Category Archives: Learner Centered

Students Give More Than $14,000 to Local Nonprofits

Nonprofit Leadership class gives more than $14,000 to four Kalamazoo nonprofit organizations

Nonprofit Leadership class gives nearly $15,000 to four local nonprofit organizations.

On April 15, Western Michigan University’s School of Public Affairs and Administration (SPAA) held their yearly Nonprofit Banquet. Nearly 200 students, faculty, staff, and members of the community gathered as grant funding was presented to worthy nonprofit organizations in the Kalamazoo area. After months of research, site visits and deliberations, twenty-one WMU students selected four organizations to award more than $14,000 in grant funding. While giving is rewarding, deciding which organizations to award funding to was more challenging than anticipated.

The spring 2013 PADM 4000 Seminar in Nonprofit Leadership class knew what they were facing. They knew that by the end of the semester they would be able to give real financial support to organizations in need and were excited to use all of the skills they’d learned in their previous classes to review proposals and impact lives of Kalamazoo citizens. From the start, the class determined its priorities utilizing a consensus method. They wanted to support organizations with a focus on education and arts for children and help individuals and/or families get or sustain housing. The remainder of their decision-making stemmed from their established priorities while building upon their leadership readings and assignments.

Led by Janice Maatman, the class went through the tedious and sometimes emotionally charged process of reviewing grant proposals and financial statements in order to determine which organizations should receive the limited amount of funds that were available. Twenty-five organizations made requests totaling $117,000 and students grappled because they saw great potential in all of them. Even when trying to reduce the number of qualified organizations based on their established priorities, the class struggled with issues like the age group the organizations served and which programs would impact the most individuals.

Using a ranking system, the class narrowed down their list to six organizations based on criteria and prioritization established earlier in the semester. The deliberations that took place between the last six organizations resulted in visceral reactions. As a class, though, they showed maturity and understood the importance of building consensus throughout the process. Maatman stated, “After five years of teaching this class, this was the first year of no tears. This class had a good sense of when they needed to let go.” In order for the class to reach a consensus, all had to release a personal bias or initial favorite.

When asked what is the most influential part of teaching such a unique class, Maatman replied, “I’ve had these students in the intro class and in this seminar class. Seeing the growth, the maturity, the ability to use non-profit language and their internship experience as they do their analysis is rewarding.” Another benefit of leading students in a seminar is seeing the students’ “development in analysis, writing, and the ability to work with others critical to a career in non-profit management. They are able to give away real money and not deal in a hypothetical situation. It’s a culmination of their work.” Maatman said, “When they read the proposals it feel like an exercise, but after site visits it connects to real life and real people, especially if they can see programs in action. It becomes really motivating. Different things in different proposals resonate with individuals.”

Maatman’s impression of the class is shared by those directly influenced by her leadership. While attending a national education conference WMU recent graduate Kierstin Nall shared her experiences in PADM 4000 with students from institutions across the country and received the same response—students from other institutions were fascinated. Nall’s appreciation for the class stems from “diving into an organization’s records will help my life following graduation. I feel prepared to enter the working field. Consensus building is tough and challenging, but it is a vital life skill in the nonprofit leadership field.”

In addition to students who completed the most recent semester, former students were also a part of the Nonprofit Banquet. Elisse Rivert completed PADM 4000 during the spring semester of 2012 and remains appreciative of the lessons learned. Rivert states, “I had never heard of or been in a class like [PADM] 4000. It teaches prioritization and you learn what you believe in. Initially, we look at the numbers, but eventually, you are led by a desire to give to kids. You learn so much about yourself that you don’t intend to.” The impact was so great on Rivert that she recently applied for a job that would enable her to facilitate grant decision-making much like she did during her class experience for high school programs. Rivert went on to say, “A lot of kids can get through college. Not everyone can get this [Nonprofit Leadership Alliance] certificate and get life skills.”

