Additional Calendars
Calendar Views
All
Athletics
Conferences and Meetings
Law School
Special Events
Sunday, November 26, 2017
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
«  11/1 - 11/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Online Teaching and Learning Strategies
  • Location: Online
  • Contact: CITS Instructional Development
  • Description: In this fully online course, we will introduce you to current research and best practices for online teaching as well as showcase examples of successful teaching strategies for the online environment. Throughout the course you will work both independently and collaboratively with your peers to gain valuable online course transition experience and develop your own strategies for online teaching and learning. As a participant, you will learn both pedagogical aspects of teaching online as well as how to use and incorporate many of the tools available in the myCourses Learning Management System used at UMassD. The ultimate goal of the course is to have you begin planning, organizing, and building the online course you eventually plan to teach. In addition, this course will introduce you to techniques that will teach you how to self-assess course site design to ensure student ease of access to course content and to facilitate more streamlined student learning and increase retention.
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty
Monday, November 27, 2017
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
8:00 AM - 11:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Classes resume
  • Location: UMass Dartmouth , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: N/A
  • Contact: Registrar's Office
  • Description: Classes resume at 8am today.
  • Link: http://www.umassd.edu/academiccalendar/
  • Topical Areas: Academic Calendar, Academic Calendar - Fall
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
3:30 PM - 4:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Department of Fisheries Oceanography / SMAST seminar - November 29, 2017 - Greg DeCelles
  • Location: New Bedford , New Bedford, MA
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: Department of Fisheries Oceanography Managing Atlantic Halibut Greg DeCelles Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries Wednesday, November 29, 2017 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm SMAST E, Room 101/102 836 South Rodney French Boulevard, New Bedford, MA To access the live broadcasting you will have to login as smast@umassd.edu with the password: smastumassd The link to the login is: https://echo360.org/home Don't forget to click on I am not a robot. After login you will have to click on ALL CLASSES (MAR 700 - 01 - DEOS Seminar or MAR 700 - 02 - DFO Seminar) and click on the green LIVE streaming. To view a video of an SMAST seminar (post-October 1, 2014), go to http://www.umassd.edu/smast/newsandevents/seminarseries/ and click on a highlighted title. For more information, please contact cfox@umassd.edu
  • Topical Areas: School for Marine Sciences and Technology, SMAST Seminar Series
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Drop-in Study Abroad Advising
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: International Programs Office
  • Description: Do you have a quick question about study abroad? Stop by the International Programs Office (IPO) located in LARTS 016. Students are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
«  11/1 - 11/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Online Teaching and Learning Strategies
  • Location: Online
  • Contact: CITS Instructional Development
  • Description: In this fully online course, we will introduce you to current research and best practices for online teaching as well as showcase examples of successful teaching strategies for the online environment. Throughout the course you will work both independently and collaboratively with your peers to gain valuable online course transition experience and develop your own strategies for online teaching and learning. As a participant, you will learn both pedagogical aspects of teaching online as well as how to use and incorporate many of the tools available in the myCourses Learning Management System used at UMassD. The ultimate goal of the course is to have you begin planning, organizing, and building the online course you eventually plan to teach. In addition, this course will introduce you to techniques that will teach you how to self-assess course site design to ensure student ease of access to course content and to facilitate more streamlined student learning and increase retention.
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty
1:30 PM - 3:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Introduction to Qualtrics
  • Location: Claire T. Carney Library , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: Free!
  • Contact: CITS: Computing & Information Technology Services
  • Description: UMass Dartmouth has selected Qualtrics as our Internet survey tool. All Faculty and Staff have access to create and publish their own surveys. Students may also use Qualtrics under the direction of a Faculty or Staff member. This workshop covers the authoring and administration of surveys, as well as data collection. Question types are covered in detail, and survey logic is also included. No previous survey experience is necessary. Note that access to Qualtrics is managed by the Office of Institutional Research and Assessment. Please contact Jonathan Bonilla at JBonilla1@umassd.edu at least three business days prior to this workshop to request access. Students must have a Faculty or Staff advisor request access on their behalf. This workshop takes place in the Library, room 135. Contact Rich Legault for more information at 508-999-8799, or email RLegault@umassd.edu. Seating is limited, so please register today!
