Nexus Newsletter.indd
Transcription
Nexus Newsletter.indd
NEXUS S C H O O L O F I N T E G R AT I V E S T U D I E S | S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 GREETINGS FROM THE DEAN SoIS MISSION To cultivate creative, intellectually engaged, and ethical problem solvers through integrative inquiry and action for social justice and the public good. SCHOOL OF INTEGRATIVE STUDIES Dean: Kristine M. Mickelson, PhD Predolin 109 608.663.2374 [email protected] ON BEHALF OF ALL OF US…. On behalf of the School of Integrative Studies (SoIS), I am delighted to bring you this issue of Nexus, a highlight of news, events, and opportunities associated with SoIS programs. It was about nine years ago that SoIS was created, an expression of the faculty’s and this college’s commitment to interdisciplinarity, engaged learning, and civic engagement. Its original mission – to cultivate creative, intellectually engaged, and ethical problem solvers through integrative inquiry and action for social justice and the public good – is still relevant today, and this newsletter provides compelling evidence of how that mission is being fulfilled. What makes this possible is partnership, a theme that permeates this edition’s stories. In the pages that follow you will read about partnerships among SoIS programs, between SoIS programs and other schools and departments, and partnerships that extend into the community beyond Edgewood. To borrow a popular phrase, I believe we are better together. Our teaching and learning on behalf of students tends to be better – transformative, deeper, farther reaching – when our faculty, our staff, and our programs are working collaboratively across boundaries to share expertise, resources, and energy. That has been the case in the past, and it will remain our commitment moving forward. NEXUS NEWS NEWS UPDATES FROM THE CENTER FOR MULTICULTURAL EDUCATION ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES PROGRAM The 2014-2015 academic year has been a rewarding and productive one for the Environmental Studies Program. With mixed emotions, we bid farewell to seven Environmental Studies minors (Ross Matters, Dustin Mireles, Peter Orlando, Katie Remondini, Debi Ryner, Kat Foulke, and Josh Williams) who graduated and set off to make their marks on the world. Another student, Charlie Nettesheim, graduated with an Individualized Major in Environmental Studies and quickly landed a job with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. We congratulate these recent graduates and wish them all the best in their next endeavors. This year, the Teaching for Diversity Series has featured two faculty panels: Race in the Classroom: Identity Politics and Critical Pedagogies and Race in the Classroom Part II: ‘Racial Moments’ and Critical Interventions. From diverse disciplinary as well as racial and ethnic perspectives, the panelists presented their pedagogical research and explored the challenges and strategies in teaching race and antiracism in the predominantly white college classroom. We thank the following panelists for their special contributions: Sara Collas (Integrative Studies), Talonda Lipsey-Brown (Education), and Huining Ouyang (Ethnic Studies), Carolyn Field (Criminal Justice), Marihelen Stoltz (Communication Studies), and Maria Yelle (Nursing). The Center for Multicultural Education has continued to host monthly gatherings to provide opportunities for community building, networking, and peer support among our faculty of color. This fall and spring, we welcomed new colleagues and enjoyed lively discussions on such topics as naming, language, and identity; teaching, scholarship, service, and inclusion. A special joint program with the Environmental Studies Program, our fifth annual Distinguished Lecture Series featured Dr. Monica M. White, Assistant Professor of Environmental Justice at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. On February 19, 2015, White delivered Black Farmers, Urban Agriculture, and Increasing Access to Healthy Food in Detroit to a large audience of Edgewood College students, faculty, and staff and Madison community members. Ethnic Studies Major and Minor: Since its inception in fall 2012, the major will have graduated four students by May 2015. The highlights of the major experiences include internships in community organizations of color and senior seminar research. This spring, partnering with the History Department, the graduating seniors will participate in Edgewood Engaged, the student research symposium, and present their senior research at a panel: Researching Race: Ethnic Studies and History Senior Research. Our minor program remains vibrant and continues to attract students from diverse disciplines and racial/ethnic backgrounds. In February, the Environmental Studies Program teamed up with the Center for Multicultural Education to bring Dr. Monica White to Edgewood as the 2015 CME Distinguished Lecturer. Monica is Assistant Professor of Environmental Justice at UW-Madison’s Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies. She discussed her work related to urban agriculture and food justice issues among black communities in Detroit. Woods