Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Spanish Bilingual Program in Speech-Language Pathology

Spanish Bilingual Program in Speech-Language Pathology at Indiana University

Do you speak Spanish fluently? Do you want a rewarding career helping people learn to communicate? Are you looking for a graduate program that combines a strong academic curriculum, real-world experience with Spanish speakers, clinical practicum and the opportunity for community outreach? If so, then the Indiana University Speech Therapy Education, Practicum, and Services for Latino Children and Families (STEPS) program in the Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences is a great program for you!

As part of the M.A. in Speech and Hearing Sciences, our program offers unique academic courses about communication in bilingual populations and specific coursework about Spanish-English language development and disorders. In addition, students will deliver speech-language pathology clinical services to mono- and bilingual Spanish speakers, both in our clinic and in real-world settings, under the supervision of an experienced bilingual speech-language pathologist. Speech-language services can include helping children learn to talk, training individuals with disabilities to produce speech sounds, helping victims of stroke or traumatic brain injury, working with individuals with autism, and much more! The opportunity to participate in the delivery of parent training and professional development seminars is also available.

This blend of experiences is unparalleled in the Midwest. Student funding for STEPS is available to those who qualify.

To be eligible, you must first apply to the IU Master’s program in Speech and Hearing Sciences. All interested students fluent in Spanish are encouraged to apply.

For more information, please visit our website at:
http://www.indiana.edu/~sphs/bilingual.html
Or contact:
Melanie Mazur, CCC-SLP, mmazur@indiana.edu, 812-855-3605 Raquel Anderson, PhD, CCC-SLP, raanders@indiana.edu, 812-855-4161

Patten Lecture: International Climate Change Scientist Jean Palutikof - October 11

Jean Palutikof, Director of the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF) at Griffith University, Australia will kick off the Patten Lecture series with:

"The Role of International Treaties in Tackling Climate Change"

Monday, October 11
7:30 p.m.
Fine Arts 015

Paultikof will discuss likely futures in a world where governments make their own rules about emissions reduction. The talk will examine whether there is a future for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and looks at the role of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, in supporting the work of the UNFCCC.

For more information on the Patten Lecture Series, see:
http://patten.indiana.edu

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Special Neuroscience Seminar at IUPUI Tomorrow! - Wednesday 9/29

On Wednesday, September 29 (tomorrow) at 12:00 noon, Dr. Pedro Lowenstein, Director of the Gene Therapeutics Research Institute of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center at UCLA will present a research seminar sponsored by the Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics. Dr. Lowenstein is a noted expert in glial brain tumors and their influence by and upon the brain microenvironment and immune system. His wife, Maria Castro, gave an outstanding seminar here a few weeks ago and I believe you can expect a similar interesting story.

Medical and Molecular Genetics – IU School of Medicine presents:

Pedro Lowenstein, M.D., Ph.D.
Director, Gene Therapeutics Research Institute Bram and Elain Goldsmith Endowed Chair in Gene Therapeutics Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Professor of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology and Medicine UCLA

“How Glioma Cells Build a Brain Tumor, Shape the Microenvironment, and Determine Therapeutic Responses”

Wednesday, September 29
12:00 noon
Walther Hall (R3) Room 203
INDIANAPOLIS

Announced by:
Gerry S. Oxford, Ph.D.
Executive Director
Stark Neurosciences Research Institute
Indiana University School of Medicine
950 W. Walnut St., Room 402 Research II Bldg.
Indianapolis, IN 46202
Voice: 317-278-5808

This Week in Themester, September 27-October 1

This Week in Themester

The following events are associated with Themester: sustain•ability: Thriving on a Small Planet. All events listed are open to the public and all are free except those designated with a $.

See THIS WEEK IN THEMESTER at
http://themester.indiana.edu/thisweek.shtml for place, time and other details.

