Explore New Ideas in Honors.

The Inside the Honors Studio series is a set of learning experiences that facilitate Honors students’ exploration of topics that are outside the traditional curriculum. Designed by Faculty to be highly engaging and experiential, Honors Studios provides students the opportunity to earn one Honors credit/fulfill an Honors requirement. They are tuition-free and non-credit bearing.

Fall 2025 Series

Honors Studio Application Process & Guidelines

(Please read this section carefully prior to applying for an Honors Studio)

  • Applications will close at 8/26 11:59pm ET. (No extensions will be given).
  • Eligibility – Honors Studios are open to all Honors Students who have not completed more than two Studios. However, Preference in admission will be given to Legacy Students, due to Program priorities and First year direct-admit students will be considered if there is room.
  • Students may submit only one Honors Studio application. However in that application they can apply to their Top Choice Studio and, if desired, apply to a Second Studio they would like to be considered for, if they have not been admitted to their first Choice Studio AND there is room in their Second Choice Studio.
    • Note: Students who submit more than one Application will have all applications removed from consideration.
  • Applications will receive emails about their Studio application Status by September 4th. (Applicants applying for the Immigrant Justic Studio will hear earlier). Applicants should be checking their email regularly as formal application into a Studio requires responding to an email.

1. Human Rights Debates

Professor Vivian Laurens, Anthropology, CSSH & Professor Michael Hoppmann, Communication Studies and Associate Dean, CAMD

Meetings: Mondays 6pm-8pm. Dates: 10/6, 10/20, 10/27, 11/3, 11/10, 11/17, 11/24. This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

** Honors students from all majors/colleges are encouraged to apply; no knowledge of/experience in human rights or debate expected **

The aim of this course is to introduce students to the field of human rights law, practice, and scholarship through the examination of historical and contemporary human rights debates. Through a structured debate format students will have the opportunity to evaluate instances of local and global implementation of human rights discourses and practice. This course emphasizes the importance of understanding diverse perspectives, fostering empathy, and constructing well-reasoned arguments. In this course, students will gain a deeper understanding of human rights law and will enhance their capacity to identify and articulate their own conception of human rights.


2.  Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Immigrant Rights By Drafting A Report for An Asylum Seeker

Professor Hemanth C. Gundavaram — School of Law, Clinical Professor; Associate Dean, Academic Affairs and Co-Founder and Director, Immigrant Justice Clinic

Meetings: Tuesdays 6pm -9pm & one Wednesday, 6pm-9pm. Dates: 9/2, 9/9, 9/16. 9/23, 9/30, 10/7, 10/14; Wednesday 10/1. This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

Under both international and domestic law, the U.S. has a legal obligation to protect those who arrive on our soil and claim asylum. Yet harsh statutes, policies, and regulations have put the asylum system in jeopardy. In many cases, the last line of defense against these attacks are the immigration attorneys representing asylum seekers throughout the country and at the border. Amid this unrelenting attack on immigrants, the Northeastern University School of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic (IJC) was founded in 2017 as an on-campus pro bono (free) legal clinic.

This Inside the Honors Studio series will allow students to help the IJC in the fight for immigrants’ rights. Every asylum seeker who claims asylum must submit various documents to the U.S. government to prove that they have been persecuted in their home country and should be granted asylum here. Students will assist in creating one of the many documents that must be submitted to demonstrate that the asylum seeker is unsafe in their home country. This series is designed for students from all majors and does not require any previous knowledge of – or experience in – immigration law.


3. Photography and Engineering: An Interdisciplinary Studio for All Majors

Professor Andrew Gillen, First Year Engineering & Civil and Environmental Engineering, COE.

Meetings: Thursdays, 6pm-9pm. Dates: 9/18, 9/25, 10/2, 10/9, 10/23, 10/30. This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

Do you enjoy taking photos, casually or more seriously? Are you curious about what actually happens after you press that button? If you have answered “yes” to any of these questions, then this is a Studio for you. Designed to be highly experiential and specifically for students from all majors, and requiring no STEM background, in this Studio, we pull back the curtain on the hidden engineering behind cameras and photography. Beyond the basics of how cameras function, we will explore bespoke, fascinating and unusually engineered photographic technology as well as applications of photography such as forensic engineering. The Studio will include a guided photo walk. Each week students will be asked to submit one photograph. Studio participants will be requested to bring to each meeting a laptop computer and a digital camera, e.g. on their phone. (Note: this Studio is designed to be fully accessible. Students unable to provide these items will be accommodated.)


