Sentences with phrase «even as an undergrad»

Even as an undergrad, her interests diverged from her peers.
Even as an undergrad, ceramic sculptor Annabeth Rosen was known as a «rabble rouser» for constantly testing the limits of clay.

Not exact matches

Some of these events include the Out for Undergrad (O4U) annual Tech Conference, which allowed us to connect with many high - achieving LGBTQ + undergraduates from across the country, as well as the Y Combinator - hosted Female Founders Conference, or even SF Pride last month!
And for anyone who suspects that hemp brownies are truly a throwback to the 60s, let me say, first of all, that the hemp seeds in these are the edible kind, so you are not ingesting any mind - altering chemicals whatsoever here (unless you count the flood of serotonins in the brain due to their heavenly taste); and second of all, hemp is not the same thing as hash, and of course the classic hippie confection was a hash brownie; and third of all, how the heck would I even know, because I never did manage to consume any of the latter, even in my undergrad days, because I am such a nerd that nobody ever offered me any, and hash brownies never appealed to me, anyway — I mean, why sully your chocolate with psychedelic drugs?
Even undergraduates can volunteer in outreach, as Ufnar did when she was still an undergrad.
Whereas in Germany, even at the undergrad level, your have to develop your own initiative and doctoral candidates are seen much more as researchers than students.
The charm of Paris fills the screen as Matthias (Kevin Kline) heads purposefully down a street where even the graffiti («Todayis the Shadow of Tomorrow») reads like a Sorbonne undergrad thesis.
I found some books by Paul Wilmott that a professor gave me a while ago while I was an undergrad that I never even opened up, but am now considering trading / investing as a career where I can be my own boss (and not get fired for doing something I love all day) as well as something that is interesting enough to keep my focus and attention on while I wean away from math.
Even during my very short stint as a university lecturer and as a grad and undergrad student, I was aware of these conflicts and personalities.
Heck, even when doing undergrad physics or math or chemistry problems would always look at the end result for size, just as a sanity check for correctness.
Insofar as maintaining standards is concerned, I also agree with you that, in essence, one should be very leery of, for example, U of Leicester's willingness to accept (and then assuredly graduate) students with barely average and even below average undergrad marks and no demonstrated affinity for the type of thinking useful to lawyers (which the LSAT is designed, imperfectly I grant you (but nothing is perfect), to illuminate).
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