Williams-Exeter Programme at Oxford
For now, the Website is probably your best bet.
Contents
Oxford City
Exeter College
Simply the best. A haven of light and of happiness in the centre of Oxford. Must see: Bat colony, quad mice, beautiful Chapel.
It's also bigger than Jesus. And better at rowing.
The Programme
It's not bad. Sometimes the Director gives you porridge. And if you're lucky, a piece of bread. But only when you do your work. And that work will probably be making shoes. Know how to use an awl?
Housing
Dormitory-style, 10 beds per room.
Field Trips
When the finished products get shipped down to London, some students get to ride with the cargo trucks. In the cargo hold, of course. Also once a year the more productive students get to go to Portsmouth to watch the container ships leave.
Student Government
There is a "GovCom" (governance committee), chosen from the students, who serve as foremen for the factory floor.
Subsidies, Mobile Phones, Etc.
I think the program(me) is getting new cell phones for the students next year.
Academics
There's a library so in your free time you can read books.
Tutorial System
Oxford is run on a tutorial system. That means you, one partner, and someone with a doctorate or close to it. Sometimes you have no partner. For a full tutorial, you meet one hour a week for eight weeks, with an essay prepared for class. For a half tutorial, it's every other week, four meetings total. Both types culminate in a final exam, essay, or presentation.
Grading at Oxford
Oxford students don't get grades. Williams students studying at Oxford do get grades...usually better grades than they would have gotten had they stayed at Williams. Much better grades. Like All A's.
Courses of Study
Alumni: let's try to get sections for as many subjects as we've taken. This is the most important part, probably.
American Studies
Anthropology
Arabic
Art History
Asian Studies
Chinese
Classics (Greek, Latin, Biblical Hebrew)
Comparative Literature
Computer Science
Economics
Economists do it with models.
Economists do it with interest.
English
French
German
History
Japanese
Lab Sciences
Literary Studies
Mathematics & Statistics
Mathematicians do it discretely.