Halo 5: Guardians Is Free For A Week

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Xbox One owners who have not yet played one of the best games available for this console are in luck as Halo 5: Guardians has gone free for an entire week. The game is available for free starting today and will remain free for several days so there’s plenty of time for Xbox One owners to take it for a spin and then decide whether or not they want to put money down for it.

There are no complicated steps involved to take advantage of this promotion. All Xbox One owners have to do is open up the Xbox Store page for Halo 5: Guardians and just download the game. It’s that easy.

This limited time offer enables Xbox One owners to download the entire Halo 5: Guardians package for free and play it for as long as the promotion is active, which is about a full week.

The only pre-requisite here is that console owners have to be a member of the Xbox Live Gold program. That gives them access to everything Halo 5 has to offer, this includes the recently released Warzone Firefight mode, the single-player and the multi-player experience.

During the entire week that the game is available to play for free to all Xbox Live Gold members, Halo 5: Guardians is being offered for 50 percent off, so if you decide to buy it you can get it for $29.99.

Halo 5: Guardians Is Free For A Week , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

First Uncharted 4 Multiplayer Expansion Released

The first multiplayer DLC for Uncharted 4 titled Lost Treasures has been released today. Developer Naughty Dog has detailed all of the content that this DLC brings in a new trailer that has now been posted online. A massive patch for the game is also out today which fixes and tweaks some things to improve the overall gameplay experience.

Uncharted 4 update 1.08 makes several gameplay and weapon balance changes to the game, the patch itself weighs 1.3GB in size. Lost Treasures, the first multiplayer DLC for this game, comes to Uncharted 4 with this patch.

This update includes a new multiplayer map called Sunken Ruins, the map will appear familiar with those who have played the game’s single-player campaign. It’s one of the smallest maps in the game so the experience is fast-paced. You can get an idea of what the experience is like in the trailer posted above.

Lost Treasure also brings more Chests that have items like the Path of Indra Mystical and the P90 weapon. Players can purchase the Chests using real money or by earning in-game currency and then spending it on the Chests.

Players will also find new vanity items in the Uncharted 4 stores, there are 50 new skins to choose from, 70 new hand and face items, as well as several new weapon skins and taunts.

A new levelling system has been introduced in Uncharted 4 1.08 patch, it features 70 levels with each level awarding players items like Relics and Chests. Every 5 levels players will get a vanity item which can’t be obtained through any other method.

The full patch notes for this update can be found here.

First Uncharted 4 Multiplayer Expansion Released , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Making Delicious Lemonade out of Lemons: A Thank You Letter to Meetup.com

This article was originally published on IntroductionsbyDiana.com

boston singles events 50 plusMeetup.com recently kicked our 45-Plus Dating events company, Introductions by Diana (IBD), to the curb. To be clear, we saw this coming and we’re totally okay with it. We are catering to singles, and though we don’t do dating and matchmaking like some other players out there…  for 5 years, we promoted our events on meetup and people showed up time and time again, many starting new relationships along the way.

Meetup started in 2001, in part a response to 9/11. There was a change in the air: “…something had changed in New York: Strangers had started saying hello. It was after September 11, and people seemed suddenly aware of each other. There was a yearning for community… Meetup.com was needed.” And so it was born. It caught on quickly and meetups formed for every interest imaginable. If you can’t find it, you can create it and find your like-minded people easily.

In January 2011, IBD started promoting on meetup. We held our first meetup in February of that year and this is how IBD began and continued for the next year. IBD meetups, which carried an event fee, were not the usual meetup, which are almost always free. The idea for IBD was essentially proven through the Meetup.com model of creating community.

In the world of online dating, singles can find innumerable opportunities to virtually connect and engage with other singles. The options seem endless. For some though, the online options lack a certain warmth. There is something that seems very disconnected about connecting with someone through only the words on a webpage or through messages without a tone of voice or a twinkle in the eye. Meetup started with one goal – connect people to other people in real life. IBD followed that lead and from that simple, brilliant idea to create communities within a greater community, the IBD community and business was born.

We want to thank Meetup for all their support over the past 5 years, and especially to all the real people for finding us and connecting with IBD and each other all these years.

To find out about IBD Events and Membership, please check out our website:
Introductions by Diana

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Keb' Mo': From Behind The Six String

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JL: Did you ever have that “ah-ha moment” — basically the moment you knew this is what I plan to do for the rest of my life?