COLL-T 200 LECTURE: Peak Oil: The Community Response on Reaching a Fundamental Ecological Limit (Dave Rollo, Bloomington City Councilmember, Research Associate, Department of Biology)

PUBLIC LECTURE: Coal’s role in Indiana’s future (Tom Sparrow , Purdue University)

FILM SCREENING: The End of Suburbia (2004, 78 min)

COLL-T 200 LECTURE: Redefining Prosperity: The Economics of Sustainability (Heather Reynolds, Department of Biology)

STAGE PRODUCTION: AwareFest: The Bloomington Playwrights Project presents eight short plays about keeping our world green.
~ A Bloomington community event, $ ~

PUBLIC LECTURE: Global Inequality, Within-Nation Inequality, and the Changing Distribution of Income (Art Alderson, Indiana University)

PUBLIC LECTURE: Majora Carter, environmental activist and consultant

PUBLIC LECTURE: Climate Science: Regional Manifestations (Linda Mearns, National Center for Atmospheric Research)

STUDENT SUMMIT: greenINg our economy, a Student Empowerment Summit, featuring Majora Carter

PANEL DISCUSSION: Design Matters: Sustainability and the Built Environment

EXHIBITION: Exhibition: African Reinventions: Reused Materials in Popular Culture Sustainability-themed tours at the IU Art Museum start September 23. Contact the IUAM Tour coordinator (855-7719 or prahn@indiana.edu) to schedule.

University of Chicago's MD/PhD Program in Medicine, the Social Sciences, and Humanities (MeSH)

The University of Chicago MD/PhD Program in Medicine, the Social Sciences, and Humanities (MeSH) is now accepting applications for the 2011-2012 academic year. The MeSH program is an MD/PhD program for students interested in pursuing medical training and a PhD in the Social Sciences or Humanities. The program seeks to train innovative physician-scholars who will work at the critical interface of medicine and society. Former students have pursued their PhD in a wide range of fields including: anthropology, conceptual and historical studies in science, economics, public policy and philosophy. Started in 1985, MeSH is one of very few programs of its kind in the country.

Applicants who wish to receive priority consideration should submit their supplemental application by November 1st; the final deadline is December 1st. Please note that applicants must apply to both the Pritzker School of Medicine and the relevant graduate department. Additional information is available on our web site.

Individuals who have already begun medical training are also eligible for consideration for the program. Such individuals are encouraged to contact Mr. Evans for further information.

Questions regarding MeSH may be directed to the Program Coordinator:
Coleman B. Evans
Director of Training Programs
University of Chicago
The Center for Health & the Social Sciences
5841 South Maryland--M200B
Chicago, IL 60637
MC 1000
P: (773) 702-3726
F: (773) 702-4620
cevans@bsd.uchicago.edu

Counseling, Social Work, and Health Networking Night - Tonight!

Counseling, Social Work, and Health Networking Night

Tuesday, September 28
6:30-8:30 p.m.
DeVault Alumni Center - 1000 E. 17th St. (across from Assembly Hall)

Networking Nights is a collaborative event hosted by the IU Career Development Center and the IU Student Alumni Association. It is a night created to give students the opportunity to learn the art of networking through interaction with professionals in their field of interest.

Please join IU Alumni and career professionals in diverse careers within the Counseling, Social Work, and Health industries for an evening of networking. Guest speakers will participate in a panel discussion focusing on their career paths, organizational opportunities, and sharing advice for students entering the world-of-work. An introduction to networking will follow with light refreshments and the opportunity to mingle with the guest speakers.

We ask that students please RSVP through their myIUcareers account, accessible at http://www.indiana.edu/~career/. Business casual attire (dress shirt, dress pants, or skirt) is appropriate for this event.

Panelists:
-Amanda Barge, Women’s Treatment Leader, Centerstone -Julie Chapin, Manager, Bloomington Hospital Hospice -Jackie Daniels, Social Worker, OASIS Programs -Erin Colone Peabody, Speech Language Pathologist, MCCSC -Shelley Sallee, Volunteer Coordinator, Volunteers in Medicine Monroe County

Don't miss this great professional opportunity!

Announced by:
Crystal M. Smith
Senior Assistant Director, University Relations Career Development Center and Arts & Sciences Career Services Indiana University, Bloomington
812-856-3128
smith838@indiana.edu / www.iucareers.com

NASA Astronaut Headlines Combined Seminar Series, Grand Rounds

We would like to invite you to an especially exciting Combined Seminar Series and Grand Rounds as our guest speaker for both is none other than NASA astronaut David Wolf.

Dr. Wolf will deliver “Tissue Engineering Utilizing Controlled Gravity” during the Combined Seminar Series from 3:30 - 4:30 p.m., Thursday, September 30 in Walther Hall (R3), Room 203.

During Grand Rounds, Dr. Wolf will present “Building and Utilizing Laboratories in Space.” That presentation is 7:30 - 8:30 a.m., Friday, October 1 in Walther Hall (R3), Room 203.

