by Kendall Curlee | Sep 16, 2018 | College of Education and Health Professions, Exercise Science, Honors College International Research Grant, Internships, Research, Research Travel, Sam M. Walton College of Business
Seeing the education gap in CPR and First Aid knowledge is scary but also exciting because I know the initial overview I provide for them will pave the way for future classes and proper education to come.
by Kendall Curlee | Jul 25, 2018 | Honors Passport/Pilgrimage, Management, Sam M. Walton College of Business
After a few relatively sleepy centuries, the number of pilgrims following the Camino de Santiago has exploded, from 2,905 in 1987 to more than 300,000 in 2017. Today, hundreds of thousands of Christian pilgrims have embraced this medieval ritual, trekking and biking...
by Kendall Curlee | Jun 11, 2018 | Architectural Studies, Art History, Fay Jones School of Architecture, Honors Passport/Pilgrimage
Architecture major Anna Ibru, from Lagos, Nigeria, visited Europe for the first time while participating in Honors Passport: Pilgrimage. Thanks to her training in Fay Jones School of Architecture, she proved to be among the most adept in reading subtle differences in...
by Kendall Curlee | Jun 8, 2018 | Anthropology, History, Honors College Study Abroad Grant, Honors Passport/Pilgrimage, J.William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences
It seems nothing is sacred: On the Honors Passport Pilgrimage trip honors history/anthropology major Elizabeth Cooper found graffiti carved into stately Romanesque cathedrals and the Roman arena at Arles. Instead of viewing these initials, names and dates as scars on...
by Kendall Curlee | Jun 4, 2018 | History, Honors Passport/Pilgrimage, J.William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, Spanish
Maddie Whipple, an honors history major/Spanish minor, imagines an encounter between pilgrims, both corporeal and spectral, at St. Sernin, a major pilgrimage church that she researched and presented to the Honors Passport: Pilgrimage class. May 21, 1240. Toulouse, the...