KM: Yeah, but a lot of my life was already over when I had it. I had been playing since I was twelve years old, but I didn’t have that ah-ha moment until I was thirty-nine. The good thing is, I still got a good amount of life left.

JL: What do you think triggered it?

KM: What it was–I hit the point of no return in my life–to me, anyways. I hit a crossroads. Do I go into electronics because I had just taken an electronics course and just secured a job with Roland Electronics. The night that I thought about whether I was going to go do this job, or continue on with my music–I really thought about it. Did I want to be this electronics guy, and how long was that going to take. Was I going to have to start over? And I asked, do I like electronics better, or do I like music better. It was an easy choice. I forgot about the job, and called the guy the next day and said, I changed my mind–I’m not gonna take it. This was everything that I’ve been telling me my whole life–this is where I should go–but I hadn’t been listening. So at that point, I started listening. And that was it.

JL: When I listen to your music, I get a sense that your musical influences spanned many different genres of music – from blues to country and everything in between. What do you think your jumping off point was in terms of influences, and what artists do you think your fans would be surprised at that you like today?

KM: Right now, when I say I’m into an artist, I’m into their vibe. What I like lately is Taylor Swift. I like the way she’s done her business. I like her determination and the way she kept rollin’ through–she’s fearless. She has clarity of her business, and she’s very compassionate with her fans. She understands what a great position she has in life at a very young age, too. I couldn’t have even fathomed that at that age. Musically, I think she’s a great songwriter, but I’m not playing it every day in my house. Earliest influence was Mando Santoria, because I started playing the congas first. But when I started leaning toward the guitar, I started to listen to David T. Walker. He was a great solo artist and recording session guy. And I was also listening to Latin music, because all I had was an acoustic guitar. I didn’t get an electric until my senior year of high school when I was asked to play in this cover band. My friend had an extra one so he loaned me his and I became a part of this cover band. And then I started to listening to the radio and to what the guitar players were playing on the records that I had. I didn’t have a main influence that I could lock into and not having enough money to buy a lot of records. I didn’t even have the space to listen in private because I didn’t have a bedroom–I slept on the sofa as a kid. So there wasn’t anywhere around where I could really woodshed. In the band, the songs we were playing were by Blood, Sweat and Tears, The Isley Brothers, Otis Reading, and The Temptations–Funky Broadway, Expressway To Your Heart. That’s what was influencing me.

JL: I have seen you play on the Experience Hendrix tour with a lot of noted guitarists. Do you consider Hendrix as one of your musical influences?

KM: I would have to say yes. I went and bought a Hendrix bootleg copy of Hendrix Greatest Hits on 8-Track. I rode around in my car listening to it all the time. I never tried to imitate him, but I would lift licks off of his record and teach them to my friend down the street. I never wanted to “be like Hendrix”, I just wanted to know what he was doing because he was making such a stir. When I got his tape, I wasn’t even playing guitar yet, I was in school for architectural drafting. A year later, I went back to my mom’s house and picked up my guitar and amp, then I started to get calls from my buddies down in Compton, asking if I could play some gigs.

JL: Were you ever mentored by other musicians early on in your career, and if so, did any of them ever give you any memorable advice?

KM: My earliest mentor was playing with Papa John Creach. He took us on as a young band. I toured with him for about four years between 1971-1976. He basically showed us how to be a band, how to tour, how to confront an audience, and by his actions he broke us into professional music. Later on, I was mentored by Charles Dennis, who later went on to be B.B. King’s guitar player. He schooled me on the blues.

JL: As a music fan, what album/CD could you sit and listen to every night and not get bored?

KM: James Taylor – Hourglass.

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JL: You recently put out a new double CD titled, That Hot Pink Blues Album. Why pink?

KM: Why not? Since it was a live album, I just wanted the album to have a lively color to it. And I wanted to show that what’s inside is fun.

JL: In your perspective, how has the music industry changed from when you put out your first CD up until now?

KM: Clearly technology is the answer. When I look back to my CD Keb’ Mo’ that came out in 1994 til now, there were a lot of changes. Music in the hand has all but gone away. We don’t have movies anymore–we’re streaming movies. We’re streaming music–it’s a challenge because now it’s more than changing from a format, it’s now going from a physical thing to a cloud. Now it’s about getting access, rather than ownership.