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Everyone
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Today - 11/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MTS Tech Surge & CIE Maritime Innovations Conference 2017
  • Location: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship , 151 Martine Street, Fall River, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship
  • Description: The Maritime Innovations Conference is the premier event in New England for connecting the marine technology industry for education, networking, and facilitating partnering opportunities. The theme for this year's conference is autonomy, with cybersecurity and communication as sub-themes. This year's event, which is being held in conjunction with the Marine Technology Society's (MTS) Tech Surge, is being held on November 28th and 29th at the UMass CIE, 151, Martine Street, Fall River MA. We expect over 250 attendees over the course of the two-days of programming. DAY 1 - MTS Tech Surge: Subsea and Marine Autonomy - Tuesday November 28, 2017 from 8:30 AM to 7:00 PM EST This one day event will include speakers and panel sessions. The Tech Surge will take place November 28th in Fall River MA. The sessions will include representatives from the academic, commercial, and military sectors focusing on subsea and marine autonomy. The speakers and panel sessions will focus on the present technologies available including networking, hardware, software, and swarming techniques. Networking of unmanned vehicles includes communication, maneuvering, onboard processing and operational complexity, all components that are essential in such networks. This event will cover a multi-faceted discussion in autonomous platforms, applications, and technologies. DAY 2 - CIE Maritime Innovations - Wednesday November 29, 2017 from 8:30 AM to 7:00 PM EST Join us for the Annual Maritime Innovation: connecting, training and advancing conference. This event will bring together leading edge marine technology companies for a day of programming aimed at providing an overview of current trends in the industry, and a showcase of start up companies to discuss their new technologies. This event is Sponsored by the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth's Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and is part of our mission to connect the university with industry, organizations, state and federal agencies, and other key stakeholders in order to grow the region's economy.
  • Link: http://www.umassd.edu/innovate/events/mtstechsurgemaritimeinnovations/
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Law Alumni, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, MBA or Graduate, Management and Marketing, Claire T. Carney Library, Biology, College of Arts and Sciences, Economics, Liberal Arts, Mathematics, Medical Lab Science, Multidisciplinary Studies, STEM Education, Bioengineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering, Computer and Information Science, Co-op Program, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Conferences & Events, CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepeneurship
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Drop-in Study Abroad Advising
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: International Programs Office
  • Description: Do you have a quick question about study abroad? Stop by the International Programs Office (IPO) located in LARTS 016. Students are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
4:00 PM - 5:15 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Frederick Douglass Unity House Intercultural Student Advisor Council
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: The next Intercultural Student Advisory Council (ISAC) will meet on Tuesday, November 28, 2017 from 4:00-5:15pm in the Unity House. The purpose of the ISAC is to provide a forum for cultural student clubs, affinity groups and ally-organizations to come together to discuss, plan, and brainstorm ideas, programs, and events to present to the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth community, as well as, to provide continued feedback on campus climate and national and international events. ISAC Objectives Include: 1. Culture Sharing via Think Tank 2. Provide counsel (advisement) to the professional staff at the FDUH 3. Collaborate with fellow ALANA student organizations (in the spirit of celebrating OUR many cultures) 4. Social Justice Discourse 5. Support for FDUH Programing 6. Campus Climate (thermostat v. thermometer) Again, we welcome all student representatives from an array of student groups to attend ISAC. For more information please contact FDUH at 508.999.9220. We look forward to seeing you then. Take care!
  • Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Fredrick Douglass Unity House, Lectures and Seminars
2:00 PM - 2:50 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • WRC Resume Writing Workshop
  • Location: Liberal Arts Building 220
  • Contact: Writing and Reading Center
  • Description: Need a strong resume to catch the eye of a potential employer? Need it to reflect your skills without being too long? Need to actually sit down and start your resume for the first time? If you can answer yes to any of these questions, come on over to the Writing & Reading Center for our Resume Writing Workshop! We will cover the tricks to create an eye-catching resume that proudly shows off your skills and experiences, all while staying under a page long! To sign up, tell the receptionist in LARTS 219 or call us at 508-999-8710!
  • Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate
Today - 11/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MTS Tech Surge & CIE Maritime Innovations Conference
  • Location: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship , 151 Martine Street, Fall River, MA
  • Contact: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship
  • Description: This year, the CIE will be joining forces with the Marine Technology Society to bring together marine technology companies for two days of programming aimed at providing an overview of current trends in the industry, and a showcase of startup companies to discuss their new technologies. For more information visit www.umassd.edu/innovate
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Law Alumni, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Conferences & Events
7:30 PM - 8:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Wind Ensemble Concert
  • Location: Main Auditorium (Angus Bailey Auditorium) , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Contact: Music Department
  • Description: Wind Ensemble Concert
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, University Community, College of Visual and Performing Arts, University Marketing
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • 2018 Unity Fest Call for Organizing Participants
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: The 2018 Unity Fest is looking for committed students, faculty, and staff to help plan an incredible Unity Fest! The Unity Fest is a Spring semester event that aims to promote diversity, intercultural awareness, and community building. Participants will have an opportunity to explore, embrace, and celebrate the various cultures that make up the diverse campus community at UMass Dartmouth. The first planning meeting will be held Tuesday, November 28th at 3pm in the Frederick Douglass Unity House. For more information, contact the student committee co-chairs, Ann-Melissa Pognon and Carlos Aquino at apognon@umassd.edu & caquino@umassd.edu or call the Frederick Douglass Unity House at 508-999-9222.
  • Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, Fredrick Douglass Unity House, Conferences & Events
«  11/1 - 11/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Online Teaching and Learning Strategies
  • Location: Online
  • Contact: CITS Instructional Development
  • Description: In this fully online course, we will introduce you to current research and best practices for online teaching as well as showcase examples of successful teaching strategies for the online environment. Throughout the course you will work both independently and collaboratively with your peers to gain valuable online course transition experience and develop your own strategies for online teaching and learning. As a participant, you will learn both pedagogical aspects of teaching online as well as how to use and incorporate many of the tools available in the myCourses Learning Management System used at UMassD. The ultimate goal of the course is to have you begin planning, organizing, and building the online course you eventually plan to teach. In addition, this course will introduce you to techniques that will teach you how to self-assess course site design to ensure student ease of access to course content and to facilitate more streamlined student learning and increase retention.
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
«  11/28 - Today Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MTS Tech Surge & CIE Maritime Innovations Conference 2017
  • Location: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship , 151 Martine Street, Fall River, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship
  • Description: The Maritime Innovations Conference is the premier event in New England for connecting the marine technology industry for education, networking, and facilitating partnering opportunities. The theme for this year's conference is autonomy, with cybersecurity and communication as sub-themes. This year's event, which is being held in conjunction with the Marine Technology Society's (MTS) Tech Surge, is being held on November 28th and 29th at the UMass CIE, 151, Martine Street, Fall River MA. We expect over 250 attendees over the course of the two-days of programming. DAY 1 - MTS Tech Surge: Subsea and Marine Autonomy - Tuesday November 28, 2017 from 8:30 AM to 7:00 PM EST This one day event will include speakers and panel sessions. The Tech Surge will take place November 28th in Fall River MA. The sessions will include representatives from the academic, commercial, and military sectors focusing on subsea and marine autonomy. The speakers and panel sessions will focus on the present technologies available including networking, hardware, software, and swarming techniques. Networking of unmanned vehicles includes communication, maneuvering, onboard processing and operational complexity, all components that are essential in such networks. This event will cover a multi-faceted discussion in autonomous platforms, applications, and technologies. DAY 2 - CIE Maritime Innovations - Wednesday November 29, 2017 from 8:30 AM to 7:00 PM EST Join us for the Annual Maritime Innovation: connecting, training and advancing conference. This event will bring together leading edge marine technology companies for a day of programming aimed at providing an overview of current trends in the industry, and a showcase of start up companies to discuss their new technologies. This event is Sponsored by the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth's Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and is part of our mission to connect the university with industry, organizations, state and federal agencies, and other key stakeholders in order to grow the region's economy.
  • Link: http://www.umassd.edu/innovate/events/mtstechsurgemaritimeinnovations/
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Law Alumni, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, MBA or Graduate, Management and Marketing, Claire T. Carney Library, Biology, College of Arts and Sciences, Economics, Liberal Arts, Mathematics, Medical Lab Science, Multidisciplinary Studies, STEM Education, Bioengineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering, Computer and Information Science, Co-op Program, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Conferences & Events, CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepeneurship
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Department of Estuarine and Ocean Sciences Seminar
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: The School for Marine Science and Technology Department of Estuarine and Ocean Sciences Seminar Announcement "Influence of winter ventilation on the ocean's biological pump" Hilary Palevsky Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Department Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Wednesday, November 29, 2017 12:30 pm - 1:30 pm SMAST West, Room 204 706 S. Rodney French Blvd, New Bedford, MA Access Live seminars To access the live broadcasting, visit https://echo360.org/home, and login the username smast@umassd.edu and password smastumassd. Click "I am not a robot" and then click on ALL CLASSES (MAR 700 - 01 - DEOS Seminar or MAR 700 - 02 - DFO Seminar) and click on the green LIVE streaming. Access Past seminars You may also view broadcast of past seminars by clicking the department name under the "Seminar Series Archive" heading below, and selecting the title URL for the video you'd like to view (Adobe Flash Player is required. Download the lastest version here) For additional information, please contact Sue Silva at s1silva@umassd.edu
  • Topical Areas: School for Marine Sciences and Technology, SMAST Seminar Series
9:30 AM - 3:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Confidential HIV Testing - In recognition of World AIDS Day
  • Location: Oak Glen Hall Multipurpose Room, 1st floor
  • Cost: Bring your health insurance card.