Dr. Wolf, an Indianapolis native, earned his B.S. in electrical engineering from Purdue and his M.D. from Indiana University School of Medicine. Selected as a NASA astronaut in January 1990, Dr. Wolf became qualified for space flight in July 1991. Dr. Wolf has logged 168 days, 12 hours, 56 minutes, 04 seconds in space over four separate missions, including 128 days on the Russian MIR space station, trained and conducted completely in the Russian language. He has conducted a total of seven spacewalks, utilizing both the American and Russian spacesuits, and has logged 47 hours and five minutes of extravehicular activity. He is an active public speaker and is called upon to represent NASA in a wide variety of venues to communicate the experience and importance of human spaceflight.

Announced by:
Patrick J. Loehrer, Sr., M.D.
H.H. Gregg Professor of Oncology
Director, IU Simon Cancer Center
Associate Dean for Cancer Research
Indiana University School of Medicine

Student Academic Center Workshops through October 6

The Student Academic Center will be offering the following free workshops the next two weeks. The workshops are open to all students, and you do not need to sign up in advance. However students who arrive five minutes past the starting time will not be allowed entrance to the workshop.

Tuesday 9/28, Note Making Made Easy: Lectures and Power Point, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Teter TEF260

Wednesday 9/29, Note Making Made Easy: Lectures and Power Point, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Ballantine Hall 310

Monday 10/4, Information Management for Large Lectures, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Forest Academic Support Center

Tuesday 10/5, College Thinking: Become a Better Memorizer, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Teter TEF260

Wednesday 10/6, College Thinking: Become a Better Memorizer, 7:00-8:00 p.m., Ballantine Hall 310

Workshops for the entire fall semester are listed at the SAC web site: http://sac.indiana.edu

Questions concerning the workshops can be addressed to:
Sharon Chertkoff, Ph.D.
Basic Skills and Outreach Coordinator
Student Academic Center
Office of the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Indiana University, Bloomington
408 N. Union St., Suite 300
(812)855-7313 phone

Friday, September 24, 2010

Life Sciences Student Associate Program - RSVP by October 11

Attention High-Achieving IU campus Undergrad, Grad and PhD Students!

Interested in a career in the life sciences? The Center for the Business of Life Sciences (CBLS) at the IU Kelley School of Business is offering a Certificate in the Business of Life Sciences to select students in the sciences, medicine, informatics, law and other programs. This highly successful and competitive program provides you interaction with top-notch industry leaders and students from many life sciences and business disciplines.

Reception & Information Session
Thursday, October 14
5:30-7:30 p.m.
IU Kelley School Graduate Bldg, CG0034
Hors d’oeuvres and beverages will be served.

*Please RSVP to lifesc@indiana.edu by noon Monday, October 11.*

Apply Today and Enroll in the Life Sciences Student Associate Program. Fall 2010 course offering begins October 26 and meets for seven weeks each Tuesday 6:15 - 9:15 p.m.

Attend a Reception to learn more about the program possibilities and to network with current Life Sciences Student Associates, instructors and industry representatives

For more information, please contact:
Inga Paegle at ipaegle@indiana.edu
IU Kelley CBLS Student Associate Program http://kelley.iu.edu/cbls
(812) 856-0915

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Indiana State University School Psychology Program

The School Psychology graduate program at Indiana State University offers Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) and Doctoral (Ph.D.) degree options for students interested in the field of school psychology. The faculty and staff provide students with rich coursework and practicum experiences, as well as research opportunities in students’ areas of interest.

The field of school psychology is undergoing exciting changes and rapid growth, and school psychologists are in high-demand as a result. Our current graduate students come from diverse backgrounds, but we all share a desire for working with children and youth to help them achieve academic, behavioral, emotional, and social success.

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Damon Krug (Damon.Krug@indstate.edu) Dr. Leah Nellis (Leah.Nellis@indstate.edu) Departmental office: (812) 237-2880 edschoolpsych@indstate.edu

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Biology Seminar this Friday, September 24

Students, you are cordially invited to the following Biology seminar.

Friday, September 24
4:00 p.m.
Myers Hall 130

Jim Goodson, Associate Professor of Biology, Indiana University, will present, "Nonapeptides and the Evolution of Social Group Sizes in Finches and Other Tales of Vertebrate Brains, Behavioral Diversity and the Limbic-Hypothalamic Soul."

Michigan SPH Prospective Student Day is October 2

Students! You are invited to the University of Michigan School of Public Health for our annual Prospective Student Day on Saturday October 2, 2010. Learn about Public Health Careers and What is Public Health? Apply now to Fall 2011 MPH, MHSA, MS, PhD, and Certificate programs.