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JL: As younger generations today are gravitating toward social media and this “snackable” information, have you as an artist embraced that as a way to connect with them?

KM: The good news is, I have a wife that loves social media. I’m paying attention to what is right in front of me, rather than what is on my phone, and what people are talking about on Facebook. I still like the personal touch. I want to be present with my audience.

JL: As more and more schools around the United States cut art and music programs due to budgetary concerns, how important is it to you for schools to keep art and music programs alive?

KM: I think it is very important to keep arts alive–not just music, but all the arts. We need to fund our schools fully. We have to hold our schools sacred because that’s where the future is going to come from. That’s how change happens, by educating our youth.

For more information about Keb Mo and his tour, visit: www.kebmo.com

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Modest Is Not Hottest

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I want to introduce this topic in the most basic form; Oxford Dictionary. Yes, a dictionary definition could be the most cliché article preface of all time, but there are few things that bring me similar satisfaction (other than peeling off a scab at the perfect stage…but that’s gross).

“Modest: (Of a woman) dressing or behaving so as to avoid impropriety or indecency, especially to avoid attracting sexual attention.”

Notice the first bit of the definition, “Modest: (Of a woman).” This guides us to the conclusion that modesty or “decency” is in the hands of the female. Interesting.

Modesty is taught to girls at some of the youngest stages of their lives. I recall having lessons in church as a teenybopper 12-year-old about staying modest. I was told not to let my shoulders show and to always cover my knees because my body’s a temple and I must respect it. But why must we define respect with a piece of fabric? Since when does wearing a tank top make me lose respect for myself? I’ve pulled an example from the LDS website which may give you an idea of what I was told as a girl.

“If we are unsure about whether our dress or grooming is modest, we should ask ourselves, “Would I feel comfortable with my appearance if I were in the Lord’s presence?””

To be honest, I don’t think Jesus could care less about my clothes, but that’s not the point I’m trying to make. My point is, why is the topic of modesty drilled into girls brains and not into those of young men?

While the concept of modesty does not start nor end with religion, it is hard to ignore the impact the organizations have had over the subject.

“9 likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, 10 but with what is proper for women who profess godliness–with good works” (1 Timothy 2:9-10).

Although braided hair and pearls do not lessen a woman’s modesty today, the principal is the same. Women hold the duty of self-control.

There is this sort of disconnect, gray area if you will, surrounding modesty and gender.

Men can take their shirts off, no problem. Men can lounge the poolside in a speedo letting the nylon carve everything out. When the tables are turned however, the standard is changed. If a women takes her shirt off, she’s promiscuous. When a women wears a bikini, she’s asking for the wrong attention. Obviously.

An image from Harper’s Bazaar was shown to girls in 1868 and illustrated the length a girls’ skirt must be as her age increased. The older they became, the more inches were added to their skirts. As silly as this may seem to us now, society still holds women to a certain standard, which in my opinion, is restricting and degrading. Setting limitations on what a person can and cannot do with their own body is potentially damaging to anyone, but it was certainly destructive to me.

I was scared to wear shorts that came up past my knees or dress in a top that showed even the very tips of my shoulders. But the thing was, I liked wearing shorts and tank tops and didn’t feel any less decent while wearing them. But this desire made me feel shame because regardless of how good the clothes made me feel, I was being “immodest” and “disrespectful of my Heavenly Father.” Not only was God ashamed, but I was making it hard for the boys around me to keep pure thoughts. Yep, you read that correctly. I was making it difficult for men to be righteous.

When will we start realizing that women’s clothing does not control the actions of men?

A tank top does not make a person whistle at a passing girl. Shorts do not cause a person to grab a woman’s leg. A bikini does not tell anyone that it is okay to touch her. The only thing responsible for the action is the offender.

As I got older, I started to wear what made me feel comfortable and cute because I shouldn’t have to dress for anyone but myself.

Regulating the “pure thoughts” of men is none of my business and I should not hold the responsibility of how someone might react to me wearing a piece of fabric on my body. They have the agency to think and feel however they would like to when they see a woman’s thigh.

