Forging a language of honors
While she arrived with many passions, Crist鈥檚 time at UW-Eau Claire has helped her develop wider curiosities and a defined academic plan. She knew she had a passion for words and enjoyed the nuance of studying English, but she was uncertain about its efficacy as a career.
鈥淚 was concerned about practicality,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 always what I鈥檝e loved.鈥
Crist used that love of language to broaden her professional pathways. She will graduate in Spring 2027 not merely with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in English, but with a linguistics emphasis, too, alongside German and history minors and a teaching English as a foreign language (TEFL) certificate.
鈥淚've always loved history,鈥 she explains. 鈥淎nd then German 鈥 I just wanted to take German. It was recommended to me. And, of course, I鈥檓 a languages person.鈥
When she arrived at UW-Eau Claire, Crist was also invited to join the Cosby Honors College. Crist found her footing quickly in honors, where she used her linguistic savvy to pick up other vocabularies, dabbling in a wide variety of special topics and unique honors courses.
鈥淎 lot of the things that I've loved here have come out of honors,鈥 she recalls.
Despite an already extensive academic plan, Crist has thrived as an honors college student. In fact, university honors has helped her make crucial interdisciplinary connections from the very beginning.
鈥淭he first honors course I took here was run by Dr. [Kaishan] Kong, who runs the TEFL program,鈥 she says, a course that inspired her to pursue a TEFL certificate.
Under Kong, the TEFL program equips students with new ways to think about language acquisition, intercultural teaching methods and teaching English internationally.