Please mark your calendar. Our annual School of Public Health Prospective Student Information Day will be held on October 2, 2010 8:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

We invite students, faculty, and advisors who wish to learn more about the field of public health to register. Visit our website to view an agenda and for registration: http://www.sph.umich.edu/students/prospective/information_day.html
Please register online if you would like to attend.

Questions? Contact us at sph.inquiries@umich.edu or 734.764.9554.

Announced by;
Kiran Dhiman, MPH

Student Admissions Coordinator
The University of Michigan
School of Public Health
Office of Academic Affairs, Suite 1700
1415 Washington Heights
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029
734-764-9554
kiransd@umich.edu
www.sph.umich.edu

Neuroscience Seminar tomorrow - September 22

Please join us for the N650 Neuroscience Fall 2010 Colloquium!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010
4:00 p.m.
Psychology Building, Room 101

Joseph Farley, Ph.D.
Department Psychological & Brain Sciences and Program in Neuroscience

"Cellular and Molecular Bases of Coincidence- and Non-coincidence Learning and Memory in Hermissenda"

Announced by:
Faye Caylor
Program in Neuroscience
Indiana University
1101 E. 10th Street, PY 343
Bloomington, IN 47405-7007
Tel.: 812-855-7756
FAX: 812-855-4520
fcaylor@indiana.edu
www.indiana.edu/~neurosci

Monday, September 20, 2010

New Second Eight Weeks Course

Students, here is a new New Second Eight Weeks Course! The course carries Culture Studies credit.

CEUS-R 199
Class Number 35224
Introductory Topics in Central Eurasian Studies
VT: “Central Asia: Cultures and Customs”
MW 5:45 - 8:15 p.m.
SY 003
Instructor: Gulnisa Nazarova, Ph.D.
Culture Studies List A

Course description:
This course will introduce Central Asia (including Xinjiang and Mongolia) and the Central Asian peoples to undergraduate students. Many people think of the Silk Road when they hear the term “Central Asia,” and indeed that region was a major crossroads on the fabled trade route linking East and West. The languages, cultural traditions, religions, and material artifacts in Central Asia all illustrate that it has been a meeting place of peoples and cultures for centuries. Most Central Asians are Muslims, and most speak languages in the same family as Turkish. At the same time, they have widely differing ways of life, with pastoralists, farmers, itinerant traders, and urbanites represented.

In this course we will cover who the Central Asian peoples are, their languages, religions,traditional ways of life, cultures and customs. We will emphasize both the common features they all share, and the important differences among them. Through readings, meetings with experts on and representatives from Central Asia, along with visual materials, artifacts, and songs, students will find answers to their questions about this vast region. During the course students will watch several movies and selected excerpts from Central Asian films and other media in order to expose them to authentic ideas and images from Central Asian culture. This course is designed to give a virtual tour of this remarkable region.

Central Eurasian Studies
Goodbody Hall 157
1011 East Third St.
Bloomington, IN 47405-7005
(812) 855-2398

This Week in Themester - September 20-26

The following events are associated with Themester: sustain•ability: Thriving on a Small Planet.

All events listed are open to the public and all are free except those designated with a $.

For dates, times and updates to this list see, This Week in Themester at http://themester.indiana.edu/events/thisweek.shtml

PUBLIC LECTURE: Textile artist Carmen Benavente, author of Embroiderers of Ninhue COLL-T 200 LECTURE: Critical Thinking about Sustainability (Christine Barbour, Department of Political Science)

Simply Living Fair & Midwest Permaculture Convergence ~ A Bloomington community event, $ ~

COLL-T 200 LECTURE: The Energy Challenge – Meeting environmental goals while providing reliable, affordable electricity (Mariann Quinn, Director of Environmental Policy Analysis and Strategy for Duke Energy)

PUBLIC LECTURE: The Evolution of Global Income Inequality (Glenn Firebaugh, Pennsylvania State University)

OPENING RECEPTION: Exhibition: African Reinventions: Reused Materials in Popular Culture. Exhibit runs through December 19.

Sustainability-themed tours at the IU Art Museum start September 23. Scheduled in advance by contacting the IUAM Tour coordinator (855-7719 or prahn@indiana.edu).

Research Opportunities in Criminal Justice Dept - September 22

Announcing Research Opportunities in the Department of Criminal Justice!