We need to stop teaching girls that in order to get the right attention, to be pure, or to be decent, they must cover their legs, shoulders, chests, and backs. We should be helping girls feel comfortable and proud of everything that they are because if we don’t, we are indirectly teaching them to feel guilty about having a female body. Alternatively, we should be teaching boys to respect a person no matter what they choose to wear.

Incase we need a reminder, humans have legs, humans have breasts and humans all have an ass. And you know what? They are amazing!

It is time to dismiss our fear of the female body and embrace the beauty of it instead.

Sincerely,

Abby

Original post can be found here: https://sincerelyabbyv.wordpress.com/2016/06/27/modest-is-not-hottest/

References:

http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/modest

https://www.lds.org/topics/modesty?lang=eng

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Timothy+2%3A9-10&version=ESV

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Kim Kardashian's Revealing Dress Is All About Cleavage

Today in news that should shock no one: Kim Kardashian West wore yet another super sexy, super revealing dress to a party celebrating her latest super sexy, super revealing magazine spread.

Mrs. West attended the launch party for her first ever GQ cover issue in Los Angeles Tuesday night wearing a skintight, strategically laced $2,950 leather Jitrois dress, strappy heels, and, what else? A black choker.

The ensemble is totally fitting, not just for the media mogul’s overall sense of style, but for the nature of GQ’s photoshoot. Kardashian posed in a range of little clothing to no clothing at all for the new issue.

She brought a bunch of other lovely accessories, too: friends Chrissy Teigen, Carla Dibello and Pippa Larsen, to be exact.

It’s very rare to all be in the same room together #baesthatslaytogether

A photo posted by Carla DiBello (@carladibello) on Jun 28, 2016 at 11:38pm PDT

And, of course, in true Kardashian fash-ian, she wasn’t shy about showing off her assets in the look on social media: 

A photo posted by Kim Kardashian West (@kimkardashian) on Jun 28, 2016 at 10:59pm PDT

Never change, Kimmy.

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Somali Refugees In Kenya Struggle In Shadow Of Forced Return

Kenya’s November deadline to shut down camps and repatriate Somali refugees leaves a community living in dangerous limbo, with some contemplating escape to Europe.

Said Abdullah’s daily life in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, has become a testament to the struggle to survive for Somali refugees in an increasingly hostile country. The 42-year-old clothes seller turned rights activist divides his time in the Somali-dominated neighborhood of Eastleigh between detention centers, courtrooms and community meetings.

He is available to help those caught up in police roundups get out of jail; to advise new arrivals on how to register with authorities; and to join Somali community leaders in petitioning the Kenyan government for more workable legislation to govern the lives of around 600,000 Somali refugees in the East African country.

The already uphill battle took a turn for the worse in May 2016 when the government abruptly announced plans to close all refugee camps within its borders and decommission its Department of Refugee Affairs (DRA), effectively leaving unregistered arrivals in limbo.

The government’s stance, although softened slightly by a partial reopening of the DRA, has been accompanied by a welter of alarming and often contradictory statements over the repatriation of refugees to Somalia. The specter of forced returns now haunts the refugees.

“Just thinking about the idea of going back to Somalia gives us nightmares,” said Said. “My children were born here and they’re proud of that. We want our right as refugees to live in Kenya or to go to a third country legally.

“Just give us that chance,” he pleads.

Like many Somali refugees, Said fled to Kenya in the early 1990s after a vicious civil war consumed his home country, settling in Nairobi. His two biological children live with relatives in the Netherlands, but Said cares for seven more children, mainly nieces and nephews.

Since the Kenyan ultimatum that says camps must be emptied by this November, much of the attention has focused on Dadaab, a complex of five interlocking refugee camps near the border with Somalia. But the fate of hundreds of thousands more Somalis who have moved to urban areas like Eastleigh, which is known as Little Mogadishu, also hangs in the balance.

Kenya’s Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Nkaissery chose the beginning of World Refugee Week to announce that urban refugees “must move to their designated camps to avoid conflicts with the law.”

One in 10 of Kenya’s refugees have been formally documented in Nairobi and retain the right to live in the city, but many of them experience arbitrary arrest, routine extortion and police harassment.

There are widespread fears of a repeat of the notorious Usalama Watch in 2014, during which thousands of Somalis were rounded up in an effort to force refugees out of the city. It was a violent and indiscriminate operation, according to the independent watchdog Human Rights Watch, in which many lost homes and businesses, some were raped and others died.

