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english regents january 2023 essay

Regents Text-Analysis Response (Task 3)

The New York State English Regents which is taken in 11th grade is composed of three tasks: Reading Comprehension (Task 1), Argument Essay (Task 2), and Text-Analysis Response (Task 3).  The following will help you with the text-analysis response.

Text-Analysis Response Directions on the NYS Regents :

Your Task : Closely read the text provided on pages — and  — and write a well-developed, text-based response of two to three paragraphs. In your response, identify a central idea in the text and analyze how the author’s use of one writing strategy (literary element or literary technique or rhetorical device) develops this central idea. Use strong and thorough evidence from the text to support your analysis. Do not simply summarize the text. You may use the margins to take notes as you read and scrap paper to plan your response. Write your response in the spaces provided on pages 7 through 9 of your essay booklet.

Guidelines :

Be sure to:

• Identify a central idea in the text

• Analyze how the author’s use of one writing strategy (literary element or literary technique or rhetorical device) develops this central idea. Examples include: characterization, conflict, denotation/connotation, metaphor, simile, irony, language use, point-of-view, setting, structure, symbolism, theme, tone, etc.

• Use strong and thorough evidence from the text to support your analysis

• Organize your ideas in a cohesive and coherent manner

• Maintain a formal style of writing

• Follow the conventions of standard written English

Regents text analysis response outline and sample  As given out in class, an outline and a sample for the Regents text analysis response

Regents Text Analysis Rubric

Helpful Websites for studying :

Literary Elements  — definitions and explanations

Literary Elements Quizlet

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If you're in middle school or high school in New York State, chances are that you've heard of the NYSED Regents exams. In fact, all NY public high school students have to take (and pass) a certain number of these exams to graduate from high school.

In this article, we'll discuss exactly what the Regents are and which Regents you'll need to take.  We'll also give you tips on how to prep for the Regents as well as the Regents testing schedule for 2023.

feature image credit: Nicolas Raymond /Used under CC BY 2.0

What Are the NYSED Regents Exams?

The New York State Education Department (NYSED) Regents exams are subject-based tests generally taken at the end of the school year in June (although there are also August and January test dates for makeups/mid-year exams). By subject-based, we mean that you aren't just tested on broad categories like "Math" or "Science"—instead, you'll take Regents in specific subjects, like Algebra 1, Chemistry, US History & Government, and so on.

Currently, there are ten Regents exams that most students will encounter:

  • English Language Arts
  • Global History & Geography
  • US History & Government
  • Earth Science
  • Living Environment (Bio)

Each Regents exam is administered over the course of three hours in a single day (rest in peace 2011, six-hours-over-two-days English Regents exam; you will not be missed).

Depending on the subject, Regents exams will include multiple-choice questions and short-answer questions or essay responses (including document-based questions ). Based on your performance, you'll receive a scaled score from 1-100 on each test.

The four Science Regents exams (Earth Science, Living Environment, Chemistry, and Physics) also include separately-scheduled lab practicals ; you can read more about these in our articles about the Earth Science , Living Environment , and Chemistry Regents .

Because there are multiple subject-based tests that you'll have to take, the Regents aren't exactly considered a high school exit examination , which tend to be more Math/English Language Arts-focused.

However, you will still have to take at least five Regents exams (and in many cases, eight tests) across grades 9-12 to get your NY high school diploma —if you're in public school, that is. If you go to private school, you're in luck—the Regents are only mandatory for students attending public school in New York.

Now that you have a better idea of what the Regents are, we'll move on to discussing how many Regents exams you have to take.

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How Many Regents Do You Need to Take?

The requirements for which and how many NYS Regents exams you need to graduate (and how well you need to do on the exams) depend on what kind of diploma you'll be graduating with.

There are three main categories of Regents diploma: regular Regents diplomas , Regents with Advanced Designation diplomas , and diplomas for students with special circumstances (e.g., English language learners, students with IEPs).

Here's a brief summary of the differences between the three categories and how many Regents you need to pass to graduate with each diploma type:

Source: NYSED.gov . For the final word on what requirements you need to meet, refer to the official NYSED Regents guidelines here .

The majority of NY public school students will graduate with either a regular Regents diploma or a Regents with Advanced Designation diploma. We'll go through the testing requirements for those two categories in greater detail next.

Regents Diploma Requirements

Unless you have an IEP or are an English language learner, you need to meet the Regents diploma requirements to graduate high school.

You'll need to pass at least four Regents exams (get a 65 or higher) to get this Regents diploma:

  • One math Regents (Algebra 1, Algebra 2, or Geometry)
  • One science Regents (Earth Science, Living Environment, Chemistry, or Physics)
  • One social studies Regents (Global History or US History)
  • The English Language Arts Regents

In addition to these four tests, you must choose one of the following six Pathway options :

  • Pass another math, science, or social studies Regents
  • Pass a NYSED-approved English assessment (in a different course; can't overlap with ELA)
  • Pass a NYSED-approved assessment in a language other than English
  • Pass a NYSED-approved arts assessment
  • Complete an NYSED-approved Career and Technical Education (CTE) program and pass a three-part assessment
  • Complete requirements for the Career Development Occupational Studies Credential (CDOS)

Unless you choose one of the alternate Pathway options, this means that you'll need to take five Regents exams (and get a 65 or above on each) to graduate.