4. Queering Boston: Exploring Place and LGBTQ+ Identity in Our City

** All Honors Students are welcome, regardless of orientation or gender identity. Students who are completely unfamiliar with the “queer” community as well as members of it. Take a step outside your comfort zone.**

Professor Caitlin Thornbrugh, English, CSSH; former Director, NU Creative Writing Program; Leader, Northeastern’s First Generation, Undocumented, Low-Income Network; Faculty Leader, NU Food and Culture in Vietnam and Cambodia DOC

Meetings: Wednesdays, 6pm-9pm. Dates: 9/17, 9/24, 10/1, 10/8, 10/22, 10/29 & 11/5. This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

Welcome to Queering Boston! This semester, we will explore what it means to “queer” place as well as how place relates to LGBTQ+ identity. This studio encourages openness to discovery combined with a critical examination of art, site visits, visiting speakers, and texts. Students will have the chance to discuss, read, listen, question, collaborate, and critique in order to deepen our understanding of queer Boston and contemporary understandings of queer identity. Through this investigation, we hope to gain a richer sense of place and queerness as continually shifting and growing. I am excited to build our studio community together!


5. The Rest of the Story: Transformative Storytelling at the Intersection of Justice and Healing

Professor Michael Patrick MacDonald, Professor of the Practice, John Martinson Honors Program, author of the New York Times Bestseller, All Souls: A Family Story from Southie and the acclaimed, Easter Rising: A Memoir of Roots and Rebellion.

Meetings: Tuesdays, 6pm-8:30pm. Dates: 9/16 (in-Person), 10/7, (Zoom), 11/4 (in-person), 11/2 (Zoom), Friday, 12/12 – submission deadline, final group project. This is a Hybrid Studio.

Description

Do you want to help facilitate personal and community justice and healing? Then this Honors Studio is for you. In this Studio, participants will be given the opportunity to assist with bringing about personal and community justice and healing with a diverse coalition of survivor organizers and activists who are working through lived experience. Students will apply the The Rest of the Story, a trauma-informed community-based storytelling curriculum developed by the Studio Faculty leader Michael Patrick MacDonald. Working with a Restorative Justice framework, the curriculum is designed to help community participants transform trauma to voice, agency and leadership through story sharing. In addition, the curriculum has been utilized for community-building efforts aimed at bridging differences or simply to break down the silos within community organizing efforts. The curriculum has been used with Boston survivors of homicide victims, survivors of loss to painkilling epidemics, parents of incarcerated young people, as well as post-conflict survivors of the Troubles in the North of Ireland. More recently The Rest of the Story is being used with people who experienced the traumas of historic segregation and busing in Boston.

** Professor MacDonald grew up in South Boston’s housing projects, which at the time held the highest concentration of white poverty in the U.S. After losing four siblings and seeing his generation decimated by crime, addiction, and incarceration, he became a leading Boston organizer, helping to launch many anti-violence initiatives, including gun-buyback programs and support networks for survivors–all with the explicit goal of building multi-racial, class conscious coalitions of solidarity. He continues to work internationally with survivor families, educators, and organizers, using his trauma-informed restorative justice curriculum, The Rest of the Story.


6. Sports Medicine, the Boston Marathon & Managing the Injured Runner (with Boston Half-Marathon service-learning component)

Professor David Nolan, Physical Therapy, Bouvé; Director, Mass General/Northeastern Sports Physical Therapy Residency Program and Director, Boston Marathon/Half Marathon, Physical Therapy Care.

Meetings: Mondays, 6pm-9 pm. Dates: 9/29, 10/6, 10/20, 10/27, 11/3, 11/10; Sunday, 11/9, time TBA (Boston Athletic Association (BAA) Half-Marathon). This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

This Honors Studio explores the principles and practices of sports medicine as they relate to distance running, with a focus on injury prevention, diagnosis, and rehabilitation strategies for the long-distance runner. Approximately 50%-75% of runners experience a running related injury each year. Despite that statistic running is one of the most popular forms of exercise as it is an accessible sport requiring minimal equipment.

Topics include running biomechanics, common injuries in runners, injury prevention and rehabilitation, and acute injury and illness seen on race day. Students will examine case studies, and gain experience in injury prevention strategies and rehabilitation techniques. The value of an interprofessional care team to keep runners safe during training and on race day will be highlighted. Students will also investigate how interest in running impacts healthcare systems, and community wellness initiatives. This is an experiential studio in which students will be part of the volunteer medical team at the Boston Athletic Association (BAA) Half Marathon.


Spring 2025 Series

1. Cognition in Context: Applying Psychological Science to Contemporary Social Issues

Ms Emma Pitt & Ms. Joan Kim – CORE (Conceptual Organization, Reasoning & Education) Lab (COS), Advanced PhD candidates.

Meetings: Tuesdays, 6pm-9pm. Dates: February 4th, 11th, 25th, March 11th, 18th, 25th, April 1st & 8th. (No meeting on March 4th). This is an In-Person Studio.