“I know we are going to suffer,” said Said. “No one has advocated for those who died in 2014, those who lost their hands or legs, their jobs, their loved ones. It’s been forgotten. Please, please, we don’t want that to be repeated.”

Kenyan security officials insist that the camps and refugee communities in the cities are being used as cover by al-Shabaab, an Islamic extremist militia that controls parts of south and central Somalia. The government has contended that Dadaab has lost its “civilian and humanitarian character” but delivered no evidence to back this claim.

Activists, including Said, point out that the refugees have the greatest interest in keeping the peace and rooting out extremists. Many of them have fled areas controlled by al-Shabaab to protect their children from being enlisted.

Somali participation in efforts like Nymuba Kumi, where a voluntary security monitor is appointed for every 10 households, are evidence of this determination. “We are ready to engage the government and help resolve any security problem,” Said insisted.

Police harassment, the partial closure of the DRA and the subsequent xenophobic rhetoric has paralyzed entire communities, especially new arrivals who do not yet have access to documents.

Far from a security burden, the refugee community has made an economic contribution to Kenya, experts argue. A report by the Life and Peace Institute found that ethnic Somalis had invested $1.5 billion in the economy in Eastleigh and account for 25 percent of Nairobi’s annual tax revenue. “Refugees, alongside local Kenyans, help drive that economy,” it concluded.

The sheer size of the Dadaab complex, which shelters nearly 330,000 refugees, makes it the third largest settlement in Kenya. Billions of dollars in international funding to support Dadaab has created 10,000 jobs in the area for Kenyans, as well as an entire ecosystem of support services.

“We are taxpayers, we work hard. We’re learning from Kenyans, yet we’re also contributing and allowing Kenyans to learn from us,” said Said.

As many in his community keep a tense vigil to see whether the Kenyan government will go through with its public pronouncements, Said fears that some will choose the hard, illegal road to Europe, a choice he calls a “suicide mission.”

There are already 1 million displaced people living in desperate conditions within the borders of Somalia and no end in sight to the long war waged between the country’s U.N.-backed government and al-Shabaab. As well as war, in recent years persistent droughts have led to famines that have killed hundreds of thousands of people.

Eastleigh is a main departure point for Somalis making life-threatening journeys across the Sahara to the Mediterranean Sea. Somalis are consistently one of the largest contingents of these desperate people.

“Refugees are leaving for Europe [from Eastleigh]. We know people who’ve died. No one wants to risk being killed with a bullet, but they will risk dying at sea,” said Said.

“Fleeing from your death to go toward death is a decision; it’s dying with freedom and the hope of reaching safety. That’s being human.”

Said Abdullah’s real name has been withheld for the sake of his security.

This article originally appeared on Refugees Deeply. For weekly updates and analysis about refugee issues, you can sign up to the Refugees Deeply email list.

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Activist DeRay Mckesson To Join New Baltimore Schools Cabinet

Civil rights activist and former Baltimore mayoral candidate DeRay Mckesson will return to his old stamping grounds at city school headquarters to lead the district’s office of human capital.

Mckesson was named interim chief human capital officer on Tuesday by incoming schools CEO Sonja Santelises. It was the second and most high-profile cabinet appointment made by the new chief, who begins her tenure Friday.

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Not Just Memorizing Memorizing: There is A Science Behind Effective Studying

The final days before a big exam can be nerve-wracking, to say the least. Just about every student knows the feeling of being wired on caffeine after pulling an all-nighter cramming all too well. As if that isn’t bad enough, the feeling of getting a C or lower can seriously crush your spirits after working so hard. The problem isn’t necessarily how much you study, it’s how you study that can make or break you.

The common thought is that if you read all of your content and memorize it, you will do well. For the longest time I would read my notes over and over again until they were imprinted in my head, thinking that would be the answer to my success. I didn’t do horribly, but I knew I could do better. It is an awful experience knowing that you are not living up to your true potential, and that your grades were falling because of it. The truth is, studying effectively comes down to a science. There are plenty of scientific study strategies that have been researched and proven to be more successful than memorizing.

Science has done some pretty amazing things since the beginning of time, including the expansion of our knowledge on retaining information. This knowledge can save us tons of wasted time using ineffective study methods in the long run, if we use the information we are giving. For example, most people plan a whole night of studying with their highlighters in hand, but scientists tell us that both of these are no-no’s when it comes to retaining information. It turns out that losing one night’s sleep over studying can impair our memories for up to four days, and highlighting information can be very ineffective. Studies have shown that highlighting information can cause us to emphasize the wrong context of the information.