Edge, the environmental studies student organization being led by faculty advisor Jake Griffin, has been busy organizing many exciting Earth Week events that will take place the week of April 20-24. Brian Czech, president of the Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy and Visiting Professor at Virginia Tech, will be visiting Edgewood that week and will give a keynote address on Wednesday, April 22. Woods Edge students have also been preparing for the second annual plant sale at Edgewood by starting tomato, pepper, and basil plants to be sold the last week of the spring semester. As the weather begins to warm up, they have also started spinach and salad greens in the Edgewood hoop house. Plans are also underway for a spring outing, perhaps another canoe trip down the Wisconsin River or a camping trip somewhere around southern Wisconsin. N EXUS NEWS NEXUS NEWS COMMUNITY WELLBEING CONFLUENCE BREAD, SOUP, AND BOOKS, 2015 As is the tradition at Edgewood College, Women’s History Month began with a communitywide gathering for good food, excellent company, and important thought: Bread, Soup, and Books. The Washburn Heritage Room was packed for the event, and the students, staff, and faculty in attendance were treated to delectable soup and bread donated by staff and faculty from throughout the college. This year, the Women’s and Gender Studies Program welcomed a guest speaker for the event. Hale Thompson, a doctoral candidate in Community Health Sciences and a pre-doctoral fellow in the National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Research program in electronic privacy and security at the University of Illinois at Chicago, came to Edgewood to speak about his work on health information communication technologies and infrastructures and their relationships to those on the social margins. The students of the Sustainability Leadership Program’s Innovative Leadership in Community Wellbeing are bringing together groups working for social equity and ecological sustainability. They hope to expedite innovative, inclusive solutions to the problem of disparities in health, education, child welfare, criminal justice, employment and income in Madison. Social equity organizations and ecological sustainability organizations often consider their goals to be separate, or even competing for resources. However, this class aims to increase the understanding of these groups’ strong connections. We’ll also identify how these groups can work together for a holistic approach to community wellbeing. Students, along with program faculty and community partner, Sustain Dane, are organizing and facilitating “Confluence Conversations” that will build relationships, identify community assets, outline shared goals and visions, and create action steps. “Our community partners offer valuable insight to the students,” says Program Director Steve Gilchrist. “We hope to engage with more than 50 community organizations and individuals to bring forth the complexities and opportunities for Collective Impact.” Some of the organizations include Dane County and City of Madison Health Department, Goodman Community Center, Mentoring Positives, UW-Extension, United Way, Boys and Girls Club, and City of Madison Sustainability Committee. Thompson’s talk, “The Original Plumbing Family: Pleasures of and Resistance to a Transgender Identity,” explained the origins of Original Plumbing, a trans-culture magazine and on-line space, and described some of his experiences as a blogger for that publication. He described how the website gives voice to bloggers across the gender spectrum, and how its unique community-building space can be a source of both great support and intense conflict. Much of the success of Bread, Soup, and Books, can be attributed to the diligent efforts of Jennifer Braun (School of Integrative Studies) and Sylvia Contreras (Library Director), and to the generous members of the faculty and staff who brought such wonderful food. This year’s winner for “Most Delicious Soup” was Hannah Lloyd, whose Veggie Thai Curry Soup won the popular vote! N EXUS NEWS NEXUS NEWS EDGEWOOD ENGAGED COR1 – PEER LEADERS In the past 1 1/2 years since I’ve become Director for Student Research, I’ve become acquainted with an outstanding group of faculty who serve on a Research Advisory Board (not to mention my colleagues with whom I serve on the Honors Advisory Board and elsewhere on campus). While peer leaders have always been a model of our motto cor ad cor loquitur (heart speaks to heart), increasingly, the COR Program also looks to peer leaders to share elements of Edgewood’s Dominican intellectual tradition with their first year students. For the first time in 2014, peer leaders participated in training separate from Orientation Guides prior to Freshman Orientation. Lasting most of a day, and resonant with the Dominican studium, the session included time for reflection and a tour of sacred spaces on campus led by COR 1 faculty member Daniel Mortensen, who teaches COR 110, The Liberal Arts and the Dominican Tradition. We’ve engaged in meaningful dialogues ranging beyond the confines of a list, nevertheless I’ll create one: specific levels of engagement as it relates to research and creative inquiry, what it would take to form a better means of communication specific to research and creative inquiry, specific “brass tacks” tasks related to Edgewood Engaged student abstracts and Ebben Fund proposals, and the formation of both a research-focused course and a summer research program. Being the first occupant of this role, I’ve found navigating the waters of the Edgewood College system to be dubiously challenging, asking myself questions related to “are we pursuing this program on the right path,” and “am I occupying this directorship with a dignifying level of expertise, leadership, humility, academic rigor, authority, etc?” I’m fortunate to find such a collegial atmosphere on campus, including an engaging network of colleagues in the School of Integrative Studies. Nevertheless, it feels rather perilous at times. I became mindful of this the many moments I shared my questions with strangers occupying similar roles on their campuses while attending the NCHC (National Collegiate Honors Conference) Institute for City as Text (TM) methodology in Lyon, France in July 2014. Similarly, I could end that same sentence with a reference to NCUR, the National Conference for Undergraduate Research in April 2014. And I’m looking forward to attending NCUR again this year, because intellectual growth emerges when one participates in communities. I’m grateful that our program fosters constant examination of teaching methodology and the role of the self in pursuit of teaching and learning. Dr. Mortensen worked with campus archivist Sister Sarah Naughton to develop the tour, and generously complied with requests to repeat it for whole classes. The tour and talk, he says, “look at the Edgewood campus as a place with sacred spaces that connect us.” People were drawn here by natural beauty and were connected, as we are connected now, by the space. The spaces also connect us to our past. The tour stops at Marshall Hall, named after Samuel Marshall, who built the stone carriage house of the villa Governor Washburn gifted to the Sinsinawa Dominican sisters he was known to admire. Erected in 1964, the carriage house survived the tragic fire that destroyed the villa in 1893, claiming the lives of St. Regina Academy students only six to eight years old. Marshall Hall is a reminder that the children of St. Regina’s were here before Edgewood. N EXUS NEWS COR 1 Intended Learning Outcomes: • Identify, explore and critically reflect upon personal identity, values, beliefs, spiritualities and worldviews. Visiting the sacred spaces on campus highlights Edgewood’s rich history, and respect for Native American tradition, as well as the relationship between humans and place. Peer leaders were encouraged to share the places and aspects of history that resonated most with them, and highlight the importance of having the space in our lives to reflect. • Use inquirybased approaches to critically examine relevant human issues questions. COR 1 classes are also spaces that connect people. Cara Brasted, senior art therapy and Spanish double major, is a three-time peer leader with Professor Julie Dunbar’s MUS 151 class, The Art of Listening. Cara appreciates the way peer leaders are encouraged to “bridge the gap between incoming students and professors, and to create a sacred space for these connections to happen”. • Explore contemporary issues and problems from multiple perspectives. NEXUS NEWS NEW FUNDING FOR GLOBAL ENGAGED LEARNING Along with other engaged learning initiatives, global education has received Transformation Funds. These funds are divided into two parts: faculty development and student development. This strategic investment will ensure that our professors and students are prepared to contribute internationally and can compete with their peers locally and globally. It will help us implement the current Academic Plan’s prioritization of student global learning through the enhancement of curricula and academic programs. It will also take global pedagogy to the next level, important because most of our students get their global perspective in the classroom. For faculty development, roughly half of the requested global resources will fund three different but complementary modes of global immersion: travel abroad, attendance at U.S. conferences, and faculty exchange. The other half will fund student scholarships in three areas: study abroad, international students, and Global/Latin American Studies minors. The goal is for more Edgewood students to have access to transformative experiences. Implementation of these initiatives will be coordinated by three staff members in the Center for Global Education: Andrea Byrum, Sara Friar, and Hannah Lloyd. As a result of these initiatives, Edgewood College will be recognized as a leader in global education. We will also increase the number of under-represented students studying abroad to reach our goal of 8% of full-time undergraduate students going abroad. These initiatives will enhance faculty global knowledge, experience, and pedagogy and bring us more strategic global partnerships to further our internationalization.