Description

Since all social issues are essentially human issues, involving how people understand and interact with the world around them, the perspectives offered by psychological science are critically important for understanding our most pressing issues. This is an experiential Studio in which students will critically engage with contemporary social issues through the lens of social and cognitive psychology. Students will learn to apply social-cognitive frameworks to social issues, such as environmental justice, racial inequalities, and nationalism, taking psychology outside the classroom and beyond the traditional academic setting. This course offers an interdisciplinary approach to research, teaching students about the ways that psychology interacts with various disciplines–ranging from history to environmental science–to shape the way people understand the world around them. Students will have the opportunity to hone their research skills and focus on social issues that are important to them. Class sessions will feature discussions, guest speakers, and field trips that emphasize the role of psychological science in a real-world context. This Studio is designed for and welcomes students from all majors and colleges.


2.  Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Immigrant Rights By Drafting A Report for An Asylum Seeker

Professor Hemanth C. Gundavaram — School of Law, Co-founder & Director, Immigrant Justice Clinic; Associate Dean, Academic Affairs

Meetings: Wednesdays, 6pm-9pm. Dates: January 8th, 15th, 22nd, 29th, February 5th, February 12th, February 19th, February 26th. This is a Hybrid (In-Person/Virtual) Studio.

Description

Under both international and domestic law, the U.S. has a legal obligation to protect those who arrive on our soil and claim asylum. Yet harsh statutes, policies, and regulations have put the asylum system in jeopardy. In many cases, the last line of defense against these attacks are the immigration attorneys representing asylum seekers throughout the country and at the border. Amid this unrelenting attack on immigrants, the Northeastern University School of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic (IJC) was founded in 2017 as an on-campus pro bono (free) legal clinic.

This Inside the Honors Studio series will allow students to help the IJC in the fight for immigrants’ rights. Every asylum seeker who claims asylum must submit various documents to the U.S. government to prove that they have been persecuted in their home country and should be granted asylum here. Students will assist in creating one of the many documents that must be submitted to demonstrate that the asylum seeker is unsafe in their home country. This series is designed for students from all majors and does not require any previous knowledge of – or experience in – immigration law.


3. Photography and Engineering: An Interdisciplinary Studio for All Majors

Professor Andrew Gillen, First Year Engineering, COE.

Meetings: Mondays, 6pm-9pm. January 6th, 13th and 27th, February 3rd, 10th and 24th.

Description

Do you enjoy taking photos, casually or more seriously? Are you curious about what actually happens after you press that button? Do you think photography is more art than science or vice-versa? If you have answered “yes” to any of these questions, then this is a Studio for you. Designed to be highly experiential and specifically for students from all majors, and requiring no STEM background, in this Studio, we pull back the curtain on the hidden engineering behind cameras and photography. Beyond the basics of how cameras function, we will explore bespoke, fascinating and unusually engineered photographic technology as well as applications of photography such as forensic engineering. The Studio will include a guided photo walk. Each week students will be asked to submit one photograph. Studio participants will be requested to bring to each meeting a laptop computer and a digital camera, e.g. on their phone. (Note: this Studio is designed to be fully accessible. Students unable to provide these items will be accommodated.)


4. Knowledge, Belief, & Critical Thinking

Ms. Shannon Carnahan, M.S. Candidate, Counseling Psychology, Bouve

Meetings: Wednesdays, 6:00pm-7:30pm. January 22nd, February 5th, 19th, and 26th, March 19th, and April 2nd

Description

Epistemology, in simple terms, is the study of how we know what we know. This concept is interested in the nature of knowledge, and the limits to our understanding. Through examining case studies from diverse sectors and academic disciplines like technology, policy, and
healthcare, we will critically analyze how knowledge is shaped by dominant culture and societal norms, and how it aligns or confÏlicts with our individual beliefs and goals. Students will explore the intersection between the construction of knowledge and their own backgrounds and
experiences. By the end of this studio, students will have a stronger understanding of how to become active, ethical practitioners, rather than passive consumers.

This highly participatory studio will combine discussions, self-reflection, and critical inquiry to help students develop the skills to evaluate knowledge more thoughtfully, and apply these insights to their professional practices. By engaging with foundational epistemological frameworks, analyzing relevant case studies, engaging in self-reflective activities, students will develop critical thinking tools that serve them in becoming more intentional, ethical, and
informed professionals. The studio will culminate in a final project that integrates course material to further inform the practitioner you want to be.

2024 Series

Emergent Technologies (including AI) and their Implications for Communities and Governance 

Professor Kimberly D. Lucas, Professor of the Practice in Public Policy and Economic Justice, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs 

Meetings: Thursdays, 2/8, 2/15, 2/22, 2/29, 3/14, 3/21, 3/28, 4/4 (no meeting 3/7); 5:30pm-7:30pm. This is an in-person studio. 

Description

Technology has always shaped the way our societies work. From our ability to do work differently, to changing our range of mobility, to changing how we communicate with one another, technology has always shaped the way human groups interact, develop, and change–for better and for worse. Similarly, societies have always found ways to ensure that their own cultural values and norms are preserved, and many societies have developed ways not just to govern themselves, but to evolve their governance to reflect changing values, norms, and ethics. 