This year’s seminar awarded grants to Big Brothers/Big Sisters, Community Homeworks, Crescendo Academy of Music, and the Irving S. Gilmore International Keyboard Festival. PADM 4000 could be one of the most impactful educational experiences in a nonprofit leadership student’s career at Western Michigan University. Having the opportunity to evaluate actual grant proposals, provide tangible resources to Kalamazoo organizations and follow-up with the organizations and individuals their decisions directly benefit, SPAA students are left with a permanent sense of accomplishment and a lesson in philanthropy that far exceeds their time at WMU.

Janice Maatman

Janice Maatman addressing attendees during the 2013 Nonprofit Banquet

PADM 4000 students ranking remaining nonprofit organizations

PADM 4000 students ranking the remaining nonprofit organizations.

PADM 4000 class

PADM 4000 class deliberations.

For more information on WMU’s School of Public Affairs and Administration please visit http://www.wmich.edu/spaa/. For details on the Nonprofit Leadership Student Association please visit http://www.nlsawmu.org.

Journalism 3100 Meets Real World

WMU alumnus, Chris Killian with students from Journalism 3100

Students from WMU's Journalism 3100 class with alumnus Chris Killian

Presidential elections provide countless opportunities to engage in meaningful classroom discussions. WMU journalism associate professor Sue Ellen Christian took a unique approach to providing real-world experience to her Journalism 3100: News reporting using new media class by reaching out to WMU alumnus, Chris Killian. Freelance writer Killian made it his mission to show the election from the perspective of those who matter most—the people impacted by the results. Killian wanted to tell people’s stories in hopes that we’d learn from one another. Knowing that he couldn’t visit all 50 states, he decided to focus on stories from the swing states, places deemed equally divided in the political debate. He wanted to give everyone, from every side, a voice.

Killian’s plan to travel to swing states and use social media to share stories gave Christian the unique opportunity to provide her students with a memorable, real-life experience. As Killian traveled thousands of miles to nine swing states, students in Christian’s class used social media to connect with him. Christian noted that Killian “showed the entrepreneurship that I try to teach in my classes. In class, we talked about how in the current digital media landscape students have to think creatively and market their skills using social media. [Killian] was a wonderful example of that.”

When Killian’s adventure ended, he returned to WMU to meet the students he’d been contacting via Skype during his travels. “It made the textbooks and teaching come alive for students to see journalism in action—especially by someone young and from WMU,” said Christian. Journalism student, Elisia Alonso says that her interactions with Killian “gave me reassurance that the journalism field is where I’d like to be. His ambition to take on the world, one story at a time, encouraged me to never stop pursuing my dreams.”

Two faculty from College named Fulbright Scholars

Two WMU College of Arts and Sciences faculty members received prestigious Fulbright Program awards to work overseas during the 2011-12 academic year. WMU’s 2011-12 Fulbright grant recipients were awarded a combination of short- and long-term grants.

Dr. Bill Cobern (left) talking with students during his Fulbright travels to Turkey.

Dr. William W. Cobern, Distinguished University Professor of Science Education and Biological Sciences as well as director of the Mallinson Institute for Science Education, received a Fulbright Lecturing/Research award. Cobern spent five months in Turkey beginning September 2011. His research and teaching were about secular and religious issues with respect to the teaching of science. He also gave lectures on the experimental study of science teaching efficacy. While in Turkey, Cobern gave 14 public lectures on both topics at various Turkish universities.

 

 

 

Dr. Richard Gerson is a professor in the School of Communication.

Dr. Richard A. Gershon, professor and co-director of the telecommunications and information management program, received a Fulbright Specialist award. Gershon spent the 2011 fall semester at the University of Navarra in Pamplona, Spain. While there, he taught two accelerated courses, one for undergraduate students on media management and telecommunications and one for graduate students on digital media and innovation.

The Fulbright Program was established in 1946 and is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the federal government. Grant recipients are selected based on academic or professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields.

