Bowden fellow shares her project at a professional anthropology conference
Daniela Gardiner '24 was the only high school student to present a poster at the 84th Conference for the Society of Applied Anthropology March 26-30, sharing the work she did for her Dan Leslie Bowden Fellowship in the Humanities at the event in Santa Fe, N.M. Gardiner, whose project was entitled "Soviet Jewish Diaspora in NYC: Acculturation Dynamics of the Fourth Wave," spent the three days engaging with anthropology professionals and college and graduate students through seminars, workshops and her own presentation.
Gardiner's project examined the extent to which fourth-wave Soviet Jews, who immigrated around the time of the fall of the U.S.S.R. in 1991, acculturated in New York City religiously, socially and generationally. She discussed her experience at the conference with her upper school peers during an April 16 assembly at the Lewis Family Auditorium.
All of the Bowden fellows also shared their work at Ransom Everglades on Bowden Fellows Gallery Night on Dec. 4 at the Lewis Family Auditorium and Solomon Art Gallery.
Founded in 1903, Ransom Everglades School is a coeducational, college preparatory day school for grades 6 - 12 located on two campuses in Coconut Grove, Florida. Ransom Everglades School produces graduates who "believe that they are in the world not so much for what they can get out of it as for what they can put into it." The school provides rigorous college preparation that promotes the student's sense of identity, community, personal integrity and values for a productive and satisfying life, and prepares the student to lead and to contribute to society.