So what happens when the parallel tracks of technology development and governance development intersect? In the past, societies have sometimes placed restrictions on new technologies to ensure safety in the name of the public good. Other times, societies have placed no restrictions on new technologies to encourage innovation through competition. But how do societies grapple with emergent technologies? And, more importantly, how will we grapple with emergent technologies in our world today? 

This Inside the Honors Studio course will expose students to emergent technologies and their implications for public administration and communities. In the first half of the course, we’ll explore concepts of society, technology, governance, and the intersections across each of these. During the latter weeks, we’ll deep dive into one particular emergent technology–AI–to understand the ways in which different types of societal actors consider this technology, ultimately contributing toward a set of recommendations for cities as they consider the uses and misuses of AI. This course is designed for students from all backgrounds; no technical skills are required. Students should be okay with exploring Boston beyond campus, including outdoor explorations and field trips/site visits during class. 


From Global Experience to Local Action: A Project-Based Exploration of Challenges That Impact Our Collective Lives 

Dr. Jalene Tamerat – Associate Director of Community-Engaged Teaching & Research (CETR) 

Meetings: Details forthcoming. This is an in-person Studio. 

Note: This Studio targets Honors students who have completed an official Northeastern-sponsored global experience (i.e. Dialogue of Civilizations, Global Co-Op, Alternative Spring Break, study abroad, etc.), and are looking for opportunities to reflect, engage, and integrate what they have learned abroad within a localized context. 

Description

A globally competent individual possesses the knowledge, skills, and dispositions to act creatively and collaboratively on important issues that impact the globe (Boix-Mansilla & Jackson, 2011). A major benefit of the university-sponsored global experience is the opportunity to witness–both first-hand and from a scholarly perspective–how these important issues impact the lives and futures of people abroad, and ideally, provide a starting point and impetus for local activism. Global challenges such as food scarcity, human trafficking, and climate change are not limited to foreign contexts—they also impact the lives of people here, within our local (Boston) community. This studio series will bridge the global and the local through an integration of skills and insights acquired abroad and leverage those toward local action. 

Through the application of a social justice lens, students in this series will collaborate in small groups to conduct research, reflect on global experiences, and present information to their peers on a chosen issue of global significance. Each group will then collaborate with a Boston-based community partner who focuses on this issue at the local level to arrange a site tour and/or service-learning opportunity in which all students in the series will take part. The culminating assignment will be a presentation addressing a global/local issue that displays nuanced understanding of the challenge and presents a detailed plan for addressing it locally. An important component of the presentation will be a demonstration of one’s personal capacity to self-reflect and provide an assessment of skills acquired abroad to aid in carrying out the project plan. These final student presentations will be showcased at an end-of-series event with community partners and others from the Northeastern community in attendance. 


Three Meanings of Argument: Disputation Training for Curious Minds 

Professor Michael Hoppmann – Communication Studies & Associate Dean, CAMD 

Meetings: Mondays, 6-8pm. 

Dates: 1/22, 1/29, 2/5, 2/12, 2/26, 3/11 (no class 2/19 & 3/4). This is an In-Person Studio. 

Description 

Do you enjoy arguing or debate? Are you looking to improve your ability to explore and evaluate others’ reasoning and your own? Do you want to learn by doing? Then this studio is for you! This highly participatory studio will engage in a mix of the first two meanings of argument – exploring what counts as a good reason (and why) and testing one’s reasons against another’s. We will do this through disputation, the oldest communication exercise in European History. Disputations, also known as dialectical training, feature in Plato’s writings (4th century BCE). Aristotle wrote a textbook on how to succeed in them. And centuries of university instruction have depended upon it. 

What is a disputation? It is a game of argumentative chess, played by two participants: A defendant who picks a thesis (e.g., “Eating meat is murder!” or “To love is better than to be loved!”) and tries to uphold it, and an opponent, who tries to overthrow that thesis by showing inconsistencies or absurdities. The main twist: The opponent may only ask closed questions, and the defendant is limited to replying only “yes” or “no” (with a few exceptions). 

In this studio, we will briefly explore argumentative principles, before diving deep into the modern disputation. Students will learn how to engage in disputations, develop their own theses, train with partners, and explore strategies of arguing. The studio will culminate in a final argument day where each student either defends or opposes a personal thesis. 


Vision and Re-Vision- ‘Rite of Spring’, the Ballet and Music, 100 Years and Beyond 

Shaelyn Casey, MFA – Program Manager for Honors Student Life, Coordinator for Creative Collective Honors Living Learning Community 

Meetings: Tuesdays, 6-8pm. 

Dates: January 23, 30, February 6, 13, 20, 27 & March 12 (No class March 5). This is an In-Person Studio. 