Links:
School of Biological Sciences
Mallinson Institute for Science Education
School of Telecommunications and Information Management

Spanish professor chronicles 2010 Peruvian Nobel prize winner

Spanish professor Hedy Habra has just released "Flying Carpets."

by Katy TerBerg

The talent among the faculty and staff at WMU is one of the many things in which WMU takes great pride. This is especially the case with Spanish professor Hedy Habra, who recently published two books: “Flying Carpets,”  a collection of short stories (March Street Press), and “Mundos alternos y artísticos en Vargas Llosa” (Alternate and Artistic Worlds in Vargas Llosa) (forthcoming)  an academic book focusing on the novels of the Peruvian writer, Mario Vargas Llosa, a recipient of the 2010 Nobel prize.

“Flying Carpets” consists of 21 short stories that were inspired by her childhood in Egypt and Lebanon. According to the Press Release posted by the online literary journal, The SOP, “Flying Carpets” is the culmination of twenty years of work, and some of the stories “evoke the fascination with divination powers, a woman’s resistance to a controlling husband, and a nanny who relies on her imagination for survival.” Noted writer and critic, Stuart Dybek said about Flying Carpets: “It belongs to that rare tradition of books whose spells grow increasingly seductive with each new story.”

Habra’s second book, “Mundos alternos y artísticos en Vargas Llosa,” “explores the function of characters’ interiority and the way Vargas Llosa uses the linguistic sign to create images or to reproduce visual art (paintings, photographs) by means of the characters’ fantasies or musings, which, in turn, convert them into fictional authors and at times into producers of sort films,” said Habra.

Habra had three poems selected among ten winners of the Fourth Annual Nazim Hikmet Poetry Festival, named after the famed Turkish poet.  This year, the competition received over 700 poems from 250 poets across the globe.The poems were published in a chapbook.

Habra lived in Egypt, Lebanon, Greece and Belgium before moving to Kalamazoo, MI. She holds an M.F.A. and a Ph.D. in Spanish Literature from WMU and currently teaches Spanish. Her poetry, published in English, Spanish and French, has appeared in various journals and anthologies.

Links:

Department of Spanish

Professor Hedy Habra

The SOP press release

Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project earns $10,000 in Michigan Humanities Council support

Reenactors depicting British soldiers during the 2011 Fort St. Joseph Open House event.

After reviewing an astounding 51 applications – 31 more than the previous grant cycle – the Michigan Humanities Council (MHC) will award $350,850 in major grant monies to 30 Michigan nonprofits—including $10,000 to the Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Program for its “A Colonial Militia Muster on the Eve of Revolution” series.

“We’re very grateful for the continued support of the Michigan Humanities Council, and honored they consider our project to be worthy of funding,” noted Dr. Michael Nassaney, principal investigator of the Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project and professor in the Department of Anthropology.

“We received an extraordinary number of very exciting, high-quality grant applications this spring and the Michigan Humanities Council has made the very bold decision to fund double the number of grants we usually fund this time of year as a result. This is more than double the amount of grant dollars we awarded in the fall cycle, but with such a large number of great projects on the table, we decided to get the funds out into the communities now when the need is so great,” said Council board chair Timothy Chester.

The grants  provide organizations with the funds needed to host cultural programming in their communities through exhibits, lectures, writing programs, festivals and more.

 Fort St. Joseph project homepage

Graduate students honored for research and teaching

President Dunn congratulates honored graduate students at the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards ceremony.

A total of 52 graduate students in the College of Arts and Sciences were honored by the university as winners of the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards. Eleven students received further distinction as All-University Graduate Research and Creative Scholars, and were  honored as All-University recipients of the Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards.

Graduate Research and Creative Scholar Awards for 2011-12

All-University Scholars from the College of Arts and Sciences:

  • Michelle Barger, geosciences
  • Timothy Edwards, psychology
  • Isurika Fernando, chemistry
  • Dustin Hoffman, English
  • Taylor Paskin, biological sciences
  • Ryan Sibert, geosciences
  • Stephen Spates, communication
  • Anthony Squiers, political science
  • Lydia Walker, comparative religion

Department Scholars

  • Sara Bijani, history
  • Gerardo Bohorquez Gonzalez, Spanish
  • Caitlin Callahan, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Mary Sajini Devadas, chemistry
  • Katherine Ellison, history
  • Leticia Espinoza, Spanish
  • Nicole Fonger, mathematics
  • Tamrat Gashaw, economics
  • David Johnson, English
  • Lucas Kanclerz, geography
  • Ian Kerr, anthropology
  • Maxwell Kirchhoff, political science
  • Scott Marley, physics
  • Christina Sheerin, psychology
  • Benjamin Slager, biological sciences
  • Michelle A. Suarez, interdisciplinary health sciences
  • Cynthia Visscher, sociology

Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards

All-University Graduate Teachers

  • Matthew Arsenault, political science
  • Skylar Bre’z, history and gender and women’s studies
  • Colleen Cullinan, psychology
  • Kevin Douglass, chemistry
  • Krystal Howard, English
  • Kathryn Kestner, psychology
  • Kate Rowbotham, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kristin Sovis, English

Department Graduate Teachers

  • Clara Adams, chemistry
  • David Barry, sociology
  • Emily Beard, communication
  • Erica D’Elia, anthropology
  • Holly DeVrou, Spanish
  • Racha El Kadiri, geosciences
  • Carolina Gonzalo Llera, Spanish
  • Alexandra Haase, biological sciences
  • Justin Hanig, economics
  • Kara Krebs, political science
  • Daniel Kueh, biological sciences
  • Bryan Phinezy, mathematics
  • Buddhi Rai, physics
  • Daniel Serfas, geography
  • Kelly Sparks, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kathryn Titus, geosciences
  • Scott Watson, comparative religion
  • Adam Wolfe, history

Public archaeology exhibits present local history

by Katy TerBerg

Artifacts like these are shown in the display at Waldo Library.

Historical and archeological findings from Fort St. Joseph in Niles, Mich., are the focus of a new display appearing at Waldo Library. The display was designed by Professor of Anthropology Michael S. Nassaney’s public archeology seminar class (ANTH 5000).

The display project showcases artifacts from historical events in and around the Fort, including archaeological findings, from beads to coins, and information on the fur trade and the Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project. The display is a venue to bring a piece of Fort St. Joseph to the WMU community.

“The purpose of this project was to give visitors to Waldo Library the opportunity to learn about archaeology and its contributions to our understanding of the past,” said Nassaney.

The display includes findings and interpretations of life in the 18th century on the edge of the French Empire. The rich historical context of the displays, said Nassaney, is only one benefit of the presentations. “The project also provides student testimonies of the the benefits of working on such a collaborative project.”

Nassaney stresses the importance of the displays in helping unlock the past. “Students will be able to learn about the history of the region, appreciate the interactions among diverse populations such as the French and native peoples,” said Nassaney. “They too can become part of a team that works to recover evidence of a daily life along the banks of the St. Joseph River at a long lost, but not forgotten, French fort.”

Historical reenactors at the 2011 Fort St. Joseph annual open house.

The Fort St. Joseph project was established by WMU archaeologists, under Nassaney’s direction in 1998, in conjunction with the City of Niles, the Fort St. Joseph Museum, and Support the Fort.

An annual open house in August, brings an average 3,000 visitors to the Fort for tours, reenactments, authentic products, and visits to an archeaological dig site. “The Project is a long-term, multidisciplinary, community service learning initiative that explores the fur trade and colonialism in southwest Michigan,” said Nassaney.

Links:

Department of Anthropology

Fort St. Joseph Archaeology Project

Dr. Michael Nassaney

English alum Adam Pasen wins top playwriting prize

Ph.D. student Adam Pasen wins the Kennedy Center Ten-Minute Play Award.

by Katy TerBerg

Department of English Ph.D. candidate Adam Pasen is the latest recipient of  the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival’s Ten-Minute Play Award—thus putting another notch in his professional career belt.

“The Ten-Minute Play Award is given at the national level by the Kennedy Center each year to one play deemed the best in that submission period,” said Pasen.

The title of Pasen’s play is “Starf*cker.” The story takes place between two Hollywood hopefuls outside the mansion of an A-List star. “It is the exploration of the shallow and the profound and a deconstruction of the rom-com genre,” he said. “On a semiotics level it is also a rumination on the instability of labels and the imprecision with which they capture the soul of the person they attempt to describe.”

According to Pasen, the 10-minute play is rapidly growing in popularity and significance. “The 10-minutes are easily the most competitive in terms of sheer volume of entries,” he said.

To win, the play must be selected as one of six regional finalists in one of the eight regions (each region received about 100 plays) and then be chosen as one of two winning regional plays to advance. Of those 16 plays, four are chosen to receive readings at the Kennedy Center, and of those four, one is named the winner.

Pasen, who holds an M.A. in English and Rhetoric from Northwestern University,  is a 2012 Ph.D. graduate in English – Creative Writing with a focus in Playwriting. He recently presented his dissertation,  a play titled “Tea with Edie and Fitz,” to Drs. Steve Feffer, Jon Adams, Cynthia Klekar and Terry Williams.

He has published several plays, scenes, adaptations, and musicals across the United States. He  also is a prominent actor around Kalamazoo and in his hometown of Chicago.

Links:

Department of English
Adam Pasen
Kennedy Center

 

Psychology alum publishes book on blind rehab

The Sight Unseen by Robert V. Pajak

by Katy TerBerg

Robert V. Pajak, who graduated in 1979 with a B.S. in Social Psychology, is no stranger to the human condition and, in his new book, “The Sight Unseen: Chronicles of Lernia,” Pajak details the struggles of living with a major sight condition.

“Most of the book is about a guy’s eye condition and attending two colleges, accompanied by a female friend—and other little sub-stories leading from that main story.

It is meant to convey to the reader that discipline, morality and principles, as well as humor, can be applied to everyday living, and this can help overcome the ups and downs of life, resulting in a person becoming a meaningful and contributing member of society,” he said.

The story is semi-autobiographical, putting Pajak at the helm of the story. Like his titular character, Pajak suffers from retinitis pigmentosa, a condition in which the retina slowly deteriorates until it causes tunnel vision. However, Pajak reminds us that each case of retinitis pigmentosa is a bit different.

“Mine is different,” he said. “It’s as if someone splashed a can of
paint on the retina. If I walk with one eye open, there would be
ragged walls.”

The book is a commemoration of one of his favorite movies and
historical events, “The Titanic.” He also mentions the Boris Pasternak
novel, “Dr. Zhivago.”  These are both brought in to elevate the touching
double climax of the story.

Links:
Department of Psychology

Bay City MLive article on The Sight Unseen
The Sight Unseen

 

Moustakis book shortlisted

Acclaimed author and Ph.D. alum Melinda Moustakis is shortlisted for the William Sayoran International Prize for Writing.

by Katy TerBerg

Alum Melinda Moustakis, who received her Ph.D. in Creative Writing from WMU in 2010, continues to rise in prominence as one of America’s most promising young writing talents. After much recognition during the winter and spring, now, her collection of short stories, “Bear Down, Bear North,” has made the shortlist of works of fiction being considered for Stanford University’s Fifth Annual William Saroyan International Prize for Writing (Saroyan Prize).

The awards, announced by Stanford University Libraries, encourage new or emerging writers, honor the Saroyan literary legacy of creativity and innovation, and recognize newly published works of both fiction and non-fiction. A $5,000 prize is awarded in both categories.

Saroyan, an American writer and playwright, is a Pulitzer Prize and Academy Award winner best known for his short, humorous stories of immigrant families and children in California. In 1944 he received the Academy Award for Best Writing Original Story for “The Human Comedy” and a Pulitzer Prize for his play “The Time of Your Life.” He is the only known author to win both a Pulitzer Prize and an Academy Award.

“Novels usually win this [award], but it’s still nice to have ‘Bear Down’ on the shortlist,” said Moustakis of her collection’s nomination.

Moustakis was named a Gwen Hodder for the 2012-2013 academic year. With her growing lists of accolades, we hope Moustakis will add the illustrious Saroyan award to her accomplishments.

Links:
Department of English

William Saroyan International Prize for Writing
Melissa Moustakis’ official website.