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            April 18, 2001: 
              From 
              the Editor 
            My predecessor often 
              said that Class Notes are the soul of PAW, and of course he was 
              right. Keeping classmates in touch with each other is PAWs 
              most important role, and like many of you, Im sure, I not 
              only read PAW back to front but read every class year (and not just 
              because I have to).  
               
            When I was reading the 
              Notes in PAWs April 4 issue, I noticed that a number of secretaries 
              encouraged their classmates to look into a spring Alumni Studies 
              course called Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and the Tasks of the Russian 
              Novel, taught by Caryl Emerson, Slavic languages and literatures 
              professor. Continuing education for alumni was already on my mind, 
              because the cover story in this issue (page 20) focuses on the new 
              Educational Technologies Center, whose staff is  among many 
              other projects  working with faculty to create online alumni 
              courses. In addition, Bob Hoffman *58, a member of the Committee 
              on Academic Programs for Alumni, recently sent me some information 
              on the abundant opportunities for continuing education available 
              to Princeton alumni. 
               
            No doubt many of us not 
              yet flush with leisure time or money have dreamed of someday taking 
              part in one of those enticing Alumni Colleges  a Mediterranean 
              cruise to Greece, perhaps, with lively lectures accompanied by sumptuous 
              souvlaki dinners, starry skies, and white-sand beaches, or a tramp 
              through Ireland with heartfelt discussions over pints at the local 
              pub.  
               
            Less familiar are Princetons 
              other alumni education courses, many of which dont require 
              the student to leave his or her couch (or keyboard). The Russian 
              literature course being touted in Class Notes, for example, is a 
              part of the relatively young  its been evolving since 
              1993  Alumni Studies program, a series of courses based on 
              study guides and reading packets, audiotaped lectures, e-mail discussion 
              groups, and optional seminars on campus.  
               
            Then there are the alumni 
              online courses being developed at ETC, multimedia courses available 
              either online or on CD-ROM that feature not only a professors 
              lectures but animated maps, illustrations, and art that bring the 
              subject to life. One of the biggest advantages of the work going 
              on at ETC, its directors stress, is its circular nature: Faculty 
              find that creating online courses influences how they teach in the 
              classroom, and vice versa.  
               
            Alumni education, as 
              PAWs class scribes obviously recognize, works much the same 
              way, as a continuous cycle of learning  whether through formal 
              courses (with or without white-sand beaches) or simply through keeping 
              up correspondence with old friends.   
                                                             
            
             
              
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