Description 

When Vaslav Nijinsky’s “Le Sacre du Printemps” premiered in 1913, it rocked the world of classical ballet. Set to the invigorating and unique score of the same name by Igor Stravinsky, this work by the Ballet Russes challenged the notion of what ballet could be and sparked over a century of future artistic creations. 

“Le Sacre du Printemps”, or “The Rite of Spring”, is one of the most iconic pieces of music of the 20th century and has inspired countless choreographic iterations. This Inside the Honors Studio course will focus not only on the history and context of Nijinsky’s original choreographic work, but on the elements of the piece that have inspired countless reimaginations and re-stagings over the last century. We will learn about Pina Bausch’s seminal 1984 version, the efforts of the Joffrey Ballet to reconstruct the original piece in 1987, and many other artistic interpretations in dance and music. 

This is not a movement technique course but will involve in-class movement-based activities. No prior knowledge of dance or dance history is required for this course, only a desire to learn, move (as you are able), and express your creativity. All bodies are welcome. For the final project, students will create and design their own work of art, be it a piece of choreography, painting, musical remix, etc. that incorporates elements of the original “Le Sacre du Printemps” from the score to the costumes to the thematic narrative elements. Final projects will be presented during the last class session. 


Factors Impacting International Humanitarian Law 

Anne “Dunni” Sodipo, Associate Director, Center for Intercultural Engagement (CIE) 

Meetings: Wednesdays, (evenings, time TBA) 

Dates: 5/8, 5/15, 5/22, 5/29, 6/5 & 6/12. This is an In-Person Studio. 

Description 

Given the number of news stories that are on covered by news agencies as well as social media, the use of words such as “genocide” and “war crimes” are often used but rarely defined. From contemporary armed conflicts raging in countries such as Ukraine, Syria, and Ethiopia to the wars that impacted and dictated the course of the ancient world, laws and norms have shaped how the world has defined what is acceptable behavior during armed conflicts. 

We will explore the questions including: What is international humanitarian law (also known as the laws of armed conflict or the laws of war)? What explains the ways that this body of laws have evolved? Why do some combatants adhere to the laws of war, whereas others victimize civilians and captured combatants, including by direct targeting; torturing detainees; recruiting child soldiers; and perpetrating gender and sexual-based violence? What challenges do international lawyers and policy actors face in this field? In this course, students will probe these questions from different angles including as political scientists, historians, international legal scholars, and policy practitioners. Students of all majors encouraged to apply. 

In an engaged participatory manner, students will develop an understanding in the content of the contemporary laws of war, explore the politics of how the laws of war operate (or fail to operate) during wartime, analyze how and why these laws came to be, and engage with the current landscape of legal and political issues inherent in armed conflicts today. We will engage directly with current and former humanitarian workers from the United Nations, Doctors Without Borders, the International Red Cross as well as several other organizations and institutions. 

Bonus Benefit of the Studio – As part of the Studio, students will earn a certificate for completing “Introduction to International Humanitarian Law”, a free on-line course designed by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) usually taken by humanitarian workers and policy makers. 


Creating Personal Narrative for Public Consumption Through Video and Sound 

Professor Julia Hechtman – Art & Design, CAMD 

Meetings: Mondays; 7/8, 7/15, 7/22, 7/29, 8/5, 8/12; 6pm-8pm. This is an in-person Studio. (No previous experience with video or sound editing is expected) 

Description

Do you have a story you want to tell? How does one express themselves through media? Are there ways to communicate complex ideas simply? How can you reach your audience and provoke meaningful conversations? In this course students will gain insights into video editing, sound editing, the use of abstraction for communication, and the formal properties of narrative structure. Bring a topic, narrative, or experience that you’d like to share and then watch as it unfolds into a completely different format. 

We will work with Adobe software and phones to create these projects. If students have cameras that they wish to use (gopro, dslr, mirrorless) these are also fair game. There will be no expectation of experience with sound or video editing. This will be a hands-on, participatory course. In this Studio we will watch films and videos, discuss their formal and narrative properties, have hands-on workshops, and create videos. 


Cognition in Context: Applying Psychological Science to Contemporary Social Issues 

Ms. Emma Pitt & Ms. Joan Kim — CORE Lab, COS, Advanced PhD Candidates 

Description

Because all social issues are essentially human issues, involving how people understand and interact with the world around them, the perspectives offered by psychological science are critically important for understanding our most pressing issues. This is an experiential course where students will critically engage with contemporary social issues through the lens of social and cognitive psychology. Students will learn to apply social-cognitive frameworks to social issues, such as environmental justice, racial inequalities, and nationalism, taking psychology outside the classroom and beyond the traditional academic setting. This course offers an interdisciplinary approach to research, teaching students about the ways that psychology interacts with various disciplines–ranging from history to environmental science–to shape the way people understand the world around them. Students will have the opportunity to hone their research skills and focus on social issues that are important to them. Class sessions will feature discussions, guest speakers, and field trips that emphasize the role of psychological science in a real-world context. 


Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Immigrant Rights By Drafting A Report for An Asylum Seeker 

Professor Hemanth C. Gundavaram — School of Law, Director of Immigrant Justice Clinic & Associate Dean, Academic Affairs 

Description 

Under both international and domestic law, the U.S. has a legal obligation to protect those who arrive on our soil and claim asylum. Yet harsh statutes, policies, and regulations have put the asylum system in jeopardy. In many cases, the last line of defense against these attacks are the immigration attorneys representing asylum seekers throughout the country and at the border. Amid this unrelenting attack on immigrants, the Northeastern University School of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic (IJC) was founded in 2017 as an on-campus pro bono (free) legal clinic. 

This Inside the Honors Studio series will allow students to help the IJC in the fight for immigrants’ rights. Every asylum seeker who claims asylum must submit various documents to the U.S. government to prove that they have been persecuted in their home country and should be granted asylum here. Students will assist in creating one of the many documents that must be submitted to demonstrate that the asylum seeker is unsafe in their home country. This series is designed for students from all majors and does not require any previous knowledge of – or experience in – immigration law. 


The Rest of the Story – Storytelling at the Intersection of Justice and Healing 

Professor Michael Patrick MacDonald, Professor of the Practice, The John Martinson Honors Program. 

Meetings: Tuesdays, 6pm-8:30pm. September 17th, October 8th, Nov 12th, Dec 3rd. This is a Hybrid Studio (Virtual/In-Person). 

Description

By learning and applying The Rest of the Story Curriculum, participants in this Studio will assist with a diverse coalition of survivor organizers and activists who are working through lived experience to bring about personal and community justice and healing. 

The Rest of the Story is a trauma-informed community-based storytelling curriculum developed by Professor MacDonald. Working with a Restorative and Transformative Justice framework, the curriculum is designed to help participants transform trauma to voice, agency and leadership through story sharing. In addition, the curriculum has been utilized for community-building efforts aimed at bridging differences or simply to break down the silos within community organizing efforts. The curriculum has been used with Boston survivors of homicide victims, survivors of loss to painkilling epidemics, parents of incarcerated young people, as well as post-conflict survivors of the Troubles in the North of Ireland. And now The Rest of the Story is being used with people who experienced the traumas of historic segregation, real estate redlining, and busing in Boston. 

2023 Series

Russian Culture & National Identity

Prof. Harlow Robinson. 

Matthews Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, Dept. of History 

Description

Today more than ever, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s famous description of Russia as “a riddle wrapped inside a mystery inside an enigma” seems apt. Especially in light of the brutal invasion of Ukraine that began in February 2022, Vladimir Putin’s Russia continues to fascinate, perplex and infuriate outsiders, including Americans. In this seminar we will attempt to understand why Russia—and the Russians—behave the way they do . Through watching films, field trips, site visits, reading works of history, historical fiction and memoirs and listening to guest speakers , we will examine how history and culture have helped to shape the Russian world-view–a contradictory combination of arrogance and inferiority. We will investigate the diverse multi-national composition of Russia in the past and present, and particularly the special significance of Ukraine to the Russian national psyche . Guest speakers with particular areas of relevant professional and academic expertise will contribute to our discussions. 

Fundamentally interdisciplinary in both texts employed and the pedagogical approach, the course is designed for students from all disciplines. Students will be encouraged to explore relevant issues in their own major areas of study. 


Social Innovation in Rural Health 

Professor Kathy Simmonds, Clinical Professor, School of Nursing (Bouvé) and Professor Linda Trvdy, Associate Director of Health Science Entrepreneurship (Bouvé) 
 
Meetings: Tuesday, 6pm-8pm. Dates: 9/12, 9/26, 10/10, 10/24, 11/7, 11/28, 12/5. This is an In-Person Studio. 
 
Description 
 
Access to healthcare and wellness services in rural areas presents unique challenges. Clinics, hospitals, and long-term care facilities where patients receive care can be hours away from family and community, and in many rural areas health care workers are in short supply. Digital technologies, which have expanded healthcare access for many, have limited usefulness in places where connecting to the internet is difficult, costly, or impossible, or for those with limited digital literacy.  Ensuring that people in rural areas have equitable access to care requires creative solutions. 
 
In this course students will work collaboratively to gain a deep understanding of the rural health context by focusing on a case drawn from real world experience. They will learn problem-solving design methods that place people and communities at the center and develop solutions that are culturally sensitive, effective, and just. 


How do Large Language Models (ChatGPT etc.) Work? A non-programming Studio targeting students outside of math and tech fields 

Professor Felix Muzny — Clinical Instructor, Khoury College of Computer Science, & Affiliated Faculty, NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks. 

