary sources. We will begin with a unit on Greek history in which we will use passages from Thucydides and Herodotus to try to see what was unique about the Greeks and what they saw as unique about themselves. We will then study closely some of the chief literary and philosophic works of ancient Greece, including Homeric Epic, tragedies, and Platonic dialogues.
UGS 303 The Challenge of the Greeks
This course will study works of ancient Greek historians, statesmen, tragic and comic dramatists, and philosophers to explore abiding questions and issues of human existence as they first emerged in the brilliant, tumultuous world of ancient republicanism. We will focus especially on the challenge that philosophic rationalism and science posed to traditional conceptions of justice and religious belief, and the ways in which philosophic thinkers defended their claim to provide the best guidance for life.
CTI 304 The Bible and Its Interpreters
A study of basic religious texts, this course includes both the Hebrew Bible and New Testament, examined from various perspectives (including comparative, historical, philosophical, and literary), with emphasis on the fundamental questions and ideas raised in those texts. The course seeks to develop a wide-ranging familiarity with the Jewish and Christian Bibles and with the dominant modes of ancient, medieval, and early modern biblical interpretation. Readings include an extensive range of primary sources, including both the Scriptures themselves and some of their most influential exegetes.
GOV 312P Constitutional Principles: Core Texts
This class is a study of the basic principles of American political life: democracy, equality, and liberty. Through a close reading of core texts of the American political tradition, we will attempt to see how these ideals took hold in the US, what arguments were made on their behalf, and what possible pitfalls there are for a society dedicated to those ideals. In exploring the theme of equality in America, a substantial unit will study the theme of slavery and race in America and the writings of African-American thinkers.
Jefferson Scholars Program Fall Opening Lecture and Pool Party
"Free Speech and Liberal Education"
Lorraine Pangle, Co-Director and Professor of Government
Saturday, August 24nd at 5:00 PM in
Avaya Auditorium, POB 2.302
Pool Party with pizza to follow,
Gregory Gym Outdoor Leisure Pool
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