Pondering the Future
Rabbi Josh Snyder speaks with the Baltimore Jewish Times about engaging students of all kinds on campus.
Pondering the Future Read More »
Rabbi Josh Snyder speaks with the Baltimore Jewish Times about engaging students of all kinds on campus.
Pondering the Future Read More »
WBAL TV features this new art exhibit at Goucher.
Unfriendly Skies: Birds, Buildings, and Collision Exhibition Read More »
The Goucher Poll backs up some decisions in this Bethesda Magazine article about Labor Day and the school year.
Comptroller May Seek Executive Order for Post-Labor Day School Start Read More »
Kelly Brown Douglas, professor of religion at Goucher, notes that even the earliest of proselytized enslaved Africans recognized the “major shortcoming of an interpretation of Christianity that emphasized the incarnation at the expense of Jesus’s earthly ministry.”
Can the Protest Movement Reform the Church? Read More »
Sculptor David Page will visit Goucher on Thursday, April 16, at 7 p.m. in Van Meter Room G07. The Goucher College Art and Art History Department is hosting Page as the Nancy G. Unobskey Visiting Artist in Modern and Contemporary Art. This event is free and open to the public. Born in Cape Town, South
Nancy G. Unobskey Visiting Artist in Modern and Contemporary Art: David Page Read More »
In the new exhibit, Unfriendly Skies: Birds, Buildings, and Collisions, 17 artists investigate bird deaths in Baltimore. Rose Anderson, Sandy Anderson, Miranda Brandon, Stephanie Garmey, Aaron Heinsman , Brian Henry, Bonnie Crawford Kotula, Ursula Marcum, Lisa Moren, Timothy Nohe, Jenny O’Grady, Lynne Parks, Ben Piwowar, Nicole Shiflet, Nick Clifford Simko, Chris Siron, and Van Wensil
Art Exhibit: Unfriendly Skies: Birds, Buildings, and Collisions Read More »
Goucher Hillel will host HaDag Nahash, a popular Israeli hip hop/funk band, Monday, April 27, at 7 p.m. in Kraushaar Auditorium. The community concert is part of the band’s “Time to Wake Up” tour. Doors open at 6 p.m. College students at area colleges may attend for free, and community members may buy tickets for
HaDag Nahash Concert: “Time To Wake Up” Tour Read More »
For science majors, it can feel tough to fulfill liberal education requirements in a timely fashion. “We have enough classes as it is,” said chemistry major Eric Adams ’17. That’s why he says it was an easy decision to take a course at Goucher last summer. With his online summer course, Adams said it was
The Convenience of Summer Courses Read More »
Some students graduate and take paths away from Goucher, while others choose to stick around a little longer. Two recent alums who decided they still had more to give Goucher recently shared stories of their past and present experiences here on campus. Ross Shaffer wrote in his admission essay to Goucher that he wanted to
For Some Students, All Paths Lead to Goucher Read More »