Meetings: Tuesdays 4pm-6pm, last meeting 5pm-7pm; 

Dates: Sept. 26th, Oct. 10th, Oct. 17th, Oct. 24th, Nov. 7th, Nov. 14th & Nov. 30th. This is an In-Person Studio. 

Description

In the last year, large language models (e.g., ChatGPT) have exploded onto the main stage, but how do they actually work? Unlike an advanced course within a computer science department, we won’t be learning the intricacies of how to build language models, rather, we’ll learn how they work (without learning linear algebra), what role data in particular plays in their functionality, and we’ll examine a few contexts in which they are currently being deployed. We’ll focus on analyzing the utility, appropriateness, and capability of large language models in different scenarios and consider the ethics, technical limitations, and implications of deploying large language models both in academic scenarios and professional ones. 

By the end of this course, students will emerge with a technical understanding of how language models work, what their current technical limitations are, the ethical issues at play in their deployment in various scenarios, and a critical understanding of the role that data and scale play with these models. 


Embodied Ethics 

Professor Ilya Vidrin – Creative Practice Research (CAMD), Institute of Experiential Robotics (COE) and the Experiential Artificial Intelligence Institute. 

Meetings: Wednesday, 6pm-8pm. Sept. 6-Oct. 25 (no class 10/18); This is an In-Person Studio. 

Description 

In many ways, bodies have been misplaced in philosophical research, intentionally set aside given the unpredictable and emotional features of human experience. Such inattention has affected the way we think, discuss, and move in relation to others. Shining a light on relational movement in particular, this studio will explore the significance of partnering in everyday life and the various ways that embodiment affects social interaction. Each studio session will include a participatory movement workshop with partnered exercises, followed by reflective discussion. We will approach the body through the lens of Somatic Theory – prioritizing the lived experience of movement. 

Drawing from moral psychology, phenomenology, aesthetics, social epistemology, we will briefly explore a number of core themes including sensation and perception, thought and action, language and power, and embodied cognition. We will consider the history of the embodiment, practical methods and approaches to movement, recent empirical advances in the field, and implications for future research directions. We will consider how this embodied research relates to applied fields including education, healthcare, and emerging technology. Students will have the opportunity to develop their own movement practice, building from exercises within the studio course. 

The purpose of this studio is to emphasize that the lived realities of people need to be given special attention through physical practice and reflective dialogue. A key objective is to review and challenge commonly held assumptions and critically evaluate how bodies are produced, managed, and enacted in contemporary social life. To achieve this, students will engage in readings, discussions, and movement activities. Students will have the opportunity to practice and reflect on physical exercises such as shared weight-shifts, counterbalances, and assisted jumps. We will consider the relationship between creative practice and theory that sheds light on everyday experience. No previous movement, dance, or philosophy experience required – all bodies are welcome. 


Restorative Justice: Community-Based Techniques for Truth, Accountability, and Repair 

Professor Michael Patrick MacDonald, Scholar-in-Residence, University Honors Program. 

Meetings: Tuesdays 6-8:30pm; Dates: 9/19, 10/3, 10/24, 11/7, 12/5. This is a Hybrid (In Person/Zoom) Studio. 

Description 

In Greater Boston, a powerful restorative justice movement has been growing at the intersection of justice and healing. Restorative justice practices are holistic, community-focused, and usually involve dialogue (story) among victim, offender, and their families and communities. It is a reparative rather than punitive approach to justice. On the global stage transitional or transformational justice efforts in post-conflict, post-colonial societies have included truth commissions and reparative processes. 

This Inside the Honors Studio series will engage students in four sessions about Restorative Justice, and what it might mean to our current historical moment as we re-examine the role of police and carceral systems in US society. Restorative Justice practices are meant to take lesser infractions—often sociological and mental health-related—out of the realm of criminal justice systems, reducing police caseloads, court dockets and incarceration rates. Looking at violence and other harms through a public health lens, Restorative Justice techniques can be applied as Prevention, Intervention, and/or Treatment, seeing those stages of harm as a circular continuum.  

 As municipalities consider the reallocation of police budgets (what is sometimes referred to as “Defunding the Police”) Restorative Justice is increasingly being explored. Restorative Justice should be understood by all who seek to reimagine justice in ways that are anti-racist, culturally responsive, and class equitable.  

Students will work with long-time activist, community organizer, and Restorative Justice practitioner, Michael Patrick MacDonald who is the author of the New York Times Bestseller, All Souls: A Family Story from Southie, to develop student-led presentations on the topic. Professor MacDonald will introduce students to powerful Restorative Justice leaders and projects happening in Boston’s most impacted communities. Students will create educational tools (PowerPoint, short documentary, animation etc.) for engaging their campus community on the topic developing student allyship for Boston’s survivor-led restorative efforts. Through this Inside the Honors Studio, students will learn to educate their peers about restorative justice, in affiliation with the Boston survivor-led restorative justice storytelling project, The Rest of the Story. 


Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Immigrant Rights By Drafting A Report for An Asylum Seeker 

Professor Hemanth C. Gundavaram — School of Law, Director of Immigrant Justice Clinic & Associate Dean, Academic Affairs 

Description 

Under both international and domestic law, the U.S. has a legal obligation to protect those who arrive on our soil and claim asylum. Yet harsh statutes, policies, and regulations have put the asylum system in jeopardy. In many cases, the last line of defense against these attacks are the immigration attorneys representing asylum seekers throughout the country and at the border. Amid this unrelenting attack on immigrants, the Northeastern University School of Law Immigrant Justice Clinic (IJC) was founded in 2017 as an on-campus pro bono (free) legal clinic. 

This Inside the Honors Studio series will allow students to help the IJC in the fight for immigrants’ rights. Every asylum seeker who claims asylum must submit various documents to the U.S. government to prove that they have been persecuted in their home country and should be granted asylum here. Students will assist in creating one of the many documents that must be submitted to demonstrate that the asylum seeker is unsafe in their home country. This series is designed for students from all majors and does not require any previous knowledge of – or experience in – immigration law. 

Previous Offerings

2024 Archive

Emergent Technologies (including AI) and their Implications for Communities and Governance | Prof. Kimberly D. Lucas, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs

From Global Experience to Local Action: A Project-Based Exploration of Challenges that Impact Our Collective Lives | Dr. Jalene Tamerat, CETR

Three Meanings of Argument: Disputation Training for Curious Minds | Prof. Michael Hoppmann, CAMD

Vision and Re-Vision: ‘Rite of Spring’, the Ballet and Music, 100 Years and Beyond | Shaelyn Casey, Honors

Factors Impacting International Humanitarian Law | Ms. Anne “Dunni” Sodipo, Center for Intercultural Engagement (CIE)

Creating Personal Narrative in Video and Sound for Public Consumption | Prof. Julia Hechtman, CAMD

Cognition in Context: Applying Psychological Science to Contemporary Social Issues | Ms Emma Pitt & Ms. Joan Kim – CORE Lab (COS)

Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Immigrant Rights By Drafting A Report for An Asylum Seeker | Prof. Hemanth C. Gundavaram — School of Law

The Rest of the Story: Storytelling at the Intersection of Justice and Healing | Prof. Michael Patrick MacDonald, Honors Professor of the Practice


2023 Archive

Social Innovation in Rural Health | Prof. Kathy Simmonds (Bouvé) and Prof. Linda Trvdy (Bouvé)

Russian Culture & National Identity | Prof. Harlow Robinson, Matthews Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, CSSH

How do Large Language Models (ChatGPT & family) Work?: A non-programming class targeting students outside of math and tech fields | Prof. Felix Muzny, Khoury

Embodied Ethics | Prof. Ilya Vidrin, CAMD, COE, Experiential Artificial Intelligence Institute.

Restorative Justice: Promoting a Just Future Through Community-Based Techniques for Truth, Accountability & Repair | Prof. Michael Patrick MacDonald, Honors Professor of the Practice

Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Asylum Seekers through Research and Writing | Prof. Hemanth C. Gundavaram, School of Law


2022 Archive

Building a Holistic Wellness Toolbox | Dr. Chong. Kim-Wong, Vice Chancellor & Dean of Students

Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Asylum Seekers through Research and Writing | Prof. Hemanth C. Gundavaram, School of Law

Restorative Justice: Promoting a Just Future Through Community-Based Techniques for Truth, Accountability & Repair | Prof. Michael Patrick MacDonald, Honors Professor of the Practice

We Wear the Masks | Prof. Vanessa D. Johnson, Bouvé

From Global Experience to Local Action: A Project-Based Exploration of the Challenges That Impact Our Collective Lives | Dr. Jalene Tamerat, Community-Engaged Teaching and Research

Novel Writing: Begin Authoring Your Own Novel | Prof. Kat Gonso, CSSH

Three Meanings of Argument: Disputation Training for Curious Minds | Prof. Michael Hoppmann, CAMD


2021 Archive

Art, Story & Health: Narrative Health Psychology in Critical Times | Dr. Irina Todorova, Bouvé

Authorship Narrative | Dr. Emma Futhey, University Honors Program

The Future of Work | Diane Ciarletta, Anne Grieves & Steven David Torres, Career Design, & Michele Rapp, Alumni Relations

Immigrant Justice: Fighting for Asylum Seekers through Research and Writing | Prof. Hemanth C. Gundavaram, School of Law

Restorative Justice: Promoting a Just Future Through Community-Based Techniques for Truth, Accountability & Repair | Prof. Michael Patrick MacDonald, Honors Professor of the Practice

We Wear the Masks | Prof. Vanessa D. Johnson, Bouvé