Thomas Krebs
03:54:27 PM
Hello Freinds -- We will be starting at 4 p.m.
Welcome to Music Theatre and dance for non majors. My name is Tom and I do recruiting and admissions and scholarships for the School of Music, Theatre and dance. And we're here today to give you just a brief overview of how you all can participate and then we will take your questions. So the first thing to know is that what we're talking about today. These are things, courses etc that you can register for and take four credit.
There are a lot of different performing arts opportunities at CSU that are not classes that you can take for credit, but they are absolutely still there, so just know as we're talking about things, these are all classes that were talking about that will go on your transcript. You'll get a grade and it will hopefully count as an elective for whatever your degree path might be. So let's go ahead and jump off by talking a little bit about music.
The first and probably most important thing to know is that all of the ensembles at CSU are open to everyone, regardless of major. You don't have to be a music major or minor in order to participate, and in fact we have many, many students who are not majors and minors who are in our very best ensembles. In fact, winds and brass do blind auditions, so if you're a great player, the professors don't even know who they're hearing, and you can win yourself a great seat.
Uh, in the orchestra the wind Symphony or solo opportunity or the chance to play a Concerto or something, so that's pretty unique and kind of special.
They are classes. You take him for grade.
We have three options that don't require an audition, and that's what you're seeing on your screen right now. These three courses are courses that you can just sign up for an you just show up on the first day and during the course. The other courses we are going to do an audition right before classes start.
And that's true, whether we're talking about choir or an instrumental type piece.
I will come in all of the information is published on our on our website. We have an audition section up their breaks down. Each instrument has an expert tells you what scales they might want to hear. I'm so it's not going to be a surprise you come in. You play that audition then basically the professors get with you and say These are the ensembles that you can be in.
Jennifer Clary
04:02:52 PM
Link to information about music ensemble auditions: https://music.colostate.edu/auditions/
And you'll go back and look at your schedule and kind of see what works based on that and so generally it's good to know that our ensembles meet in the mid to late afternoons in general, and so those are the Times that you might eventually doing, but you might end up having to do a little last minute juggling of your schedule.
Jennifer Clary
04:03:27 PM
Hi Charlie!
Also, these three that you can see on your screen are open to anyone. By the way, if you hear that scraping sound, that is the sound of Charlie the dog, he lives under the desk, much like a troll lives under a bridge and he waits till I'm on these video conferences to kind of dig himself a nice bed in the carpet. So thank you Charlie. Jennifer says Hi Charlie.
He smiling, you just can't see it.
So we've talked about how to audition form. Here's the link and Jennifer, my colleague, the director of communications, has posted it in the little chat here. That's the shortcut to where it breaks down by each instrument. What's going to be expected of you at the at the audition?
If for some reason you do not own a $10,000 bassoon that you lug around with you, we can probably help you out and that goes for almost any instrument. We have an instrument curator and we have a lot of different instruments available. If for some particular reason we don't have just enough English horns or whatever you're looking for that semester. We also know just about everybody in town who rents instruments who isn't CSU, so we can connect you with.
Jennifer Clary
04:04:39 PM
SMTD@colostate.edu
Boomer music or the Guitar Center, or some other place where you can get the instrument that you need. The best way to find out about that we use sort of a general email address for the School of Music, Theatre and dance, and it's right there on the screen. It's SMTD at colostate.edu and if you send us a note and just tell us what you're looking for, I will put you in touch with Ramondo Munoz, who is our instrument curator and see if we can't get you get you start I think the prices range a little bit.
By, uh, by instrument, it turns out it is cheaper to rent a kazoo than a bassoon so you know who knew. Who knew.
If you're interested in taking music classes, there are some options for that as well. So what you see on the screen here? This is everything that we offer. All that's available for non majors and a lot of the things on this list are ensembles which are classes, but we also have more traditional academic classes up here as well. Music appreciation, music theory, fundamentals, music, technology, history of jazz, history of rock-and-roll are the main ones now.
Everybody has at CSU you have to take 40 credits or so of the All University core curriculum, the AUC and that curriculum has an arts and humanities requirement in it that everyone has to fulfill. So as a non major, if you want to take music appreciation, music theory, music technology, history of Jazz, History, Rock and roll, all those courses will fulfill that humanities requirement in the AUC core curriculum. Other music courses are restricted to music majors and minors.
Uh, the music instruction because it's one on one is is just about the most expensive instruction on campus, and so the only way we can go back to not go bankrupt that the only way we cannot go bankrupt is if we limit ourselves as far as those other courses and private lessons to just students who are majors and minors. If you are interested and want to talk about being a music minor, I'll tell you it's not that.
It's not that overwhelming as far as the course work that's required. It's about 22 credits. You take two years of lessons through the University, and you perform an aide ensembles during your time here, which is just being in something every semester or two things one semester and nothing the next but just 8 by the time you're done. So it's not that difficult, and that's a great way if you want to expand what courses you can take beyond what's on this screen. Definitely shoot us a line at MTV.
Uh, and let us know if you're interested in that, and I can find the time to talk about it with you privately and and you know, see if it makes sense. If it's something you want to think about.
Let's move on to theater.
Hello oh mouse don't be like that. There we go.
Our theater program at CSU, just like music, is accessible to non majors. You do not have to be a theater major to be in a show or to work on a crew. As far as auditions go, they just cast the best person for the role and it turns out it's exactly the same in real life. So know that if you want to continue participating, you can absolutely do that. It's open to all majors and we have a spot on our theater website.
Jennifer Clary
04:07:56 PM
Here is the link for information about auditioning for a play: https://theatre.colostate.edu/audition-for-a-play/
Uh, that goes over what's happening that particular semester. As far as theater auditions. Generally speaking, we do a large kind of group audition in the early fall where we auditioned for the whole season. All the shows you come in and do something and all the different directors are there and then you get call backs for various shows. Sometimes, of course, we are going to hire A guest director or someone is on sabbatical or traveling or something and they can't be there. So we also have one off auditions as well.
It's a combination of the two things, but no matter what's going on, all the information is always always going to be on that link for you to take a look at.
Would you have a courses that are open to non majors and theater and dance are our little our little bit tricky in this regard, only in the sense that you as a non major can take at any theater course that we offer.
Presuming that there is room in the course and that you have the right skill level, if you if you sign up, you know if there's if you're wanting to do a course like lighting design, first thing we have to do is we're not going to be able to sign you up for until pretty close to when classes start, because we need to make sure that all the majors who need to take that course can in order to graduate. The second thing is, you're going to have to have a chat with the instructor of record with the professor for that course.
Um, our courses, even the first courses in the sequence is they don't.
This is a double negative, but I'm going to say it anyway. They don't begin assuming that you know nothing, or In other words, they start assuming that you know something about what the area is. So if you come in and you know want to do lighting design, but you're confused when someone says, you know what's up, staging, what's downstage.
You might not be at the right skill level to take that course, and because it's collaborative and everyone sort of depends on each other.
Having everyone be on the same page is is pretty important as far as that goes.
So you can enroll in absolutely anything that you're interested in. I will tell you that we have non majors who have taken all the way up through our most advanced classes in design and performance. There some of our most talented students and you know, we know out there. For those of you in this seminar, just because you didn't decide to major in Music, Theatre and dance does not mean that you could not have decided to major in Music, Theatre and dance. There's a lot of folks.
Just like you that that absolutely could have, you know, could have been a music performance major, but they decided they wanted to learn about chemical engineering and so, but that doesn't diminish their abilities or what they can contribute on our stage so.
Just know that you are most welcome and you will certainly not be alone if you decide to take those theater courses.
If you're in a, if you cast in a show, it is a class. You'll take it for credit and you'll get a great and by the same token, if you are asked to krua show, you can also you will also get that sort of as a practicum like as a course with a grade.
On one of the questions that we get most frequently is how to participate on the technical theater side of things.
Jennifer Clary
04:11:47 PM
faculty contacts: https://theatre.colostate.edu/people/
And the best way to do that is to reach out to our SMTP email address and just tell us what you're interested in, or if you if you go look online, you can find our entire faculty are listed at this email address. Theatercolostate.edu backslash people if you are wanting to talk to a shop foreman and your love singing, painting and you want to know how you can participate, that's where you can find those folks.
Or you can email us the SMT and will connect you.
On so here's how you can do a shop work. One as I said, as you can enroll in it as a class and take it that way. The second thing is you can come to work in one of our shops as work study student.
You might be thinking to yourself. Oh, shoot I I don't have work study and that's OK. Don't panic. There are two types of work study. One is one is need based at just involves looking at you know however, your finances. Look on paper and they say, Well this person is eligible for work study.
The 2nd way you can get work study jobs is called Merit based and what that means is that we can make an argument that somehow the job is relevant to your education to what you're trying to do at CSU. So if you want to apply to be a front of House manager for events that we have at the UCA and you're in the hotel and resort management area, it's not hard to justify that and hire you for that kind of work study position and so.
You can, still. We've gotten very good at it, so if you're wanting to work in the shops, we can connect you with the various managers of those shops and they can tell you a little bit more about how that process works the 3rd way you can do it is simply just agree to volunteer, and we also have a lot of folks that do this because that's just the right level of commitment for them and we're happy to know we're happy to have you and we can facilitate that for you as well. Whether we're talking about music, theater, or dance, you'll find that the.
People are kind of the same everywhere. There are similar to the people that you know and and that's sense of family and belonging is is going to carry forward to CSU with. I skipped over one theater slide and I think it was the one about our visit day. So if deep down in your dark dark heart of hearts, you are just thinking Oh Man, I would really like to do that. But I I swear my parents would have a heart attack if I told him I was going to do theater.
We have a visit day that we put together something each semester where where students can come get a sense of the whole program, get tours of our facilities, meet everybody who's involved, and even though you'll be a currency as you student, you're still welcome to participate in that. We always have three or four students each semester who do it, and we almost inevitably have a few that either add theater as a second major or change their major 2 theater. So just know that that exists, and if you're interested that we would love to have you join us when we do our.
A theater visit day as well.
Probably the most difficult one for a non major to participate in just based on schedule and the reason is all of the performances that we do in dance. These are rehearsed in class, in our dance techniques course and so.
It's not a you need to be available during that time. And just like I was talking about with theater, you need to be at the right skill level to be in that particular dance techniques course.
Now we have dance techniques. Courses level one. Anyone can sign up for advanced techniques. Class level one. You don't need to be a dance major, you can just go on in and sign up. That is basically like assuming that you don't know anything about dance. Or maybe it's ballet or modern or whatever it is our dance majors who come in. They start in techniques to.
Uh, or sometimes, uh, if someone's only had experience in ballet, they'll start in techniques to for ballet and techniques, one from modern, which they've never done or they are so great about way they start in techniques three, but still modern one.
The Registrar's office loves loves us. I think we're the only major on campus where students take the same class over and over and over again until they're ready to go to the next one. And that's OK. That's what's expected, but it always seems like it makes their brains hurt a little.
So what you can do is come do those techniques, courses, and if you've been dancing and you think that maybe a level 2 courses more appropriate, all you need to do is contact the instructor of record of that course and they'll tell you if there's room first of all and 2nd, they're going to ask you to come in and just have a little mini audition with them, since all the dancers are going to put on a piece together by the end of the semester, they're looking for everyone in level 2, Level 3, Level 4 to all be at a similar skill level.
Which is which is good 'cause I know if I run one of those courses that I would be playing a tree and it would be a great tree like an epic tree, but a tree nonetheless.
What else you need to know? First week of school for dance?
The technique placements are often looked at during our visit an audition days and this is kind of similar to theater. We have these dates I once a semester where students who are looking at the program come in. They meet everybody involved. They take some master classes. Are dancers put on a performance for them? This is the kind of thing if you're interested in thinking about it. You're welcome to join us for that. For that as well.
Emily Morgan is the director of dance at CSU and nicer woman. There could not be. So if you have any specific questions, especially if they're super Dancey or you want to know is are Capezio shoes better than blocker or whatever? She's a great resource for that kind of thing. Or you can always email SMTD and we will help you connect with the right person as well. I should tell you guys, I don't. I don't work on Commission like I'm not trying to sign you up to be a second major or minor or anything but.
It's a pretty unique opportunity that you're going to have and you will have the chance to do things during your time at CSU that you honestly may not have a chance to do again in your whole life time. And so for a lot of people, especially once they get started and sort of see what's happening, they really want to be a part of that, so just know or tuck in your brain that it's not too late if you want to talk about it or see what that would look like from a credit perspective, that kind of thing. Drop us a line SMT and we can help you figure it out.
These are the courses on the screen right now that are open for non majors. D110 understanding dance that is like the dance.
Equivalent of music appreciation or or introduction to theater. There is a movement component in that course is not just academic, so be prepared to move if you sign up for understanding dance. These are the introductory techniques courses that you see, their jazz, ballet and modern and then we have improvisation and practicum is what you could sign up for if you were actually participating in one of our dance productions in our dance, theater, etc.
Uh, that more or less sort of brings us to the end of the overview. This last slide is an important one. You guys may have heard this along the way. There is no charge to students for any of these events a number of years ago when we were trying to raise the money to finish the University Center for the arts, students at CSU voted through a fee to basically pay for the last $20,000,000 that was needed to finish the University Center for the arts. And that's.
I mean, that's really pretty tremendous. Uh, I'm not sure that the average student gets a lot out of an oboe recital, but they voted it through and we were able to complete the UCA. And ever since then, all of our students have received free tickets to all the different events that we do. There are about 250 of them a year typically, so there's there's a lot of Friday night dates taken care of right there. You got something to do. It doesn't cost a penny, it's going to be interesting going to be something to talk about.
So hopefully we we get to see you over there over there with us. I'm going to open the floor now to any questions that you may have. You can submit them through the chat and my colleague Jennifer will kind of group them together or feed them to me in an order that makes sense.
And we will tackle whatever questions that you may have.
This part always a little hard for me because a lot of times when I'm meeting with students like this, you know it's zoom so I can see everybody and I can see people nodding. Or I can see people even looking confused at what I'm saying is making sense, but in this format I don't see anything. I just see my own screen, so it's it's a little like being alone in a giant room sometimes.
So have pity on me and ask me a question.
Even if you know the answer will give me, it'll give me something to say.
I can keep this up all day, I'll just look right into the camera.
Ally Procopio
04:21:36 PM
How many choral concerts are there in any given year? Does one group perform more than any of the others?
I'm just looking at this picture now. I'm noticing that every single person's mouth is open, which makes sense because they're singing.
Oh, there's a question from alie alie. Thank you so much. You are a merciful human being. Thank you for asking a question.
How many coral concerts are there in any given year and just one group perform more than any of the others?
Each group usually has at least one concert per semester.
Um and more. Often two concerts per semester. There is not any group that particularly performs more than any other. The exception to that being in certain semesters. It's not. It's not going to be this semester because you know you can barely travel to the mailbox these days, but we usually sending ensembles out on tour.
In a typical year of the University, spends 35 or $40,000. I'm sending our students out on tour to various places, so if it's that particular semester that a group has been chosen to go someplace, you might perform quite a bit more than that. The good news is from managing your life perspective, everyone of these courses, if you sign up farm, is going to give you a syllabus, and in that syllabus is going to be a list of all the dates that you need to be available to take that course.
So you will know from the very first day if I do chamber singers. These are the dates that I need to be free and available.
They will not spring on you at the last minute. Hey everyone, next Tuesday we all gotta be down to Pizza Hut for a little concert. And if you can't be there, you know you're going to lose a letter grade or something. That kind of stuff doesn't happen at the University level. It's a contract, and it's at from the very first day. Now are things tend to be at night on there aren't too many other academic departments on campus that are doing things in the evenings. The possible exception being maybe astronomy.
Charlotte George
04:23:41 PM
Are there piano practice rooms?
04:23:55 PM
How likely is it that there will be live performances this year? Sorry if you've already answered this!
You will find that if you are trying to participate in arts things and you have some kind of a conflict with something in another course, that if you address it at the beginning of the semester when you're comparing dates on, you will find people are very, very accommodating.
And we can find a way for you to make it up, or your other professor or something.
When people aren't accommodating is when you come to them two days before the thing that you're supposed to be at and say just kidding, you know we're charting the black hole tomorrow night in astronomy, and I have to be there.
That's when, not surprisingly, the director will be a little cranky. So the bottom line is if you can manage your own time and manage your life, you're not going to have a problem participating in these arts things, but it's something to watch for because we do have set times and it's collaborative. We depend on each other to show up and be there.
Dylan Stahl
04:24:42 PM
What is the current thinking on concerts/shows, etc? I mean, will there be audiences, live performances?
Charlottes asking are there piano practice rooms and the answer is yes and we have about 40 practice rooms at the UCA. They all have pianos, chairs, stands and mirrors in them.
There are certain rooms that are designated as piano rooms that have slightly nicer pianos in them.
Keycard access to the practice rooms is for music majors and minors or any student who is enrolled in a music course. So if you're enrolled in Symphonic Band, you are going to have access to the practice rooms to practice your clarinet or flute or whatever the case might be, so you don't necessarily have to be a music major and minor to have that you just have to be enrolled in a music class.
Jennifer Clary
04:25:26 PM
Here is a link to information about rehearsals, performances, and the facility in regard to COVID: https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Colorado-State-University---School-of-Music--Theatre--and-Dance-Fall-2020-Update.html?soid=1101500019577&aid=-DxxUqTmr5w
It looks like there's another question, although oddly I can't see who it's from and less. It's from Charlotte again.
On how likely is it that there will be live performances this year? Sorry if I've already answered this, I have not answered it, so please don't be sorry and two.
Uh, the spaces. Every space has been audited for what is a health conscious capacity for the room based on social distancing based on how far the performers are from each other and onstage. But you know, it's a situation where are 500C concert Hall? You know we're going to be able to have like 70 people in there for a performance, so it's definitely going to be different. My understanding is there is every intent to have some live performances.
But just like you guys, we're rolling with the punches and and you know, just trying to adapt as things come down from the state and federal government on what we can and can't do. But please do know that every decision and I wish I would get every decision has been made with the health of the students in mind. So people are going to be wearing masks. There's going to be social distancing, were not.
Sacrifice, um, protecting your health to still create art, and in fact we have some faculty who are really chomping at the bit to do some quite creative stuff this semester, so it's going to be interesting. You guys are going to be on the ride with us, but just know that you have a whole team of very talented and very motivated people who are held at doing quality work and they're not going to let you know I'm not going to let a little virus.
Prevent them from from creating something great an something unusual. It may not come around again.
Lanna Bruce
04:27:54 PM
Could someone with no dance experience take a Ballet 1 or Modern 1 class?
My colleague Jennifer has posted a link a few days ago. The director of the School of Music, Theatre and dance. His name is Dan Gobel. He put out an email to all of our majors and minors, just kind of explaining where we're at with rehearsals and how that stuff is going to work so far. So if you're interested, please click on that link and you can read that note and it will. It will give you some more information as far as specifics and.
And exactly what the protocols are going to be for different things.
Lanna Bruce
04:28:16 PM
Would it be difficult to participate in both theatre productions/classes and the marching band?
Looks like Lana Bruce says. Could someone with no dance experience take a ballet one or a modern one class? And the answer is yes, you don't. You don't even need to audition to sign up for them on if there's space in the course at this point, you know everybody is registered. You can go ahead and sign up.
You know it. It's the kind of thing where.
You know it is a skill and it is physically demanding, so it may. It may come to light along the way that you know like me. You can only move your wrist 30 degrees instead of the normal 180 or something like that, but generally speaking there's no barriers to taking those opening techniques courses and their set up for students that haven't had dance training before.
In law asked again, would it be difficult to participate in both theater productions classes and the marching band?
Difficult is such a subjective term generally know. I mean marching band meets from four to six Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays. In the fall semester.
Theater productions tend to rehearse in the evenings from like 7 to 10. Probably what you guys are used to now.
So that part is manageable. The part that gets tricky is performances for the marching band. Obviously you cannot have missing people when you're doing a show at a football game on ESPN.
And same thing for a theater performance like it's just no good to have a cast member out. That's the situation where you're back to looking at that syllabus like they're going to provide you all the dates they're going to say these are the performances. These are the mandatory rehearsals, technique, etc. Same thing for marching bands. These are these are performance States and that's going to be known from the get from the get go.
So it's something to just be aware of, uh, but I wouldn't say that it's particularly difficult.
Ally Procopio
04:29:56 PM
For the choirs that have a class, do they have extra rehearsals outside of class?
You guys are good questions. It's so late I I'm not sure we've done one of these at 4:00 o'clock before, maybe once, but I always, I always think by that time that you probably been through Seven of these and and are just some version of like zoom, zombies, information, comma, natural. But if there is such a thing as sensing engagement, I do sense it. Al is asking for the choirs.
That have a class. Do they have extra rehearsals outside of class? I'm generally not generally not. They're going to meet at a set time.
Jennifer Clary
04:30:42 PM
Hi Lanna, since there are theatre productions in the spring it might be more practical to do marching band in the fall and audition for the spring productions.
However, at this level you are going to be expected to practice your music outside of class, so it's not necessarily a formal rehearsal, but you're going to be given music, and the expectation is that you're going to find some time to work on it and not just work on it.
Yeah, you you can't put Beethoven 9 together in 50 minutes. Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays. Like music just doesn't work like that. So do you know that you are going to have to perhaps put more time into it then you have been in high school? Just depends on your program. I don't know for sure.
But also know that the results and the rewards of it are are going to be great.
No, Jennifer's offering gap. That's a. That's a good suggestion.
Marching band in the fall and I'm just in first bring production.
We're always doing at least one musical in the theater season. Sometimes the opera program also does a musical. They tend to pick things that are a little heavier with more rest. Sit in them, you know.
Stuff like Les Misérables or Miss Saigon, or any Steven song I'm show. So yes, there are definitely opportunities to do musical theater as well. If that is something that is close to your heart.
Jennifer Clary
04:32:14 PM
Tom is great at musical theatre...fun fact!
Lanna Bruce
04:32:19 PM
Awesome, thank you!
So we're coming up on 4:30 or were out there. So if any guys need to bail and go to another session or you know get to work or whatever the case might be, your certainly fine to do that. I will stay here and continue answering questions as long as you guys are asking him, but we're not monitoring ozone so left at 4:30. Two were never casting them Haha.
Jennifer Clary
04:32:39 PM
SMTD@colostate.edu :)
Nothing like that. And if you think of something later, this isn't your last opportunity to ask a question. Send us a note to smtd@colostate.edu and we will help you figure out whatever your question is and get you to the place that you were trying to go.
Tom is great at musical theater fun fact.
Janet Jennifer owes me a lot of money and she thinks if she says these nice things that I'm going to forget but you know it doesn't. It doesn't work like that.
Anything else that's on anybody's mind?
I think guys are going to have a lot of fun.
And I'm I'm real. I'm real proud of CSU I'm I'm glad that as a recruiter.
That I get to do these sessions and tell you that you can do everything because I am not.
I'm not lying when I tell you there are schools out there that you would be in this call and they would be saying I'm sorry we only cast theater majors. Oh, I'm sorry you can't take any dance classes unless you're a dance major. CSU is kind of unique in that regard. And like I said, we know that that students have a lot to contribute, even if they're not a music major minor and we are just selfishly, we want to harness. We want to harness all of your talents and include them in the collective good so that we can.
Ally Procopio
04:33:59 PM
if I’m planning on double majoring (and maybe also minoring) do you think I will have time in my schedule for performing arts classes?
Produce the best art possible.
Ali has a question, if I'm planning on double majoring and maybe also minoring, do you think I'll have time in my schedule for performing arts classes?
Hum, I I do. I do think that, uhm, it tends to be the case. You you guys might be surprised. We have about 225 music majors and of the music majors we have about 85 double majors theater majors. We have about 125 and we have almost half that are double majoring. Dance is about 50, about 50 majors and about I think last time 18 or 19 are double major. So it's pretty common.
Now those are our majors doing stuff. When I was going to say is, you would be surprised at some of their majors. Engineering for music is the most common major to be paired with music.
And part of the reason is and I mean I'm not trying to, you know, be sycophantically you guys but.
This doesn't feel like work the same way that writing a paper or digging a swimming pool does. It's it's difficult, and it takes a lot of time.
But you know it, it feeds your soul in in a way that nothing else really does, and so a lot of students. and I mean this quite emphatically. Find that that participating with the school music theater dance is a force that grounds them and kind of keeps them connected to who they really are.
So it is doable. Uhm, and and what I would encourage you to do is go ahead and try it. I don't. I don't know if they went over this with you when you.
Should your registration or anywhere along the way but universities have what's called the W drop date and it's basically a date up until in that it's always like October 27th or something up until that date you can withdraw from the course and it does not count against your GPA. It records on your transcript that you withdrew from it, but you know that could be for any reason you move to another country or it was too many credits or you change your major and the course wasn't needed anymore.
So it doesn't count against your GPA and you don't. You don't get a great, it just says that you were in it for awhile and then you left. So when I would encourage you to do is, go ahead and try it. And if you find that it's overwhelming or that you're feeling stretched.
It's OK to drop the course and you know cut down your load, but what you can't do is add it late, and so I always encourage everyone with this art stuff to go ahead and try it and see if it's for you knowing that you can walk away from it at any point you know with no no negative consequences.
Is there pretty good down to 55 hardcore people left in the session?
Two of them are probably me.
Do you have anymore questions?
Watching scanning scanning.
04:37:43 PM
No more questions - thanks so much!
OK, well as I said, it's not your last chance. SMT Dia Colostate Value Jennifers anticipating me she knows she knows what I'm going to say. It's there in the it's there in the notes just reach out to us and we'll help you try to find out whatever you're looking for. A lot of people situations are unique and you know we were happy to talk to you. And if you're thinking about you know well maybe I want to look into a major or minor or something we can talk to you about that too.
We don't work on Commission. It's not a hard sell, um.
Jennifer Clary
04:37:51 PM
Thank you
Jennifer Clary
04:38:04 PM
It was lovely chatting with you all!
It's an awesome chance though, to do some things that you might never again get a chance to at a level of quality that you're going to be really proud of. So it was my pleasure to spend some time with you all this afternoon. Call, call or email us if you need and friends. Take care of yourselves out there and will see you soon.
Bye for now Everybody Ta ta.
Lanna Bruce
04:38:16 PM
Thank you!
Oh no, and you can never find the close button after you say goodbye.