blank image Home blank image Site Map blank image Contact Us blank image Search blank image blank image   blank image
Garnet to Cream Gradient Graphic
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
blank image
Hello, Goodbye
blank image
Power of a Paper
blank image
Go Figures
blank image
Bates in the News
blank image
Turning Points
blank image
Ask Me Another
blank image
Easy as pie?
blank image
CBB Cuts Back
blank image
On the Wall
blank image
blank image
CBB Cuts Back
Cost, enrollment issues doom study-abroad program
Edited by H. Jay Burns and Doug Hubley

After a five-year run, a Colby-Bates-Bowdoin study-abroad program winds up this fall.

With centers in London, Quito, and CapeTown, the CBB Off-Campus Study Program was an academic success but a financial failure,primarily due to unpredictable enrollments.(Bates operated the consortium’s Quitocenter, the subject of a 2003 magazine storyposted online at www.bates.edu/x31076.xml.)

The three schools still offer bountiful study-abroad opportunities through non-CBB programs as well as school-specific programs.Bates, for example, sponsors its Fall Semester Abroad Program in various countries.

"Programs like FSA give us the flexibility to connect costs to enrollment and connect faculty expertise to a location," says Bates Dean of the Faculty Jill Reich.

And there is a happy legacy of the defunct program: increasingly easy CBB collaboration, Reich says.

Joint CBB efforts include a thriving libraryconsortium; a grant-supported inquiryinto teaching and learning; a language technology project; a Bates-hosted conference on entrepreneurship and the liberal arts; andrecent diversity conferences. Plus, the CBB deans (and presidents) meet periodically by videoconference.

 

blank image


Days of Honor: From a Lewiston pool Hall to Carnegie Science Hall, Bates seniors experience the "crucible" of the honors thesis.
Art in the Balance: Going global. Staying local. Can Mark Bessire, director of the Bates College Museum of Art, do both?
The John Show: A string of choreography successes for John Carrafa '76 puts him on Broadway's center stage.
Me and Jesus: In a dazzling Perry Atrium installation, artist K-Fai Steele '04 asks: "What if Jesus got the girl?"
'Keep in Touch': Commencement 2004 offered a nifty twist on tradition - all four honorary degree recipients offered remarks - but it was a Bates institution, Milton Lindholm '35 who helped color the day "Bates."



Preamble: Don't cry for me, says the editor
Open Forum: Lindholm's honorary degree; remembering the man they knew as "Hank" Stred '53; and a chippy letter about athletics.
Quad Angles: Dance of a Lifetime
Bates Matters: An Unmistakable Lesson
Scene Again: Poetry in motion
Sports Notes: Equipment manager Jim Taylor
Class Notes: Find out what fellow Bates alums are doing
Your Page: Grounded
Vital Stats: First comes love, then comes marriage...
Deaths: The stories of alumni lives
blank image