  • Contact: LiveWell: Office of Health Education, Promotion, & Wellness
  • Description: This test requires a blood draw, which is performed by trained counselors from Seven Hills. You'll receive your results in approximately one week. For more information on World AIDS Day, visit: https://www.worldaidsday.org/events
  • Link: http://www.umassd.edu/livewell/whatwedo/hivtesting/
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, Health Services, Livewell
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
10:00 AM - 11:30 AM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Open Rehearsal Javanese Gamelon
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: Music Department
  • Description: Indonesian music CVPA Rm. 108
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Students, University Community, College of Visual and Performing Arts, University Marketing
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
12:00 PM - 12:50 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • WRC Resume Writing Workshop
  • Location: Liberal Arts Building 220
  • Contact: Writing and Reading Center
  • Description: Need a strong resume to catch the eye of a potential employer? Need it to reflect your skills without being too long? Need to actually sit down and start your resume for the first time? If you can answer yes to any of these questions, come on over to the Writing & Reading Center for our Resume Writing Workshop! We will cover the tricks to create an eye-catching resume that proudly shows off your skills and experiences, all while staying under a page long! To sign up, tell the receptionist in LARTS 219 or call us at 508-999-8710!
  • Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate
«  11/28 - Today Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MTS Tech Surge & CIE Maritime Innovations Conference
  • Location: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship , 151 Martine Street, Fall River, MA
  • Contact: CIE: Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship
  • Description: This year, the CIE will be joining forces with the Marine Technology Society to bring together marine technology companies for two days of programming aimed at providing an overview of current trends in the industry, and a showcase of startup companies to discuss their new technologies. For more information visit www.umassd.edu/innovate
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Law Alumni, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Conferences & Events
«  11/1 - 9:00 AM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Online Teaching and Learning Strategies
  • Location: Online
  • Contact: CITS Instructional Development
  • Description: In this fully online course, we will introduce you to current research and best practices for online teaching as well as showcase examples of successful teaching strategies for the online environment. Throughout the course you will work both independently and collaboratively with your peers to gain valuable online course transition experience and develop your own strategies for online teaching and learning. As a participant, you will learn both pedagogical aspects of teaching online as well as how to use and incorporate many of the tools available in the myCourses Learning Management System used at UMassD. The ultimate goal of the course is to have you begin planning, organizing, and building the online course you eventually plan to teach. In addition, this course will introduce you to techniques that will teach you how to self-assess course site design to ensure student ease of access to course content and to facilitate more streamlined student learning and increase retention.
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Drop-in Study Abroad Advising
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: International Programs Office
  • Description: Do you have a quick question about study abroad? Stop by the International Programs Office (IPO) located in LARTS 016. Students are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
10:00 AM - 12:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • BuyWays Requisitioner Training
  • Location: CCB 115
  • Contact: Purchasing
  • Description: BuyWays Requisitioner Training Learn how to create Purchase Orders. Available purchasing resources. UMass Dartmouth policies and procedures. How to monitor you Purchase Order. Lookup payments, receipts, workflow approval steps. How to add a new vendor to system
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Staff and Administrators
Thursday, November 30, 2017
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MNE/ISE MS Project Presentation by Mr. Salman Sohel Mia
  • Location: Charlton College of Business, Room 115, , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Contact: Mechanical Engineering Department
  • Description: Mechanical Engineering (MNE) / Industrial & Systems Engineering (ISE) Master of Science Project Presentation by Mr. Salman Sohel Mia DATE: November 30, 2017 TIME: 2:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. LOCATION: Charlton College of Business (CCB), Room 115 TOPIC: Aviation Demand Forecasting Model with the Help of Actual Data Analysis by Comparing Existing Models ABSTRACT: The goal of this paper is to feed actual data to the selected forecasting models based on different conditions and then compare the results with each other. In the process, try to establish a model which can have a projection for next few years with a negligible deviation from the real data based on the comparison. The focus will be on number of flights, passenger demand and airfare and to establish a strong model will be crucial as there are other entities such as GDP, Load Factor, Fuel Cost, Revenue, Operating Expense, Revenue Per Mile, Available Seat Miles which could affect them directly or indirectly. With the help of various analytical tools such as trend analysis, probability analysis, correlation and regression model the collected actual data will be analyzed and validated. Then the forecast scenarios will be identified. It will also deal with how to develop a model to forecast air passenger demand and air fare to evaluate passenger terminal capacity expansion to meet the future demand. Dynamics frameworks normally be used to model, analyze and generate scenario to increase the system performance where its capability of representing physical and information flows actually continuously converted into decisions and actions. Researchers found that airfare impact, level of service impact, GDP, population, number of flights per day and dwell time play an important role. It also helps determining the air passenger volume, No. of air flights arrangements and on top total additional area needed for passenger terminal capacity expansion including runway utilization. It will discuss about demand forecast uncertainty in brief just to mention that there are various practical reasons and entities that can be impossible to predict accurately as well. It includes the capacity extension and discus how directly it depends on demand forecasting. KEY WORDS: Modeling, Forecasting, Model Comparison, Model Validation & Verification ADVISOR: Dr. Soheil Sibdari Decision and Information Sciences, Charlton College of Business, UMD COMMITTEE MEMBERS: Dr. Wenzhen Huang, Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, UMD Dr. Bharatendra Rai, Decision and Information Sciences, Charlton College of Business, UMD Open to the public. All MNE students are encouraged to attend. For more information, please contact Dr. Soheil Sibdari (ssibdari@umassd.edu, 508-999-8019). Thank you, Sue Cunha, Administrative Assistant Mechanical Engineering scunha@umassd.edu 508-999-8492
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Students, University Community, Decision and Information Science, College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Lectures and Seminars
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Science Fiction Book Club November meeting
  • Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Room 314
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: Join the Science Fiction Book Club for our first fall meeting! We'll be discussing The Martian by Andy Weir. All are welcome! Questions? Contact Hilary Kraus at hkraus@umassd.edu
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Staff and Administrators, Students, Claire T. Carney Library, English, STEM Education, College of Engineering, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Literature
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • ProCard & Travel Card Training
  • Location: Foster Administration Building, Room 223
  • Contact: Purchasing
  • Description: This 1 hour training class is required in order to obtain a University Procurement Card (Procard & Travel Card). Individuals may attend training either before or after submitting a Procard application, either way this training must be completed before an application receives final approval from Procurement.