Now that we know how not to study, what are some effective studying methods? Luckily, science has provided us with some good study tips that will increase our likelihood of remembering the information. Some of these tips suggest that we study ten minutes before bed, in a new place every day, or by writing out the information down. By strategically planning your study sessions around your brain’s highest performing times, you are more likely to be successful at retaining information. New memories grow stronger while we sleep, so the information you learned before bed will be more likely to be remembered. By reading the same material in a new place, we are forcing our brain to make new associations with the same information, which helps us learn it completely.

Studying can be a huge part of most anyone’s life. Whether you are a student, new employee, or taking a class for training, you know that studying is important. Don’t waste your time by cramming it all in during one all-nighter, because you will only hurt yourself in the long run. Take this information, and all other guidelines that research has provided, and make it worth your while. Studying is more than just memorizing, it’s learning and actually understanding the information. If you have a photographic memory like I do, you understand that it’s not all you need to comprehend any subject. You have to know the information inside out, and then you will find success.

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The Visit Every Female College Applicant Should Make

For many rising high school seniors, the summer between the 11th and 12th grades includes visits to a variety of colleges and universities to learn about options, see what fits, and decide where to apply. I encourage each student to keep an open mind, ask questions, and explore as much as possible during these visits.

I also encourage all young women in the Class of 2017 to consider something that may not be on their radar: a visit to a women’s college.

Why visit a women’s college? Because experiencing the culture may change some misconceptions – and lead to finding a perfect fit. Here’s why every female student should give at least one women’s college a look this summer:

Women’s colleges are anything but homogeneous.
When picturing the student body at a women’s college, many high schoolers and their parents envision a group of shy, bookish women from similar backgrounds. But women’s colleges are incredibly diverse, and you will meet students who are bold, athletic, outgoing, strong, smart, fun-loving, and more. One of the defining features of a women’s college is that women are accepted for who they are and who they want to be. There is no single “type,” and students are encouraged to pursue their own interests and embrace their true personalities.

Women’s colleges expand opportunities for female students.
More than perhaps any other environment, a women’s college campus communicates that women can, and should, do everything. Role models are everywhere. It is never implied that a particular field of study or career pursuit isn’t for women because women dominate every field on campus. This empowerment is a crucial part of the culture at women’s colleges, but it’s something you can only really feel if you visit.

Women’s colleges are made to fit women.
At women’s colleges, all of the resources are made for women. Facilities are constructed with women in mind – the heights of lab benches, mirrors, and sinks, and the equipment in the gym are all calibrated for women’s bodies. Staff at these schools are trained on how to address issues that most frequently impact women, mentally and physically. Our students talk about feeling that these beautiful spaces, traditions, and challenges have been created for the sole purpose of increasing their abilities and opportunities – because, in truth, they were.

Women’s colleges offer co-ed experiences.
One thing many high school girls may not realize is that going to a women’s college doesn’t mean avoiding male peers. Most women’s colleges are part of a consortium with neighboring co-educational schools, which allows female students to take classes with men and participate in co-ed extra-curricular opportunities as well. At Bryn Mawr College, for example, we have a relationship with both Haverford College and Swarthmore College through our Tri-College Consortium. Our students can take classes at these nearby schools and many Haverford and Swarthmore students show up in our classrooms (and our dining halls, because the food is pretty fantastic here). We also have a relationship with the University of Pennsylvania, where students may take up to two undergraduate courses per semester. Wellesley has a collaborative relationship with MIT, and Scripps College in Claremont, CA, is part of a consortium that includes Pomona College and Harvey Mudd. Partnerships like these allow students at women’s colleges to get all the benefits of a school designed for women while having access to co-educational experiences when they choose.

Bryn Mawr students often tell me that they were initially opposed to attending a women’s college, but that a visit completely changed their mind. In fact, almost half of those who visit our college apply, and almost one quarter of those end up enrolling. Those students will have an increased likelihood of attending top graduate programs, becoming leaders of Fortune 500 companies, and breaking into fields traditionally dominated by men – and it all started with a surprising visit to a women’s college.

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