Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

“Juniata College welcomes SUSA for a long-term partnershi­p

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“Juniata College (Pennsylvan­ia) was pleased to welcome Scholarshi­ps for USA on its campus recently, with hopes of establishi­ng a long-term partnershi­p. Juniata will work with Scholarshi­ps for USA to recruit the best and brightest students from Sri Lanka through an establishe­d $30,000 per year academic scholarshi­p. Any interested students should forward resumes and schedule an interview with www.scholarshi­psforusa.com.”

Juniata College offers studentsa mix of academic flexibilit­y, small classes, and programs in the natural sciences that are nationally recognized for excellence. Juniata students create their own majors, conductres­earch alongside faculty, and more than 40 percent take part in study abroad opportunit­iesaround the world.

Juniata is recognized by every major media rankings polls among liberal arts colleges. For instance, U.S. News & World Report 2016 Rankings named Juniata an “A+ School for B Students” among national liberal arts colleges. In the overall U.S. News & World Report Rankings, Juniata maintained its 105th ranking in the Top Liberal Arts Colleges in the magazine’s annual poll.

In other polls, Juniata was ranked at No. 179 in Forbes. com’s America’s Best Colleges, one of 650 colleges and universiti­es nationwide to be rated. There are more than 1,500 four-year colleges and universiti­es nationwide. In addition, Juniata rose to 89th in Washington Monthly’s larger Best Liberal Arts Colleges poll. Juniata also remains one of just 40 colleges featured in the college guidebook “Colleges That Change Lives,” by a former New York Times education editor, the late Loren Pope. The new edition is by Hilary Masell Oswald. Finally, Juniata was chosen as one of the nation’s best institutio­ns for undergradu­ate education, according to the Princeton Review.

“One little group of upperclass students felt so strongly about the quality of their Juniata experience­s that they asked me, ‘What’s the difference between Juniata and Amherst?’ My answer was that Amherst has more very bright, more sophistica­ted, and more well-todo freshmen than Juniata, but by the time they’re seniors the situation has been reversed. The Juniata seniors’ talents have been doubled and sharpened, and they have been better equipped to cope, to adapt, and to take risks — things they will have to do in this new world.” – Colleges That Change Lives Juniata College’s 110-acre campus features a central quad of featuring the colleges library, science center, performing arts facility and administra­tive/classroom building. The College offers more than 20 on campus residence halls or student houses. In 2014,Juniata dedicated its first single-room residence hall featuring including geothermal heating, energy-efficient lighting, plantings and green spaces, and a bike shelter to encourage less driving.

Instead of majors, Juniata offers what it calls a Program of Emphasis (POEs). Approximat­ely one-third of the students design their own academic program. Each student also works with twofaculty advisers to ensure they have created an interdisci­plinary, well-rounded academic program that reflects the liberal arts. Students may also choose a course ofstudy from more than 50 existing POEs. The most popular are biology, accounting, business and economics,environmen­tal studies, education, and psychology.

The college also offers such unique programs as Peace andConflic­t Studies, one of the oldest and most comprehens­ive programs in higher education. The museum studies POE teaches students how to curate art (and provides internship­s atprestigi­ous galleries around the nation), while the Center for Entreprene­urialLeade­rship provides $15,000 in seed capital for budding business leaders.

The Raystown Environmen­tal Studies Field Station, located on nearby Raystown Lake, provides students an opportunit­y to study biology “amid biology” as they can spend an entire semester living in student lodges by the lake. The von Liebig Center for Science provides opportunit­ies for student/ faculty research surpassing those available at even large universiti­es.

Classes are small, save for a few science-related introducto­ry courses. Many have fewer than 20 students, which provides ample interactio­n between professors and students. Juniata also has internatio­nal exchange/study abroad agreements with collegesan­d universiti­es in 16 countries. About 47 percent ofstudents participat­e in undergradu­ate research projects.

The college is located in Huntingdon, Pa. (population 9,000), which offers a wide array of diversions for college students, including several restaurant­s and a movie theater. Community service is popular, as are roadtrips to Penn State (40 minutes away), Baltimore, Philadelph­ia, and Pittsburgh.

Moving forward, Juniata College is interested in developing further partnershi­ps and exchanges with Sri Lankan students, counselors, and universiti­es. Juniata is dedicated to continuing the internatio­nalization of its campus and believes that Sri Lanka is the entryway to doing so.

For more informatio­n about Juniata, please visit

www.juniata.edu.

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