  • Topical Areas: Training, Workshop, audience: Faculty, audience: Staff
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • ARNIE Talk: Unlocking the Power of the Sea - A New Wave of Renewable Energy
  • Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Stoico/FIRST FED Charitable Foundation Grand Reading Room
  • Contact: College of Arts and Sciences
  • Description: This ARNIE talk will provide a brief overview of the current US and world energy landscape, the role of renewables, the techniques for harvesting wave energy, and how UMass Dartmouth researchers are at the forefront of efforts to tame the waves, and utilize their energy to benefit society. Presented by Mehdi Raessi (Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at UMassD and member of the Center for Scientific Computing and Visualization Research) and Dan MacDonald (Civil Engineer and Coastal Oceanographer, professor at UMassD in both the College of Engineering and the School for Marine Science and Technology).
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, Biology, Chemistry and Biochemistry, College of Arts and Sciences, Bioengineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Sustainability Office, Lectures and Seminars
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Percussion Ensemble and Steel Drum Concert
  • Location: CVPA Room 104
  • Contact: Music Department
  • Description: Concert Percussion and Steel Drum
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Students, College of Visual and Performing Arts
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • MNE/ISE MS Project Presentation by Mr. Arun Kumar Mutyala
  • Location: Textiles Building 101E
  • Contact: Mechanical Engineering Department
  • Description: Mechanical Engineering (MNE)/ Industrial & Systems Engineering (ISE) Master of Science Project Presentation by Mr. Arun Kumar Mutyala DATE: November 30, 2017 TIME: 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. LOCATION: Textile Building, Room 101E TOPIC: Examining Different Learning Methods for Airline Decisions of Route Planning ABSTRACT: The airline industry has important decision to make in airline route planning i.e. add new route if it has demand and deletes existing route if the route has not much demand. Such decisions are important for increasing profitability, understanding customers flight preference behavior, satisfying customers need, make changes in route planning and adapting to competitive changes. The aim of this paper is to develop a predictive model to identify parameters affecting airline route planning and making an accurate decision while adding or deletion a route for effective network topology in airline transportation. These models are useful for stakeholders and airline managers to make smart choices. Discrete choice models are widely used for modeling algorithms in the airline industry. These models are created using utility function, a linear function of independent variables and their interaction effects. Utility function uses binary choice model for making decision of route selection. They are also used to project future demand estimates to support policy exploration. This latter use for prediction is indirectly aligned with and conditional to the models estimation which aims to fit the observed data. On the other hand, machine learning models are designed in such a way that they maximize prediction accuracy. In this project, different models are made for airline decisions on route planning using discrete choice model and machine learning models and a comparison study is performed using prediction accuracy on route addition or deletion. The performance was better using machine learning models compared to the discrete choice model in both route addition and deletion. ADVISOR: Dr. Soheil Sibdari, Decision and Information Sciences, Charlton College of Business, UMD COMMITTEE MEMBERS: Dr. Wenzhen Huang, Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, UMD Dr. Bharatendra Rai, Decision and Information Sciences, Charlton College of Business, UMD Open to the public. All MNE students are encouraged to attend. For more information, please contact Dr. Soheil Sibdari (ssibdari@umassd.edu, 508-999-8019). Thank you, Sue Cunha, Administrative Assistant scunha@umassd.edu 508-999-8492
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Students, University Community, Decision and Information Science, College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Lectures and Seminars
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Drop-in Study Abroad Advising
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: International Programs Office
  • Description: Do you have a quick question about study abroad? Stop by the International Programs Office (IPO) located in LARTS 016. Students are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
Friday, December 1, 2017
