| University Scholars Spend Autumn Term Studying 
                    at Oxford University IN AUGUST 2005, A HANDFUL of Seattle Pacific 
                    University students traded Tiffany Loop for Radcliffe Square. 
                    The four University Scholars
                    — juniors Andrew Hays, Justin Peters, Michael Seguin, 
                    and Rachel Woodbrook — were selected to spend a semester 
                    as visiting students at Oxford University. “I really wanted to do a study abroad program
                    that would challenge me academically,” says Hays, who 
                    is now studying political theory
                    at Oxford. “Some programs emphasize the ‘abroad’ 
                    part, while the Oxford program definitely
                    emphasizes the ‘study’ part. If I can
                    make it here, I can make it anywhere.” Each year, honors students from member institutions of the 
                    Council for Christian Colleges and Universities apply to the 
                    Oxford program, which is aimed at honing critical-thinking 
                    skills and at conducting scholarship from a Christian perspective. 
                    If selected, students choose from tutorial-based study programs 
                    in disciplines ranging from art to religion. “I’m studying classics and English literature,”
                    says Woodbrook, describing the focus on outside-the-classroom 
                    self-study. “Really,
                    I think we’re studying how to study. We end up practically 
                    living in the libraries.” “It’s quite a different emphasis than the American 
                    system,” explains Professor of English
                    Luke Reinsma, who directs the University Scholars, SPU’s 
                    four-year curriculum for academically gifted students. “At 
                    Oxford, students
                    learn to take charge of their education.” The tutorial approach has its advantages, says Seguin, who 
                    chose a course of study in the classics and Latin. “The 
                    one-on-one professor-
                    student dynamic allows for more
                    in-depth instruction and personalized assignments,”
                    he explains. Reinsma encouraged each of this year’s four students 
                    to apply to the Oxford program. He says it’s as much 
                    about life experience as it is about academics. Peters, who is examining literature as diverse as Chaucer’s 
                    Troilus and Criseyde and old Norse mythology, agrees. 
                    “Sometimes you just have to sit back in the Bodleian 
                    Library, look out at the Radcliffe Camera and remind yourself 
                    that you are in one of the oldest and greatest libraries in 
                    the world.” All the students say adjusting to life at Oxford has been, 
                    at times, challenging. “Learning how to enjoy the city 
                    is one of my main goals,” says Woodbrook, “and 
                    it actually takes a lot of effort not to get completely caught 
                    up in the academics.” They admit to missing the familiarities of life at SPU, too: 
                    favorite professors (“I miss the inimitable Dr. Reinsma,” 
                    says Seguin. “He is simply a world-class professor and 
                    a good man.”); Queen Anne Hill; walks across campus;
                    and, well, working appliances. “Our laundry
                    machine has a severe grudge against Justin, whose attempts 
                    to do laundry have been foiled on three occasions by an exploding-laundry-machine 
                    phenomenon,” says Hays. A more welcome phenomenon, says Reinsma, is the potentially 
                    life-changing impact of an experience such as the Oxford study 
                    program. “These students have the unique opportunity 
                    to get an entirely new view,” he says. “One of 
                    the best things to do in education is to get outside the U.S. 
                    It can be very sobering, but it’s so enlightening.” Back to the topBack to Home
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