If you just miss the cutoff on one of your tests (scoring a 60-64), you can appeal to your district to still allow you to graduate; if you score lower than that, or if you score below 65 on multiple tests, however, you'll need to either re-take the test(s) and pass or take another Regents and pass.

If you're looking to challenge yourself, you can aim for a Regents with Honors diploma; the only difference is that instead of only needing a 65 or above, you need to have an average of 90 or above across all your Regents (whether you take four or five).

There isn't really a material advantage to your college applications to getting a Regents with Honors diploma (except possibly if you're applying to SUNY or CUNY colleges), but if your teachers count your Regents exam grade as part of your course grade, it's to your benefit to do well on the Regents you take. (If I recall correctly, I believe that for some of my high school classes, our Regents grades were counted as two test scores when calculating our grades in the final quarter of the year.)

Regents With Advanced Designation Requirements

The requirements for the Regents with Advanced Designation diploma include everything you need to do for the Regents Diploma plus passing three additional Regents exams, for a total of seven or eight Regents exams .

As with getting a Regents with Honors diploma, unless you're applying to a SUNY or CUNY college which uses your Regents diploma level as a placement or admissions criteria, there's no real benefit in specifically aiming for a Regents with Advanced Designation diploma.

However, if you're taking a rigorous high school course load (honors classes, APs/IBs), you will likely end up qualifying for the Regents with Advanced Designation diploma as a byproduct of your schedule if your school requires Regents to be taken at the end of the year for a particular course.

For example, as an eighth-grader I took Regents Earth Science, which was the honors science class for that grade (vs. regular Earth Science), and so had to take the Regents at the end of the year (because that's what my school required). For other classes, the Regents exams were not only required at the end of the year, but were part of our grades for the final quarter of the year, so it behooved us to try to do well on them.

The "traditional" Regents with Advanced Designation path requires you to pass eight Regents exams :

  • Three math (Algebra 1, Algebra 2, and Geometry)
  • Two science (one physical, one life: Living Environment, Earth Science, Chemistry, or Physics)
  • One social studies (Global History & Geography and US History & Government)
  • One English Language Arts
  • One Pathway

Alternatively, you can swap out any of the Regents exams listed above for another state-approved alternative assessment.

In addition to getting a Regents with Advanced Designation diploma, you can potentially get additional laudations through these three options:

  • Mastery in Math : meet all Advanced Designation requirements and score an 85 or above on each Regents math test.
  • Mastery in Science : meet all Advanced Designation requirements and score an 85 or above on each of three Regents science tests taken.
  • Honors : meet all Advanced Designation requirements and score an average of 90 or above across all Regents exams taken.

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Regents Schedule, 2023

Below, we've created tables with the Regents schedule for January 2023, June 2023, and August 2023. We'll update it if test times and dates change.

One important note before jumping to the Regents schedule: All Regents exams have admission deadlines, aka the latest time you can show up to take the test and still be allowed in. These deadlines are 45 minutes after the time the test administration starts.

For example, let's say you sleep in past your alarm for your 9:15 am English Language Arts exam (not that I know anyone who did this). As long as you show up and are admitted to the testing room by 10:00 am, you can still take the test (although you'll still only have until 12:15 pm to finish).

January 2023

Source: NYSED.gov

Admission deadline : 10 am for morning tests; 2 pm for afternoon tests. If you arrive at the classroom/wherever your test is being held after this time, you will not be permitted to enter and take the test.

Sources: NYSED.gov

Admission deadline : 10:00 am for morning tests; 2:00 pm for afternoon tests. If you arrive at the classroom/wherever your test is being held after this time, you will not be permitted to enter and take the test.

August 2023

Admission deadline: 9:15 am for morning tests; 1:15 pm for afternoon tests. If you arrive at the classroom/wherever your test is being held after this time, you will not be permitted to enter and take the test.

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Regents Prep Tips

On our blog, we've written several other articles that include specific tips for different Regents tests, including:

However, we also have a few general Regents prep tips that are applicable to studying for any Regents exam.

#1: Spread Out Your Studying

Because Regents exams cover a whole year's material (or in the case of Global History, two years'), cramming doesn't work super well , particularly if you're taking multiple Regents exams (plus an AP or two).

Start reviewing your material at least two weeks before the test. You don't have to study for hours every night, but giving yourself enough lead time before the test means you'll have more flexibility in the amount of time you spend on each unit. For instance, you might find that you only need to spend a day reviewing US History up through the Civil War, but need to spend a week on Reconstruction.

Spreading out your studying also means you'll be sleeping in between studying, which will help cement your memory of all that information you're reading and quizzing yourself on. Speaking of which...

#2: Get Sleep the Night Before the Regents

Remember that fun, not-at-all-something-that-happened thing I mentioned in the scheduling section about sleeping through the Regents? Yeah. While I didn't do this, I know people who did, and rushing to get to school before the deadline and then rushing through the test is not super conducive to scoring well.