5:30 PM - 9:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • International Student Gala
  • Location: UMass Dartmouth Main Campus , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: Free
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: UMass Dartmouth Global Student Program sponsored by the UMass Dartmouth Global Student Program
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Law Alumni, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Biology Seminar - Doctoral Dissertation Defense by Sherri Eldridge
  • Location: Science and Engineering Building , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Contact: Biology Seminar Series
  • Description: Sherri Eldridge will be speaking on, "Somatosensory Innvervation in the Aquatically-Adapted Skin of Humpback Whales (Megaptera novaeangliae" in LIB 314
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, General Public, Students, Biology
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • ECE Seminar* Speaker: Dr. Kunal Mankodiya, University of Rhode Island
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Cost: Free
  • Contact: ECE: Electrical & Computer Engineering Department
  • Description: Topic: INTERNET-OF-THINGS FOR WEARABLE TELEMEDICINE Speaker: Dr. Kunal Mankodiya, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical, Computer, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Rhode Island Location: Lester W. Cory Conference Room, Science & Engineering Building (SENG), Room 213A Abstract: Today, our global society is facing some unique healthcare challenges due to rising costs, growing elderly population, and the prevalence of chronic diseases. The emerging field of Internet-of-Things (IOT) holds a great potential to fulfill unmet needs of healthcare. IOT could provide personalized telemedicine to anyone, anytime, and anywhere. However, IOT must overcome the hurdles of cross-domain medical procedures that are complex, demanding a high level of precision without compromising the quality. The challenges for IOT in telemedicine are manifold; firstly, the establishment of a remote unsupervised computing infrastructure fulfilling the medical needs and, secondly, the patient interactions with such high-tech infrastructure to accomplish diagnosis or treatment objectives. In this talk, Dr. Mankodiya will present Wearable IOT, a unique framework that establishes human-centered interconnections among wearable sensors, fog computing gateways, and big data analytics-key elements for the future success of IOT in healthcare practices. He will demonstrate some of his ongoing (federally-funded) projects involving smartwatches and smart textiles that are targeted to remotely intervene patients suffering from neuropsychiatric disorders such as Parkinson's, post-traumatic stress disorders, and autism. He will also touch upon the emerging paradigm of edge/fog computing and its role in modern IOT concepts of smart cities and communities. Dr. Mankodiya will also discuss about his newly-developed courses and hack-a-thons for undergraduate and graduate students to nurture the skill of entrepreneurial and design thinking in the intersection of IOT and healthcare. Biography: Dr. Kunal Mankodiya is the Director of Wearable Biosensing Lab and is an assistant professor in the Dept. of Electrical, Computer, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Rhode Island, RI, USA since 2014. He pursued his postdoctoral research at Intel Science & Technology Center (ISTC) affiliated with Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), Pittsburgh, PA, USA. He received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Luebeck, Germany. He holds MS (University of Luebeck, Germany) and BE (Saurashtra University, India) degrees in Biomedical Engineering. He is a recipient of NSF (2016) CRII and NSF (2017) CAREER Awards. He was recognized as the Innovator-of-the-year by Future Textiles Awards, Frankfurt, Germany in 2017. Mankodiya was also selected among "40 under 40" by Providence Business News in 2017. His embedded computing design of a smart-textile ECG system earned him the 2010 SYSTEX Award, University of Ghent, Belgium. He has published a book on wearable health monitoring that serves as a hands-on guide to program high-end application processors for healthcare applications. He regularly organizes scientific workshops/symposiums on IOT for healthcare at various international conferences. He also organiz-es Hack-a-Thons every year to promote entrepreneurial thinking in the areas including IOT, healthcare, and aging. His course on Wearable IOT that is funded and supported by VentureWell blends design thinking with IOT concepts to nurture entrepreneurial skills in students from various backgrounds. The Seminars is open to the public free of charge. *For further information, please contact Dr. Honggang Wang at 508.999.8469, or by via email at hwang1@umassd.edu.
