Manhattan School for Advanced Wizardry
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==Staff== | ==Staff== |
Revision as of 10:27, 28 September 2011
BbdAA4 Yeah !... life is like riding a bicycle. You will not fall unless you stop pedaling!!...
Contents |
Staff
Administration
President: Cornelia Bowers - Mastigos
Vice President: David Hart - Thyrsus
Dean of Students: Nicole Thompson - Acanthus
Teachers
At MSAW, students have access to various tutors for the ten separate Arcana. The teachers listed below are all Masters of their respective Arcanum, and are often at least Disciples in their other ruling Arcanum.
Death: Jerome 'Duster' Keating - Moros
Fate: Priscilla 'Calliope' Webber - Acanthus
Forces: Katherine 'Starfire' Archer - Obrimos
Life: Theresa 'Lucie' Harris - Thyrsus
Matter: Stephen 'Elric' Armstrong - Moros
Mind: Samuel 'Morpheus' Rhodes - Mastigos
Prime: Vincent 'Omega' Kincaid - Obrimos
Space: Caroline 'Farpoint' Baines - Mastigos
Spirit: Nathanial 'Umbra' Johnson - Thyrsus
Time: Jessica 'Amrita' Powers - Acanthus
Curriculum
Magical Studies
General classes include, but are not limited to:
- Advanced Magical Theory
- Defensive Magics
- History of American Magic
- History of the Dark Arts
- International Affairs
- Magical Runes
- Supernatural Creatures (seminars on various topics, including vampires, werewolves and the like)
A number of classes geared toward particular Arcana are also available:
- Death: The Twilight of the Big Apple; Ghostly Etiquette
- Fate: Oaths and Oath-breakers; Luck: A Lady or A Tramp?
- Forces: Elemental Magics; Arcane Physics; Applications of Magic in Electronics
- Life: Medicine and Magic; Organic Transfiguration; Shaping the Body
- Matter: Advanced Metallurgy; Alchemy; Magic and the Industrial Arts
- Mind: Dreamscapes and the Astral Plane; Perception and Thought
- Prime: Study of Magical Artifacts; Places of Power
- Space: Apparition; Wards and Bans
- Spirit: Spirit Etiquette; Shadow Navigation
- Time: Watching the Flow of Time; Notable Time Paradoxes of the 20th Century
Mundane Studies
Thanks to a scholarship set up by the Department of Magical Education, students have the opportunity to earn a Bachelor's Degree at any of the mundane universities in New York City. Students are required to take language courses during their entire stay at MSAW. The courses may be taken either on MSAW's campus or at one of the mundane universities; French, Spanish, Italian, German, Russian, Japanese, Chinese, Greek and Latin are offered on campus.
Housing
Freshmen and sophmores are required to live in one of the two dorms on campus, which are segregated by gender; Cowden Hall (girls) or Barrymore Hall (boys). Each building is five stories tall, with a number of rooms on each floor. Most rooms hold two students; juniors and seniors who stay on campus are given priority for the single rooms.
Juniors and seniors have the option of living off campus if they so choose. The school owns a building in Greenwich Village which acts as an off-campus dorm of sorts. Each apartment is 2B/1B and has a small kitchen attached to a living room/study. They may also rent their own apartment if they wish; the school offers a small stipend to those who do.
The International Wizarding Exchange Program
The IWEP was the brainchild of Eliza Langdon, an Acanthus who was Dean of Students at MSAW (then the Manhattan Academy for Progressive Magics) from 1935 to 1960. A graduate of the school, Eliza was always annoyed that her alma mater was perpetually in the shadow of the older and more prestigious Weston Academy of Thamaturgical Practices. As she watched the United Nations move from a concept to a reality, though, she was struck with an idea: namely, to create a program where wizards and witches from around the world could come together and experience both the magical and Muggle cultures of other countries.
Although somewhat hesitant at first, wizards from other countries soon came flocking to the halls of the school. Some were older mages who came to touch up on skills that had become rusty after leaving their respective academies. Others were freshly-graduated wizards who wanted to see what exactly the American schooling system can teach them before settling down and going to work in their home countries. Although a great number of countries take part in the program, one foreign academy in particular sends the largest amount of students to the program; this, of course, is the UK's Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. On average, at least a third of the students in the program hail from the British Isles.
Students who are accepted into the program are enrolled for two years; after that point, students reapply every year. Exchange students are free to choose whatever classes they wish to take, much like the normal students at the university. Most of the students live on campus, although some of the more adventurous students live off-campus with an American witch or wizard who helps to show them the ropes.