Even if you're someone who wakes up at the same time every day without an alarm, though, getting a good night's rest leading up to a test will magnify the results of your studying . Personally, I've found that getting a good night's sleep two days before the test is also critical, but you may find your body works differently.

#3: Match Regents to Your AP Exams

As a NY public school student, Regents are an inescapable fact of life, but you can use them to your advantage.

If you're thinking about applying to any schools that require or recommend AP Exams, it's really helpful to take them at the same time you're taking a Regents on the same subject. This can help you get AP exams out of the way early on in high school, leaving you more time to focus on the regular SAT/ACT and college apps in junior and senior year.

Plus, the overlap in material between the Regents and other tests means that you often need to just study once, thoroughly (rather than having to study multiple times for each test). For example, you could self-study for the AP World history exam and take that the same time you take the Global History Regents in 10th grade, and earn some college credit to boot!

The only thing to be cautious of is overloading yourself , particularly if you have final exams in addition to the Regents in a particular subject. Speaking as someone who took the US History Regents, US History AP, and US History SAT Subject Test all within a month of each other at the end of junior year, burnout can be a very real thing.

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What's Next?

Are you taking the APs as well as the NYSED Regents? Make sure your schedule doesn't get snarled by comparing Regents test dates with upcoming AP dates .

NYSED might not care if you get an A or a C as long as you pass the New York State Regents, but colleges certainly do. Learn what a good GPA is for college and how to convert your GPA to a 4.0 here .

Thinking about what to do this summer after the NYSED Regents? Read through our guides on what high school students should do over the summer (besides summer assignments), including pre-college summer programs , SAT/ACT boot camp , or getting a job .

Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points or your ACT score by 4 points? We've written a guide for each test about the top 5 strategies you must be using to have a shot at improving your score. Download it for free now:

Get eBook: 5 Tips for 160+ Points

Laura graduated magna cum laude from Wellesley College with a BA in Music and Psychology, and earned a Master's degree in Composition from the Longy School of Music of Bard College. She scored 99 percentile scores on the SAT and GRE and loves advising students on how to excel in high school.

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2024 Dr. Hope Babette Tang Humanism in Healthcare Essay Contest

The 2024 Dr. Hope Babette Tang Humanism in Healthcare Essay Contest in now open! Medical and nursing students are invited to submit an essay that illustrates an experience of humanistic care to the 25th annual Dr. Hope Babette Tang Humanism in Healthcare Essay Contest .

Using the following quote, reflect on an experience in any healthcare setting where you or another healthcare team member worked to put the person at the center of care: “The practice of medicine is an art, not a trade; a calling, not a business; a calling in which your heart will be exercised equally with your head.” — William Osler

Six winners (three medical students and three nursing students) will receive a monetary award ($1,000 for first place, $500 for second place, and $250 for third place). Their essays will be published in Academic Medicine, the journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, and The Journal of Professional Nursing, of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.

Deadline: Wednesday, March 13, 11:59pm P.T. (March 14, 1:59am CST)

About Dr. Hope Babette Tang

The essay contest is named in honor of Hope Babette Tang, MD, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center from 1992 until her death in 1998. Her last position was Pediatric Medical Director of the hospital’s HIV clinic. Dr. Tang’s devotion and generosity to the care of the children and infants with HIV infection in New York City was an inspiration to her colleagues and her students. Her approach to medicine combined a boundless enthusiasm for her work, intellectual rigor, and deep compassion for her patients. In sum, Dr. Tang was an exemplar of humanistic care, and we continue to hear stories to this day about her grace, kindness, and humility.

Essay Contest Details

Participants in the Dr. Hope Babette Tang Humanism in Healthcare Essay Contest engage in a reflective writing exercise to describe an experience where they or a team member worked to ensure that humanism was at the core of care. Submissions that touch upon students’ personal experiences of humanistic care or stories of family and friends will also be accepted. Essays should be 1,000 words or fewer.

Judges will be looking for essays that connect strongly to the Gold Foundation’s mission of humanism in healthcare for all. Winning essays will illuminate how the human connection can make a meaningful difference in care.

The essay contest is open to medical students at accredited schools of medicine in the U.S. and Canada, and nursing students at AACN member schools. Students at international medical schools that have a Gold Humanism Honor Society (GHHS) chapter are also eligible. For more information on contest rules and eligibility, please visit our website .

This post was authored by Academic Affairs on 02/12/2024.

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Global Learning Newsletter – February 2024

  • by Blake Cooper
  • February 13, 2024

Graphic with text: UC Davis Global Learning Conference

UC Davis Global Learning Conference—Registration Now Open

​​​​​​​April 6 . Are you interested in developing your global leadership skills? Do you have experience navigating intercultural spaces in the U.S. or abroad? Are you passionate about solving global challenges? Register . Deadline: March 15 .

Study Abroad

Program spotlight: building sustainable water treatment systems (new).

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Based in Monterrey, Mexico, students will work to address global sustainable development goals through the design of a holistic water treatment system in a historically under-resourced community. Earn 8 units in Civil and Environmental Engineering in 4 weeks. Create an account to start your enrollment.

UC Davis Summer Abroad Internships—Deadline February 15

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​There is still time to enroll in an internship program this summer! Programs fill on a first-completed, first-reserved basis. Financial aid applies and scholarships are available. To start your enrollment, create an account today.

UC Davis Study Abroad Awards

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Study Abroad Award applications are open for UC Davis students participating in summer and fall 2024 programs. Awards are $500–$2,000. Watch our recent Award Writing Workshop to learn how to improve your chances of winning an award.

University of California Education Abroad Program (UCEAP)

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​2024-25 UCEAP program enrollment is now open. Application open dates and deadlines vary by program, beginning in winter quarter. UCEAP programs offer UC credit and financial aid. Program options include immersion, special focus, language and culture, and internships. Find a program .

Gilman International Scholarship Program

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​The Gilman Scholarship provides up to $5,000 for Federal Pell Grant recipients to participate in study abroad and internship programs. Learn about the eligibility requirements, application process and how to become a competitive candidate. Info Session : February 21. Essay Review Drop-In Hours : February 29.

Global Leadership, Internships, and Research

Latinx student leadership summit.

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) and Google will co-host a Latinx Student Leadership Summit at the Google offices in Chicago, Illinois, April 19–21. Undergraduate student leaders with a passion for technology and an interest in developing their leadership skills are encouraged to apply. Deadline: February 14 .

HACU National Internship Program—Extended Deadline

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​June–August . Looking for a paid internship this summer? The HACU internship program is open to all students. Apply for an internship with one of HACU’s partners. Financial support is available for housing and travel. Virtual and in-person opportunities are available in all fields. Extended Deadline: February 16 .

UC Davis Widening Circles—Global Social Impact Program

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ June 24–August 23 . Explore pathways for learning and acting with purpose and humility in the face of global inequality and injustice. Program includes an online curriculum, guidance from mentors, peer-to-peer learning and digital storytelling. Funding and travel awards available for UC Davis undergraduate and graduate students. Register for free .

UC Davis Undergraduate Research, Scholarship and Creative Activities Conference

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​April 26–27 . This conference is designed to acquaint undergraduate students with the process and academic rigors of presenting research in a scholarly manner and an affirming environment. Submit a presentation proposal for your global research! Register to present . Final Deadline: February 19 .

Universitas 21 Global Citizens Program

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​March 11–29 . Free for UC Davis undergraduate and graduate students, this online leadership program gives students the opportunity to develop skills needed to thrive in the 21st century while tackling the world’s pressing problems outlined in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Apply . Deadline: February 21 .

APRU SDG Education for Global Citizenship 2024 Program

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ June 1–August 30 . The 2024 APRU SDG Education for Global Citizenship program offers an intercultural, transdisciplinary, and interactive hybrid program for undergraduate and master’s students under the umbrella theme of “Shaping the Future of Health & Wellbeing.” Deadline: March 1 .

English and Spanish Language Partners: Talk2Me Program

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​April 2–May 28 . This program, organized by Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, offers students the opportunity to improve their English and Spanish skills through weekly one-hour conversations. Participants must have a basic understanding of their partner's language for active engagement. Application . Deadline: March 3 .

Global Affairs Career Enhancement Certificate: Exploring DEI to Contribute to an Inclusive Workplace

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This series is open to graduate students and postdocs. Participants will be provided insights from late-career professionals on how to improve leadership skills—with emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion—for success in intercultural work environments. Register . Deadline: March 22 .

Global Affairs UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) Internship

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​The Global Affairs UN SDGs Internship provides an opportunity during spring quarter 2024 for UC Davis undergraduate students to actively contribute to campus engagement on the SDGs, gaining knowledge of organizational strategy, campus and external coordination, and communications and analytical skills to support this global agenda. Deadline: April 5 .

International House Davis English Practice Partner Volunteer

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Join International House Davis English Practice Partners program. Seeking local native English speakers to empower international learners in improving conversational skills. Volunteers are paired for weekly one-hour English conversations at flexible locations. Be a part of meaningful language exchange! Volunteer Sign-Up .

Competitions, Challenges, and Funding

One-year scholarship for japanese studies.

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​The Japanese Government’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology is offering one-year scholarships to study in Japan for undergrads majoring in Japanese language, affairs or culture. This fully-funded scholarship covers academic fees, a monthly stipend and roundtrip airfare. Deadline: February 15 .

Toshizo Watanabe Study Abroad Scholarship Program

This scholarship provides financial assistance to American undergraduate or graduate students for a semester or year-long study abroad program in Japan. Applicants must be in good standing and will participate in a credit-bearing program. Deadline: February 19 .

Global Aggies Award for LGBTQIA+ Rights

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This award, up to $2,500, supports UC Davis undergraduate, graduate and professional students with global learning and engagement regarding the issues that LGBTQIA+ communities and individuals face around the world. The grant supports research or projects that advance the rights and/or well-being of LGBTQIA+ people globally. Deadline: February 21 .

UC Davis Big Bang! Business Competition

This competition provides opportunities for all students to pitch their ideas for innovative ventures, work on a team to develop those ideas and compete for cash prizes. Sign up . Deadline: February 26 .

Free STEM Space Collaboration Project

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Apply for A Space Collaboration! 16 American and Russian STEM students (ages 18-24) will explore ways their skills and interests can be applied to various careers involving space—virtually and in Washington D.C.; all expenses paid. Deadline: March 3 .

American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Leading Edge Fellowships

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This fellowship places recent humanities and interpretive social sciences Ph.D.s with nonprofit organizations committed to promoting social justice in their communities. Fellows receive $70,000 in their first year and $72,000 in year two, plus relocation allowance, health insurance and professional development funding. Deadline: March 13 .

Widening Circles Social Impact Program Travel Grant

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​$500 full program fee awards and $1,500 travel grants are available for students who add an in-person internship or volunteer position in conjunction with the Widening Circles program. Register for free through Omprakash and complete our funding application . Deadline: March 15 .

UC Davis Global Grad Grants

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​These grants provide $2,000 funding plus pre-departure support for UC Davis graduate or professional students seeking to participate in a globally-focused social impact program or globally-focused research over the summer. Students can choose between two funding tracks: Social Impact or Research. Deadline: March 15 .

UC Davis Eivind G. Lange '77 and Mary G. Puma Graduate Fellowship

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This fellowship supports graduate students in conducting research in Chile in partnership with UC Davis Chile Life Sciences Innovation Center. Awards amount up to $4,000. Deadline: March 15 .

Eisenhower Global Scholars

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Eisenhower Global Scholars is an opportunity to spend the entire 2024-25 academic year of postgraduate study leading to a master's degree in public policy at the University of Oxford or international relations at the IE University in Madrid. All courses are in English. Deadline: March 22 .

The Obama-Chesky Voyager Scholarship for Public Service

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​The Voyager Scholarship gives college students who plan to pursue a career in public service up to $50,000 in financial aid to alleviate the burden of college debt, meaningful travel experiences to expand their horizons, and a network of mentors and leaders to support them. Apply . Deadline: March 27 .

Freeman–ASIA Scholarship

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This award supports undergraduate students with financial need to study abroad in East or Southeast Asia. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents, demonstrate financial need through FAFSA, have a minimum 2.8 GPA, and have little or no previous experience in the study abroad country. Deadline: April 2 .

North American Language and Culture Assistants Program (NALCAP)

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​October 2024–May 2025 . NALCAP offers teaching grants to Americans who are 18-60 years old and are native English speakers with a basic knowledge of Spanish. Recipients partner with elementary and secondary schools to support language programs as teaching assistants for 14–16 hours per week. Spotlight video . Deadline: April 4 .

Samvid Scholars

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This program provides $50,000 annually for two years as well as leadership development programming for future leaders and changemakers to pursue graduate education. Applicants must be first-year graduate students in 2024-25 at a university in the U.S. Deadline: April 8 .

Peter and Marion London Global Learning Innovation Award

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​This award supports an annual project led by one or more UC Davis students who will partner with Nepali and/or Tibetan students on a project with a strong public benefit related to sustainable development for disadvantaged communities. Award amount up to $4,500. Apply . Deadline: April 10 .

Middlebury Institute of International Studies UC Global Alumni Scholarship

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​UC alums who participated in a global program are eligible for a 25% scholarship toward this master’s degree, plus a waived application fee. More than ten programs are available, including International Policy and Development, International Education Management and Teaching Foreign Language. Application details .

APRU Global Health Virtual Case Competition

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Join a team of three to six students from around the world in this fun, educational competition to address a real-world global health challenge. $1,000 prize. Case challenge released on March 10.

Teach English Abroad and Change Happens (TEACH) Fellowship in Taiwan

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​August 2024–July 2025 . This Institute of International Education fellowship offers teachers with state certifications, TESOL certification or other teaching experience the opportunity to be placed in a public or private school in Taiwan to teach English, science and other fields. Applications are accepted and reviewed on a rolling basis. Application .

Upcoming Info Sessions and Events

Gilman foreign policy in focus: global food security virtual seminar series.

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Fridays, 10–11 a.m., 2/23, 3/29, 4/26 . This free, interactive seminar series—open to all students— is focused on global food security. The series aims to enhance participants’ understanding of global food security through a foreign policy lens, including the environmental, political and economic impacts of these issues. Register .

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In Moscow, the War Is Background Noise, but Ever-Present

Muscovites go about their daily lives with little major disruption. But the war’s effects are evident — in the stores, at the movies and in the increasingly repressive environment.

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A woman walking along a busy street, a skyscraper behind her.

By Valerie Hopkins

Photographs by Nanna Heitmann

Reporting from Moscow

Metro trains are running smoothly in Moscow, as usual, but getting around the city center by car has become more complicated, and annoying, because anti-drone radar interferes with navigation apps.

There are well-off Muscovites ready to buy Western luxury cars, but there are not enough available. And while a local election for mayor took place as it normally would last Sunday, many of the city’s residents decided not to vote, with the result seemingly predetermined (a landslide win by the incumbent).

Almost 19 months after Russia invaded Ukraine, Muscovites are experiencing dual realities: The war has faded into background noise, causing few major disruptions, and yet it remains ever-present in their daily lives.

This month, Moscow is aflutter in red, white and blue flags for the annual celebration of the Russian capital’s birthday, No. 876. Its leaders marked the occasion with a monthlong exhibition that ended last Sunday. Featuring the country’s largest hologram, it showcased the city of 13 million people as a smoothly operating metropolis with a bright future. More than seven million people visited, according to the organizers.

There is little anxiety among residents over the drone strikes that have hit Moscow this summer. No alarm sirens to warn of a possible attack. When flights are delayed because of drone threats in the area, the explanation is usually the same as the one plastered on signs at the shuttered luxury boutiques of Western designers: “technical reasons.”

The city continues to grow. Cranes dot the skyline, and there are high-rise buildings going up all over town. New brands, some homegrown, have replaced the flagship stores like Zara and H&M, which departed after the invasion began in February 2022.

“We continue to work, to live and to raise our children,” said Anna, 41, as she walked by a sidewalk memorial marking the death of the Wagner mercenary leader Yevgeny V. Prigozhin. She said she worked in a government ministry, and like others interviewed, she did not give her last name because of a fear of retribution.

But for some, the effects of war are landing harder.

Nina, 79, a pensioner who was shopping at an Auchan supermarket in northwestern Moscow, said that she had stopped buying red meat entirely, and that she could almost never afford to buy a whole fish.

“Just right now, in September, the prices rose tremendously,” she said.

Nina said that sanctions and ubiquitous construction projects were some reasons for higher prices, but the main reason, she said, was “because a lot is spent on war.”

“Why did they start it at all?” Nina added. “Such a burden on the country, on people, on everything. And people are disappearing — especially men.”

When asked about the biggest problems facing Russia, more than half of the respondents in a recent poll by the independent Levada Center cited price increases. The war, known in Russia as the “special military operation,” came in second, with 29 percent, tied with “corruption and bribery.”

“In principle, everything is getting more expensive,” said Aleksandr, 64, who said he worked as an executive director in a company. His shopping habits at the grocery store have not changed, but he said he had not traded in his luxury Western-branded car for a newer model.

“First of all, there are no cars,” he said, noting that most Western dealerships had left Russia and that Chinese brands had been taking their places on the roads.

The war has made itself evident outside supermarkets and auto dealerships. Moscow may be one of the few cities in Europe without sold-out showings of the movie “Barbie.” Warner Bros, which produced the film, pulled out of Russia shortly after Mr. Putin invaded Ukraine, and bootleg copies of “Barbie” were shown only in a few underground screenings .

Theaters regularly show movies that premiered more than five years ago because of licensing issues and strict new laws banning any mention of L.G.B.T.Q. people.

Advertisements to join the military are plastered on roadside billboards and on posters in convenience stores. Moscow’s metro recently stopped making announcements in English, with a Russian-language voice announcing every stop twice.

Cosmetically, Moscow is changing, too. A statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the Soviet political police, was inaugurated this past week in front of the headquarters of the foreign intelligence services. It is a copy of a statue that stood in front of the headquarters of the K.G.B. until it was torn down in 1991 by Russians hungry for freedom.

The election for mayor also underscored the sea change in Russian politics. A decade ago, the opposition politician Aleksei A. Navalny stood as a candidate against Sergei S. Sobyanin. Now, Mr. Navalny is in jail, and there was no real competition for Mr. Sobyanin, who won a third term with an unprecedented 76 percent of the vote.

Other parties, including the Communist Party , fielded a candidate against the incumbent, but they are all considered “systemic opposition” parties, or groups in Parliament nominally in opposition but who align their policies with the Kremlin on most issues.

“Before the war, I still voted,” said Vyacheslav I. Bakhmin, a chairman of the Moscow Helsinki Group, the oldest human rights group in Russia. “I don’t want to vote now because, well, the result seems to be clear, right?”

Many in Moscow chose not to vote, though turnout was at a two-decade high because of electronic voting that allows Muscovites to cast a ballot online. There is also heavy-handed encouragement of public sector employees to vote.

Mr. Sobyanin, 65, benefited from a carefully cultivated image as an effective manager, and Moscow’s cleanliness and ease of getting around are praised even by people who oppose his political party. He has made transportation a hallmark of his tenure, and he not only keeps the trains running efficiently, but is opening brand-new stations.

The elections in Moscow and in more than 20 Russian regions are widely seen as a test run for presidential elections in March. Mr. Putin has not declared his candidacy, but he is widely expected to run.

As Mr. Putin presides over a war with no end in sight, the authorities have worked to limit public expressions of dissent and make things seem as normal as possible. Aleksei A. Venediktov, who headed the liberal Echo of Moscow radio station before the Kremlin shut it down last year, said that the government had engineered the war’s absence from political spaces.

“This war, it is mainly on TV, or on Telegram channels, but it is not on the street, it is not even discussed in cafes and restaurants, because it is dangerous, because the laws that have been adopted are repressive,” Mr. Venediktov said. He noted cases in which people expressing antiwar views were denounced — or in some cases reported to the police — by those sitting next to them on the subway or in restaurants.

“People prefer to tell one another, ‘Let’s not talk about it here,’” Mr. Venediktov said. “And that’s why you can’t see it in the mood.”

In Moscow City, an area of skyscrapers that is the Russian capital’s answer to New York’s Financial District, many people casually dismissed a series of drone strikes that damaged some of the buildings there but resulted in no casualties.

One woman, Olga, who said she worked nearby, just nodded as a colleague shrugged off the potential risk.

Later, Olga sent a New York Times journalist a message on the Telegram messaging app: “I couldn’t say anything, because at work they don’t talk about a position like mine,” she wrote. “I am against war and I hate our political system.”

When there is a drone strike inside Russia, she said, “I always hope that maybe someone will think about what it means to live under shelling, and regret the loss of our normal life before the war.” She said that if the explosions do not cause casualties, then “I don’t regret damage to the buildings at all.”

Mr. Venediktov said that even if changes on Moscow’s surface were hard to see, and increasingly harder to discuss, people were truly transforming inside.

“People are starting to return to the Soviet practice, when public conversations can lead to trouble at work,” he said. “It’s like toxic poisoning — a very slow process.”

An earlier version of this article misstated which birthday Moscow is celebrating this year. It is No. 876, not No. 867.

How we handle corrections

Valerie Hopkins is an international correspondent for The Times, covering the war in Ukraine, as well as Russia and the countries of the former Soviet Union. More about Valerie Hopkins

Our Coverage of the War in Ukraine

News and Analysis

Ukraine claimed that its forces had sunk a Russian landing ship off the coast of Crimea . The attack would be a powerful blow against Russians at sea, at a time when Ukrainian soldiers are struggling to hold back assaults on land.

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine is redoubling his diplomatic outreach to Europe , as the debate in the United States over providing renewed military assistance for Ukraine continues to play out in Congress .

Kyiv said it had evidence that Russia had used a new hypersonic cruise missile for the first time in an attack , a development that would pose another challenge to Ukraine’s already strained air defenses.

Creative Use of Weapons: Ukraine’s use of a Patriot missile to take down a plane in January is an example of how novel battlefield tactics can be fraught with peril as well as promise .

Broadcasting Rage: Residents of the battered Ukrainian city of Kharkiv turn to a station called Radio Boiling Over to vent their anger at Russian attacks .

Reined In: Ukraine’s oligarchs have lost billions from the shelling of their factories. Now the government hopes to break their political influence .

Staying Put: The front line in Ukraine is largely populated by the elderly these days. Some can’t afford to get out, while others say they won’t leave their homes .

How We Verify Our Reporting

Our team of visual journalists analyzes satellite images, photographs , videos and radio transmissions  to independently confirm troop movements and other details.

We monitor and authenticate reports on social media, corroborating these with eyewitness accounts and interviews. Read more about our reporting efforts .

  • International edition
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Police detain a woman in Moscow on Saturday.

Tens of thousands protest in Russia calling for Navalny's release

More than 1,870 arrested across country in one of largest demonstrations against Putin’s rule

Tens of thousands of Alexei Navalny supporters have protested across Russia in one of the largest demonstrations against Vladimir Putin’s rule in the past decade.

More than 1,870 people were arrested by riot police on Saturday at dozens of unsanctioned rallies throughout the country, spanning from Kaliningrad in the west to Vladivostok in the far east, as the turnout of those calling for the opposition leader’s release from jail far surpassed many protesters’ expectations.

Navalny’s allies hope they can force the Kremlin to release him through a show of strength, but it is unclear whether the protests will break the government’s resolve to send him to prison for as long as a decade.

Clashes broke out as police wielding truncheons ran protesters off main squares in Moscow and several other cities, and columns of demonstrators broke through police lines in Moscow and St Petersburg, leading to pitched battles.

The police at times appeared to be losing control. In Moscow, video showed protesters trading blows with riot officers near the main protest square, as younger participants nearby kicked a police officer’s riot helmet around like a football. In St Petersburg, protesters shut down the city’s main street, Nevsky Prospekt, and Navalny’s team eventually issued a call for the demonstrators to go home.

Russia’s investigative committee said it had opened an inquiry into violence against police officers on Saturday evening. A spokesperson for the US embassy condemned the violence against demonstrators, accusing Moscow of suppressing Russians’ rights to peaceful protest.

Pro-Navalny protests have kicked off in the Far East and now in Siberia, where 100s and 1000s coming out. Their size could influence whether he's released from jail. Pics and vid coming out from Vladivostok, Irkutsk, Ulan-Ude, even Yakutsk, where it is -50C. So far 56 arrested. pic.twitter.com/PZSZbgteVU — Andrew Roth (@Andrew__Roth) January 23, 2021

Several thousand protesters took to the streets in the far-eastern port city of Vladivostok, as well as hundreds more in nearby Khabarovsk and Blagoveshchensk. That region has been a hotbed of protest since last year’s arrest of the Khabarovsk governor, Sergei Furgal.