  • Topical Areas: General Public, University Community, College of Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering
5:30 PM - 12/2  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Panel Discussion and Reception for "Black Spaces Matter"
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: On the Occasion of the Opening of the Exhibition, Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood Friday December 1 | 5:30-7:30 THE MCCORMICK GALLERY AND THE CASCIERI HALL THE BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE (BAC) 320 NEWBURY STREET, BOSTON, MA 02115 5:30 Reception & Dean Karen Nelson's Welcome Message 6:00 Panel 7:30 Gather, Reflect, Discuss This Panel is organized on the occasion of Black Spaces Matter, an exhibit that showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. While the exhibit is primarily focused on the aesthetics and architectonics of this African-American and abolitionist neighborhood in the south coast of Massachusetts, the panel will address broader issues concerning Black neighborhoods across the United States and African-American heritage in general. Panel Schedule Presentations | 6:00pm-7:10pm. Moderated by Pamela Karimi Learning from Black Neighborhoods | Pamela Karimi, Associate Professor of Art History at UMass Dartmouth. The Abolitionist Row and the Underground Railroad in New Bedford and Beyond | Lee Blake, President of the New Bedford Historical Society. Digital Preservation and African-American Cultural Heritage | Jana Cephas, Assistant Professor of Architecture at the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of Michigan. Discussion and Q&A with Panel Speakers + Exhibition Curators and Contributors | 7:10pm-7:30 pm. Moderated by Pamela Karimi Participants: Don Burton (filmmaker & Instructor at UConn); Lee Blake (speaker & advisor to the show); Jana Cephas (speaker); Vaughn Horn (speaker); Pedram Karimi (architect & designer); Pamela Karimi (speaker & lead curator); Jennifer McGrory (architect & manager of exhibition production); Michael Swartz (graphic designer, 360° spherical photographer & Professor at UMass Dartmouth). This event is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Office of the UMass President, UMass Dartmouth's Provost Office, and the Boston Architectural College
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter-panel-discussion
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Students, Students, Graduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art History, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
12:00 AM Download Add to Google Calendar
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Drop-in Study Abroad Advising
  • Location: > See description for location
  • Contact: International Programs Office
  • Description: Do you have a quick question about study abroad? Stop by the International Programs Office (IPO) located in LARTS 016. Students are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
Saturday, December 2, 2017
«  11/19 - 1/29  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: NOVEMBER 19 - JANUARY 29 MCCORMICK GALLERY BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE 320 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MA 02115** This exhibit showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. This neighborhood, which was the home of many African-Americans, white and black abolitionists, and former slaves, provides a lens through which we may study interracial aspects of American cities. Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1783, more than 80 years before the Thirteenth Amendment; however, federal law supporting slave owners superseded this law and there were cases of slaves being "reclaimed" from Massachusetts in the years that followed. A strong network of abolitionists, both black and white, gave New Bedford its claim to fame that no slave was ever forcibly "reclaimed" from it. New Bedford's architecture reflects a period of relative racial equality and tolerance in "the city that lit the world" during its whaling boom. This neighborhood includes a mixture of Gothic Revival, Federal, Greek Revival, and early Italianate homes, as well as modest cottages. Important historical figures, such as Fredrick Douglass and Lewis Temple, resided in these homes. In recent years we have seen a growing body of literature on race and architecture; however, this scholarship has focused mostly on the negative side of such built environments; lacking is an in-depth exploration of the form and function of interracial neighborhoods. This exhibit celebrates the aesthetics and architectonics of a neighborhood where many former slaves lived side-by-side with the rest of the population and engaged multiple aspects of the city's interracial architecture. Through this exhibit, local New Bedford experts along with students and faculty from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC will reveal a lesser-known progressive interracial neighborhood in the United States. Please join us on Friday, December 1, from 5:30-7:30 pm, for a special panel discussion and reception. Black Spaces Matter is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Ofice of the UMass President, Perkins + Will Associates, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Boston Architectural College (BAC), New Bedford Historical Society, Rotch Jones Duff House and Garden Museum, and Spinner Publications. Lead curator: Pamela Karimi | Architectural renderings, model production, and maps: Pedram Karimi | Film, animation, and digital curation: Don Burton | Artistic representations: Michael Swartz | Advertisement and Graphic Design: Michael Swartz | Digital stations: Michael Swartz, Don Burton, Ben Guan-Kennedy | Production Manager: Jennifer McGrory| Consultant: Lee Blake | Curatorial Assistance: Students from UMass Dartmouth and the BAC. **If traveling on public transportation, take the Green line to Hynes Convention Center. The BAC is a one block walk from the station. If driving, the closest parking garage is the Hynes Auditorium Garage at 50 Dalton Street, Boston. For more information, see: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Visual Arts, Black History 4 Seasons, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
«  11/7 - 12/7  » Download Add to Google Calendar
  • COLLABORATIVE AGGREGATES ART SCHOLARSHIP EXHIBITION FINE ARTS FACULTY EXHIBITION
  • Location: CVPA: College of Visual and Performing Arts , 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
  • Cost: FREE
  • Contact: University Art Gallery
  • Description: The College of Visual and Performing Arts presents an exhibition of recent faculty work in painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media at the UMass Dartmouth CVPA Campus Gallery from November 7 through December 7, 2017. The closing reception is planned for Thursday, December 7, from 4 to 6:30 pm, with the artist talk at 5 pm. Also on display will be the juried exhibition of Collaborative Aggregates Art Scholarship winners. Collaborative Aggregates LLC has awarded six $1,500 scholarship awards to students enrolled in the College of Visual and Performing Arts graduate or undergraduate program: Jeremy Duval, Natasha Feliciano, Erick Maldonado, Taylor Maroney, Robert Ian Najlis, Cody Oliveira-Gingras. Works by each scholarship winner will be included in the Collaborate Aggregates annual calendar. Juror Timothy Van Laar is an artist, professor, as well as the Chair of Fine Arts at the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, MI.
