Thursday, July 05, 2018

Museum Welcomes New Students to University

Freshman orientation at the Tate Student Center

Each year, thousands of new faces — ranging from excited to terrified — appear on campus, gearing up for the fall semester when they will officially be Georgia Bulldawgs. They are incoming freshman, transfer students and graduate students, and they all have the chance to hit the ground running with an orientation just for them. 

Orientation acts as a guide for new students to do everything they may need to accomplish before moving to Athens this fall. This includes registering for classes, taking placement exams, touring the dorms and getting an overview of all of the programs and offerings on campus at the Resource Fair.

The Georgia Museum of Art has participated at the Resource Fair for the past four years, and it has been a great opportunity to show attendees that no matter what their interests may be, the university has a place for them.

Michael Lachowski, one of the museum’s representatives at each orientation, said, “Participating in the Resource Fair is a big commitment for us — it’s a lot of days and a lot of hours for staff to be standing around, hoping for an opportunity to interest new students or their parents in what we have to offer at the museum.”

This is certainly true; there are 17 freshman and five transfer orientation sessions throughout this summer. Although the effort is not minimal for this commitment, Lachowski is optimistic about the results.

He continued, “[We] think it’s worth the effort. We want the museum to have a place at the fair the same as it should be in the students’ experience at Georgia. And maybe some of them will just remember they saw our banner that said ‘Georgia Museum of Art.’”

With a campus as large as the University of Georgia, it is easy to fear you will be lost in the mix. But orientation and the Resource Fair allow students to see that there are faces behind all of these units and organizations, and they are all ready to make your college experience the best it can be.

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