• Amy Laskowski

    Senior Writer Twitter Profile

    Photo of Amy Laskowski. A white woman with long brown hair pulled into a half up, half down style and wearing a burgundy top, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Amy Laskowski is a senior writer at Boston University. She is always hunting for interesting, quirky stories around BU and helps manage and edit the work of BU Today’s interns. She did her undergrad at Syracuse University and earned a master’s in journalism at the College of Communication in 2015. Profile

Comments & Discussion

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There are 7 comments on Book ’em

  1. Why would ANYONE buy something so useless and overpriced as a yearbook? This isn’t high school. We’re not getting our classmates and friends to sign our yearbook so we can KIT over the summer. We have real lives.

    Maybe it isn’t Facebook or the internet but rather students not being gullible and abiding by pointless, wasteful traditions that is decreasing sales?

  2. I think it is an AWESOME way to collect memories of the college years all together in one album along with the school official pics. If it were just the plain old yearbook it was more or less useless, adding the personalized pages makes it a great way to capture all the fun times and friends. You may not look at it much now, but later you as the years go bye it will be fun to look back at the college experience. The personalization was a GREAT IDEA! I love it!!!

  3. I think that is an absolutely fantastic idea. I cannot wait to be able to get one of these when I am a senior and i DO have every intention of BUYING one AND I have ever intention of getting it signed by all of my friends and classmates – contrary to what debbie downer with the comment below has to say!

  4. I love that the poster arguing that people are too busy having lives to buy a Yearbook is posting a comment on an online publication. Hypocrite much?

    You’re missing the point. Yearbooks aren’t about keeping in touch, and they’re not pointless. They’re about MEMORIES. Every picture and writing in a yearbook is a story in itself. You’re going to tell me you never pull out your high school yearbook every once in a while and reminisce?

    While this is a great idea, I’ve always thought yearbooks were great because of the opportunity to write on classmates’ yearbooks. Ordering them online and having them shipped to your house effectively kills that. Students ought to be given a choice of whether they want them in the beginning of the year, deducted as a Student Account expense. Have them be able to customize it online mid-April if they choose to. Then, a week before the end of school, have the yearbooks distributed to everyone who ordered them at GSU and various residence halls. I feel like if you want to make the yearbook significant again, you’d have to do that.

  5. As someone who has combed through past yearbooks for story content, like historical photos, I see their value. They show what the community was like and how it has evolved. Looking back at BU yearbooks from the early 20th Century, you’ll see women students with finger curled hair who appear like clones of Mary Pickford, a Hollywood silent film star. In the 1960s and 1970s the yearbooks are filled with expository writing, and those stories reflect strong political activism. A couple of years in the 1970s, the yearbooks never went to press, because students were occupied protesting the war. Today, with far less written content, the yearbooks have evolved into coffee table photo albums. Again, it says something about the current student body.

    The fact that BU has gone away from offset printing to print-on-demand shows the evolution of technology and respect for the environment. I’m certain there are piles of old yearbooks that have not been sold from previous generations.

    But keeping the yearbook is crucial in placing 2010 in a historical context. Students today will realize this in future years.

  6. From someone who still has every yearbook from years gone by – I can just tell you that this is waaaay more than a wasteful tradition decreasing in popularity. I have pulled those yearbooks off the shelf many times to remember a friend that has passed away, or look at a building that was torn down for progress. I know someone who works in the journalism field – and they are questioned frequently by people who did not purchase a yearbook several years ago – and wish they could now.
    What we were in those years – helped shape who we are now. Placing value in the good times – will pleasantly take us back to our roots. And since we do ‘have a life’ – purchasing a yearbook from a staff that is passionate about putting a quality book together is better than having to choose your own details. Many traditions are the fabric of our lives, for good reason. Buy a yearbook today!

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