  • Link: https://www.umassd.edu/cvpa/galleries
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Staff and Administrators, Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art Education, Art History, Artisanry, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Visual Design, Exhibits, Visual Arts
«  12/1 - 8:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Panel Discussion and Reception for "Black Spaces Matter"
  • Location: Boston, MA
  • Cost: NA
  • Contact: Art History Department
  • Description: On the Occasion of the Opening of the Exhibition, Black Spaces Matter: Exploring the Aesthetics and Architectonics of an Abolitionist Neighborhood Friday December 1 | 5:30-7:30 THE MCCORMICK GALLERY AND THE CASCIERI HALL THE BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE (BAC) 320 NEWBURY STREET, BOSTON, MA 02115 5:30 Reception & Dean Karen Nelson's Welcome Message 6:00 Panel 7:30 Gather, Reflect, Discuss This Panel is organized on the occasion of Black Spaces Matter, an exhibit that showcases the abolitionist neighborhood near the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park. While the exhibit is primarily focused on the aesthetics and architectonics of this African-American and abolitionist neighborhood in the south coast of Massachusetts, the panel will address broader issues concerning Black neighborhoods across the United States and African-American heritage in general. Panel Schedule Presentations | 6:00pm-7:10pm. Moderated by Pamela Karimi Learning from Black Neighborhoods | Pamela Karimi, Associate Professor of Art History at UMass Dartmouth. The Abolitionist Row and the Underground Railroad in New Bedford and Beyond | Lee Blake, President of the New Bedford Historical Society. Digital Preservation and African-American Cultural Heritage | Jana Cephas, Assistant Professor of Architecture at the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of Michigan. Discussion and Q&A with Panel Speakers + Exhibition Curators and Contributors | 7:10pm-7:30 pm. Moderated by Pamela Karimi Participants: Don Burton (filmmaker & Instructor at UConn); Lee Blake (speaker & advisor to the show); Jana Cephas (speaker); Vaughn Horn (speaker); Pedram Karimi (architect & designer); Pamela Karimi (speaker & lead curator); Jennifer McGrory (architect & manager of exhibition production); Michael Swartz (graphic designer, 360° spherical photographer & Professor at UMass Dartmouth). This event is supported by a Creative Economy Fund from the Office of the UMass President, UMass Dartmouth's Provost Office, and the Boston Architectural College
  • Link: http://the-bac.edu/experience-the-bac/news-and-events/events/black-spaces-matter-panel-discussion
  • Topical Areas: Alumni, Faculty, General Public, Students, Students, Graduate, University Community, University Marketing, Art History, Fredrick Douglass Unity House
7:00 PM - 10:00 PM Download Add to Google Calendar
  • Observatory Public Open House
  • Location: UMass Dartmouth Observatory Field
  • Contact: > See Description for contact information
  • Description: The UMass Dartmouth Observatory and the Astronomical Society of Southern New England (ASSNE) are pleased to invite the general public to their FREE Fall-semester night-sky viewing sessions at the campus observatory on: Saturday, Dec 2, 7:00 pm EST Viewing will take place through the observatory's 16-inch telescope and other telescopes operated by ASSNE members. This event will take place only if the weather permits (clear skies). In the event of cancellation, an announcement will be available before each event around 5 PM at https://www.meetup.com/ASSNE-MA-RI/ or by calling (508) 999-8715 for a recorded message. The UMass Dartmouth Observatory is located in the field to the right of the main campus entrance off Old Westport Rd., North Dartmouth, Massachusetts. Parking is available in designated spaces on the campus Ring Road or in lot 17. Admission is free. Children are welcome to attend, if accompanied by an adult. For more information about the observatory, make a donation to its operations, or to become an individual or corporate sponsor, please contact Prof. Alan Hirshfeld at ahirshfeld@umassd.edu or 508-999-8715.
  • Topical Areas: General Public, University Community

Export / Subscribe

Current Filters:

Event feed or embeddable widget?
Data format?
    • Include download link?
    • Show details or summary?
Event count
Time frame

  • Note: Event count takes precedence over date range!
Widget Options
  • Limit the number of events listed?
    (default: false)
    events
  • Show a title above event list?
    (default: true)
    (default: "Upcoming Events")
  • Highlight event dates or event titles?
    (default 'by title')
  • Show description in listing?
    (default: false)
  • Display end date in listing?
    (default: true)
  • Display time in listing?
    (default: true)
  • Display location in listing?
    (default: false)

Your URL:URL

Widget Code: