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Monday, April 11, 2016
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12:00 PM
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1:00 PM
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Lightning Session: Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
- Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Room 314
- Contact: Office of Faculty Development
- Description: As a reflective practice, the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning uses evidence-based methods to research effective teaching and student learning. Join Karen Gulbrandsen and Shari Evans (English), and Chan Du (Accounting & Finance) as they share their successful experiences conducting and publishing research related to teaching and learning in their disciplines.
Lunch will be served; if you wish to attend, please register through the Events calendar on UMD website.
- Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty, topic: Faculty Development
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1:00 PM
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3:00 PM
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Doctoral Dissertation Defense
- Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Room 314
- Contact: College of Nursing & Health Sciences
- Description: Patrcia Dwyer, PhD(c), RN
Nursing PhD Candidate
Multilevel Influences on New Graduate Nurse Burnout and Turnover Intent
Date: April 11, 2016
Time: 1pm-3pm
Location: Library, Room 314
Dissertation Committee:
Susan Hunter Revell, PhD, RN (Chair)
Kristen Sethares, PhD,RN
Brian Ayotte, PhD
RSVP to Vicki Vital: vvital@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, College of Nursing, Lectures and Seminars
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2016 MFA Thesis Exhibition
- Location: Star Store, New Bedford
, Purchase Street, New Bedford
- Cost: Free Admission
- Contact: University Art Gallery
- Description: April 2-May 14, 2016
2016 MFA Thesis Exhibition
Opening Reception: Saturday, April 2, 3-5 pm
Artists Talk: Thursday, AHA! Night, April 14 at 7 pm
The UMass Dartmouth 2016 MFA Thesis Exhibition is a much anticipated and celebrated annual event showcasing the artwork of graduating students from the College of Visual and Performing Arts. This large-scale exhibition at the Star Store Campus in historic Downtown New Bedford consists of a wide variety of media including painting, drawing, sculpture, digital and moving images, software application design, as well as intricately made jewelry that utilizes both text and unusual contemporary materials. The range of themes is equally diverse; explorations of personal and cultural identity, feelings of loss, intimacy, memories and dreams as well as examinations of formal and conceptual space.
The 2016 exhibition includes the creative efforts of 18 UMass Dartmouth MFA degree candidates in the visual arts: Alec H. Andersen, Amy Araujo, Calvin Arterberry, Kendra Conn, Kelly Lynn Daniels, Yinan Dong, Meaghan Gates, Marcia Goodwin, Kyungsun "Ariel" Lee, John A. Middleton, Mark Phelan, Sara Allen Prigodich, Cuong Abel Sy, Brett Sylvia, Andrew Tedesco, William M. Vanaria, Lillian E. Webster, and Will Wolf.
An opening reception will be held on Saturday, April April 2, from 3 to 5 pm and the exhibition is open to public through May 14, 2016. Artists Talk is scheduled on Thursday, AHA! Night, April 14 at 7 pm.
Selections from this exhibition will be shown this summer at the Bromfield Gallery in Boston from June 1 to June 26, with an opening reception on Friday, June 3, 6:00 - 8:30 pm.
Gallery exhibitions are open daily in New Bedford from 9:00 am to 6:00 pm and until 9:00 pm during AHA! Nights (every second Thursday each month-April 14 and May 12). All events are free and open to the public.
University Art Gallery
UMass Dartmouth
715 Purchase Street, New Bedford, MA 02740
umassd.edu/universityartgallery
www.facebook.com/UMassDartmouthGalleries
- Link: http://www.umassd.edu/cvpa
- Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Exhibits, Fine Arts, Visual Arts
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9:00 AM
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4:00 PM
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Fidelity Rep - On Campus
- Location: > See description for location
- Contact: > See Description for contact information
- Description: One-on-one: please contact Diana Rittenberg directly for an appointment 1-800-343-0860 Location: CCB room 306
- Topical Areas: Faculty, Staff and Administrators, Human Resources
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12:00 PM
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2:00 PM
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Religious Literacy Unitarian Universalism: A Free-Thinking Faith
- Location: Charlton College of Business, Room 115,
, 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
- Contact: > See Description for contact information
- Description: Please join Reverend Ann Fox at College of Business room 115 at noon for part of the ongoing series on Religious Literacy sponsored by the Religious and Spiritual Life Office.
- Topical Areas: Staff and Administrators, Center for Religious and Spiritual Life
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9:00 AM
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11:00 AM
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Doctoral Dissertation Defense
- Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Room 314
- Contact: College of Nursing & Health Sciences
- Description: Nancy Murphy, RN, MSN, PhD(c)
Nursing PhD Candidate
Nursing Assessment and Interventions to Manage Acute Pain in the Preterm Neonate: Practice Analysis
Date: April 11th, 2016
Time: 9am-11am
Location: Library, Room 314
Dissertation Committee:
Dr. Gail Russell, EdD, NEA-BC
Dr. Rosemary Polomano, PhD, RN, FAAN
Dr. James Fain, PhD, RN, BC-ADM, FAAN
Kristen Sethares, PhD, RN
RSVP to Vicki Vital at vvital@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, College of Nursing
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2:30 PM
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4:30 PM
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CAS Major/Minor Fair
- Location: Liberal Arts Building
, 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
- Cost: free
- Contact: Student Transition and Achievement Resources Center
- Description: Exploring? Undecided? Looking for direction? Learn about majors & minors in the College of Arts and Sciences and Leduc Center for Civic Engagement's minor (and have some food).
Come visit various departments in the Liberal Arts Lounges.
- Topical Areas: Students, Students, Undergraduate, Academic Affairs, College of Arts and Sciences, Lectures and Seminars
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4:00 PM
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6:00 PM
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To Be Heard (A Must See Film)
- Location: MacLean Campus Center
, 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
- Cost: Free
- Contact: Foreign Literature & Languages Department
- Description: According to the New York Times this one of the best documentaries of the year. Its tag line is "if you don't learn to write your own life story someone else will write it for you".
Organized by Professor Marta del Pozo Ortea
About the the film:
Lives and language on the edge: Three teens from the Bronx tell their stories of friendship, love and struggle, and show how a radical poetry class can ignite change.
To Be Heard is the story of three teens from the South Bronx whose struggle to change their lives begins when they start to write poetry. As writing and reciting become vehicles for their expressions of love, friendship, frustration, and hope, we watch these three youngsters emerge as accomplished self-aware artists, who use their creativity to alter their circumstances.
A verit film, intimately shot over four years, To Be Heard is the story of three friends and the love that develops between them as they evolve as artists. This tripod, as they call it, is bound by proximity, circumstance, and poetry. To Be Heard is also the story of how language links people. Pearl is the support and soul of the three; Karina is the passion and heart; and Anthony is the energy and physicality. In a community where friendships are kept tenuous for many reasons, these three build a bond based on language, respect, and the need to survive.
What will happen to these three kids? Will they find a way to articulate their dreams? Will that articulation manifest meaningful change? Does language contain the power to transform? Perhaps this film is simply about the lives of three kids from the ghetto and their struggle to survive. Perhaps it is also about the poet in all young people, the struggling artist in all of us, seeking to emerge. Embedded in the story of these three teens is the tale of their path as writers and a look at the source of their inspiration. That seed of inspiration comes in the form of a radical poetry class, called Power Writing, taught by a trio of outsider teachers. Early on we meet Joe, Amy and Roland. Given the heightened volume of the educational debate these days, their message and approach merits close attention. Not a part of any school faculty or formal curriculum, these three come bearing a simple gift in the form of a motto, If you don't learn to write your own life story, someone else will write it for you. There are very few secrets to their teaching methods, very few tricks. Their style of committed pedagogy is less about instruction and more about empowerment simply stated, they are there to listen closely, if the writer wants to be heard.
Film Trailer: http://www.tobeheard.org/watch.html
On Tuesday, April 12 at 9:30 am a Power Poetry session will take place with special guests from the film.
Please join us for the film on Monday and Power Poetry on Tuesday.
- Link: http://www.tobeheard.org/watch.html
- Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, Foreign Literature and Languages, Portuguese, Films
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3:00 PM
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4:30 PM
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Doctor of Nursing Practice Capstone Defense
- Location: Foster Administration Building
, 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
- Contact: College of Nursing
- Description: Jennifer Shallow, RN, DNP(c)
Nursing DNP Candidate
"Cardiac Rehabilitation Identifying the facilitators and barriers to women's attendance"
Date: April 11, 2016
Time: 3-4:30
Location: Foster Administration Building-Board of Trustees, Room: 333
DNP Capstone Committee:
Margaret Rudd-Arieta, DNP, PPCNP-BC (Capstone Advisor)
Elizabeth Chin, PhD, RN
Joyce Grusmark, MSPT
RSVP to Vicki Vital: vvital@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, College of Nursing
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