Many more came out in cities across Siberia, with thousands in the city of Novosibirsk and hundreds in Irkutsk, Ulan-Ude, and even dozens in Yakutsk, where temperatures dipped as low as -50C (-58F). In Irkutsk, protesters shouted: “We will not go!” Some in Omsk carried pairs of underpants in a reference to the suspected FSB poisoning of Navalny last August.

Protesters scuffle with police during a rally in Vladivostok

Navalny’s allies have said the rallies are their best chance of convincing the Kremlin to free him.

Navalny was arrested on Sunday after returning from treatment abroad after the poisoning attempt, which was traced to Russia’s FSB security service. A parole board could reverse an earlier sentence and send him to a penal colony as early as the end of January.

The Moscow mayor’s office has told the public not to attend the rallies and the powerful investigative committee has opened a criminal investigation into a flood of calls on social networks, including TikTok, Facebook and others, for young people to join in.

Authorities claimed social networks had complied with their demands to delete the content, saying TikTok had deleted 38% of posts promoting the rallies and that YouTube and VKontakte had each deleted 50% of similar posts appealing to underage protesters.

In remarks from a Moscow jail released on Friday night, Navalny told supporters he was in good spirits and, in case anything mysterious happened to him, that he was emotionally stable and not planning to harm himself. “I definitely know that outside of my prison there are many good people, and help is on the way,” he said.

Who is Alexei Navalny?

english regents january 2023 essay

Born in 1976 just outside Moscow, Alexei Navalny is a lawyer-turned-campaigner whose Anti-Corruption Foundation investigates the wealth of Vladimir Putin’s inner circle. 

He started out as a Russian nationalist, but emerged as the main leader of Russia's democratic opposition during the wave of protests that led up to the 2012 presidential election, and has since been a thorn in the Kremlin’s side. 

Navalny is barred from appearing on state television, but has used social media to his advantage. A 2017 documentary accusing the prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, of corruption received more than 30m views on YouTube within two months. 

He has been repeatedly arrested and jailed. The European court of human rights ruled that Russia violated Navalny's rights by holding him under house arrest in 2014. Election officials barred him from running for president in 2018 due to an embezzlement conviction that he claims was politically motivated. Navalny told the commission its decision would be a vote 'not against me, but against 16,000 people who have nominated me; against 200,000 volunteers who have been canvassing for me '. 

There has also been a physical price to pay. In April 2017, he was attacked with green dye that nearly blinded him in one eye, and in July 2019 he was taken from jail to hospital with symptoms that one of his doctors said could indicate poisoning . In 2020, he was again hospitalised after a suspected poisoning , and taken to Germany for treatment. The German government later said toxicology results showed Navalny was poisoned with a Novichok nerve agent .

Navalny was sent to prison again in February 2021 , sentenced to two years and eight months, in a move that triggered marches in Moscow and the arrest of more than 1,000 protesters. By April he was described as being "seriously ill" in prison .

Police have arrested Navalny’s press secretary, two lawyers and a top investigator who helped to prepare an investigation into a £1bn palace on the Black Sea they claim was bankrolled by Putin’s friends and state companies. As of Friday, the video of the investigation had been watched 50m times on YouTube.

Navalny supporters were also arrested in Krasnodar, Kaliningrad, Vladivostok and cities across Russia, as protest coordinators planned rallies in at least 65 cities and towns.

Kira Yarmysh, Navalny’s press secretary, said police threatened to break down her door while detaining her before the protests. She continued to tweet from custody, saying that attending the demonstrations was “everyone’s duty, if we want prosperity, freedom and the wellbeing of our country. And so that Alexei and all those illegally behind bars are set free.

“January 23rd should become legendary,” she wrote from a jail cell before signing off for the night.

Navalny could be sent to a prison colony if a parole board decides to revise a three-and-a-half-year sentence handed down in 2014. Russian investigators are also preparing criminal cases that could carry more than a decade of jail time if Navalny is charged.

Opposition rallies have attracted more young Russians, including many teenagers, since Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund began releasing online investigations into senior politicians and others close to Putin. In 2017, protests largely attended by young Russians shut down Tverskaya Street in central Moscow after Navalny released an investigation into the prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev.

Influencers on TikTok and other social networks have come out in support of the rally, bringing warnings from Russia’s general prosecutor that the social networks should take down the content or face fines or other sanctions.

In one viral video, an English-language teacher, @neurolera, gives tips for how people can pretend they are American tourists if caught by police. “You are violating my human rights!” she says with an American intonation. And if all else failed, she added, then tell the police: “I’m gonna call my lawyer.”

On Friday, the Moscow city police department said it would prosecute anyone calling on people to join the protests “in the media, on the internet, and on social networks”. In particular, the city prosecutor singled out calls for minors to participate in mass riots.

Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin press secretary, said on Friday that the investigation into Putin and the Black Sea mansion was a “lie” and a “cut-and-paste job”.

  • Alexei Navalny
  • Vladimir Putin

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    The June 2023 Regents Examination in English Language Arts is similar in format to the test administered in January 2023. The examination consists of three parts. Part 1 consists of three texts ... constructed-response questions on any Regents after each essay has been rated the Examination