All interested undergraduate students are invited to join the Department of Criminal Justice on Wednesday, September 22 at 5:00 p.m. in the Maple Room, Indiana Memorial Union, to learn about undergraduate research opportunities.

Research options within the Department include our new research internship, our departmental honors program, and other fantastic options with faculty and affiliates.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Office of Admissions Tour Guide Recruitment - Call Out Meeting September 20

Attention, sophomores and juniors! Herman B Wells wants you to join the IU Tour Guide Program! Please join us at our Call Out Meeting.

Office of Admissions Tour Guide Recruitment Call Out Meeting Monday, September 20 7:30 p.m.
Jordan Hall 124

We are hoping to recruit students from across campus in every academic discipline to be more representative of Indiana University when prospective students from across the country consider making IU their home.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us:
Ryan Short & Kyle Roach
Tour Guide Directors
Ryan (Cell phone): (765) 748-8945
Kyle (Cell phone): (765) 624-8081
E-mail: IUBTOURS@INDIANA.EDU

SPHS Colloquium on September 27

Please join us for our first colloquium of the season!

What: Colloquium presented by the Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences and the SPHS PhD Organization
Where: Speech and Hearing Building, Room C141
When: Monday, September 27, 4:00-5:00 p.m.

Speaker: Karen Forrest, Professor and Chair, Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences

Title and abstract will be forthcoming.

Jewish Studies Fall Welcome dessert

You are cordially invited to for the Jewish Studies Fall Welcome dessert

Come meet Jewish Studies faculty and students, and learn about Jewish Studies and the Jewish Studies Student Association!!

Tuesday, September 21, 2010
4:30-6:00 p.m.
Hoosier Room
(around the corner from the East Lounge, Mezzanine Floor) Indiana Memorial Union

Drop by and join us for dessert and beverages.

All students interested in Jewish Studies are welcome!

For more information, please contact 855-0453 or e-mail the Jewish Studies Program.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Career Development Center Newsletter

Students! The Career Development Center is a great resource for employment, internship, and graduate school information. Their latest newsletter highlights the following events:

* RESUME SUBMISSION DEADLINES
* FEATURED JOB AND INTERNSHIP POSTINGS
* VISIT THE CDC MARKETING BLITZ (AND GET A FREE T-SHIRT!)
* LIFE SCIENCES WORKSHOPS FOR IUB FALL CAREER FAIR
* PROCTER & GAMBLE CONSUMER AND MARKET KNOWLEDGE (CMK) INFORMATION SESSION
* TWISTED LIMB PAPERWORKS INTERNSHIP INFORMATION SESSION
* RESUME DAY: PREPARE FOR THE IU BLOOMINGTON FALL CAREER FAIR!
* IU BLOOMINGTON FALL CAREER FAIR
* DISH NETWORK INFORMATION SESSION
* AMERICORPS: NEW FUNDING OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENTS ENGAGED IN SERVICE

For more information on these and other events, visit www.iucareers.com and sign in to your myIUcareers account.

BENEFITS OF myIUcareers:
Participate in on-campus interviews for internship and full-time employment/Access online postings for part-time, internship, fellowship, and full-time positions/View the IU Career Development Center and Arts and Sciences Career Services calendar of interviews and events and RSVP for workshops and employer information sessions/ Obtain contact information for employers actively partnered with the Career Development Center and Arts and Sciences Career Services

Announced by:
Katie Lloyd
Senior Assistant Director, Student Services Career Development Center Arts & Sciences Career Services Indiana University Bloomington
Phone: 812-855-9136
lloydk@indiana.edu
www.IUCareers.com

New Overseas Study Program - Apply by September 27

Announcing a new study abroad option! We are now offering a *spring semester* option to students this upcoming year at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England where students are directly enrolled at a British university and take classes with British students.

The deadline for applications is Monday, September 27, 2010.

The University of Kent is situated about one hour southeast of London in the midst of a famous cathedral city and picturesque villages. You can consult Kent’s catalogues of modules at http://www.kent.ac.uk/studying/short-term/programmes/index.html for more specific information on classes offered.

Announced by:
Casey L. Vargo I Study Abroad Advisor
Office of Overseas Study, Indiana University Franklin Hall 303
Appointments: +1 (812) 855-9304
Phone: +1 (812) 855-5607
Fax: +1 (812) 855-6452
clvargo@indiana.edu
http://www.indiana.edu/~overseas

Friday, September 3, 2010

Freshman Prelaw/Premed Orientation Meetings Sept. 7 and 8

Are you interested in the possibility of attending law or medical school in the future? If so, these meetings should be considered mandatory!

1. PRELAW ORIENTATION with Don Gjerdingen, Chair, IUB Law School Admission Committee, and HPPLC Director/Prelaw Advisor Mac Francis Wednesday, September 8, 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. (Quiet latecomers welcome.)
Law School Room 121 (corner of Third St and Indiana Ave).

2. PREMED ORIENTATION with Rachel Tolen, HPPLC Assistant Director and Premed Advisor and Richard Hvale, Premed Advisor Tuesday, September 7, 6:00 to 7:30 p.m.
Indiana Memorial Union, Whittenberger Auditorium.

These meetings are sponsored by IU’s Health Professions and Prelaw Center (HPPLC), located across from the Union in Maxwell Hall 010. Get to know this office. They are dedicated to helping you become a well-prepared and successful applicant to professional school. Freshmen are strongly encouraged to meet with a preprofessional advisor.

ALL STUDENTS--including those who cannot attend the above meetings--PLEASE:
1. Register for your area’s email list. Go to www.hpplc.indiana.edu, and click the link for “Email Lists.” It takes 20 seconds. You will receive email only for your area of interest and year in school.
2. Review the material for your area at the above web address.
3. Take a look at the HPPLC calendar of preprofessional events: http://www.hpplc.indiana.edu/events.php. Try to get a head start on professional development by attending as many of these as possible!
4. Make an individual appointment to meet with a preprofessional advisor. Just call (812) 855-1873.

Announced by:
The Preprofessional Advisors at HPPLC
For more information, contact:
IU Health Professions and Prelaw Center
hpplc@indiana.edu

Boren Scholarship Opportunity

On September 9, 2010, from 2:00-3:00 p.m. in the Great Room of the Honors College, a representative from the Institute of International Education will be speaking with interested students about the David L. Boren Scholarships and Fellowships for the 2011-12 academic year.

Boren Awards provide a unique funding opportunity for U.S. students to study world regions critical to U.S. interests (including Africa, Asia, Central & Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East). The countries of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are excluded.

The Boren Scholarship provides opportunities for undergraduate students to study in countries that are generally underrepresented in study abroad. Boren Scholars are awarded up to $20,000 for an academic year.

The Boren Fellowship allows graduate students to add an important international and language component to their graduate studies. Boren Fellows can be awarded up to $30,000.

Additional information on preferred geographic regions, languages, fields of study and application procedures can be found at www.borenawards.org.

For more information please contact Steven Rose, IU Boren Undergraduate Scholarship Representative (rosestm@indiana.edu), or Paul Fogleman, IU Boren Graduate Fellowship Representative (pfoglema@indiana.edu), or contact Boren Awards at 1 800 618 NSEP or boren@iie.org.

Announced by:
Steven M. Rose
Assistant Director
Office of Overseas Study
http://www.indiana.edu/~overseas/
Indiana University
Franklin Hall 303, 601 E Kirkwood Ave
Bloomington, IN 47405
(812) 855-7588

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Second Eight Weeks Course: "Comics as Memoir"

Check out this Second Eight Weeks Course!

Comics as Memoir (2 cr)
MW 4:00-5:15 p.m.
Collins Living-Learning Center

Course description:
How are comics so popular as pleasure reading, and yet so sought after by scholars as fodder for their methodologies? This class will take as its purview comics, webcomics and graphic novels from the last decade or so, and investigate the themes and meanings of each. We will look at memoirs, discussing issues of time, space, memory, liminal zones, and culture through the intersection of image and text. We will also use scholarly articles, showing the rich field of scholarship that has sprung from comics. For assignments, students will write weekly responses to the readings, and undertake an independent project with a presentation. We will also take several field trips, including Boxcar Books, Microcosm Publishing, and have several guest lectures by local scholars and artists to enrich the learning experience.

Questions may be directed to:
Emilee Mathews
mathewse@indiana.edu
M.A. Candidate in Art History, Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana M.L.S. Candidate in Library Science, School of Library and Information Science, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Themester Events - September 3

Welcome to Themester 2010! Please join us for these exciting events.

Friday, September 3
Student Building 150
9:30-10:45 a.m.

PUBLIC LECTURE: Introduction to issues in poverty, inequality and development Gerhard Glomm, Indiana University


Friday, September 3
Student Building 150
11:00 a.m.-12:10 p.m.

PUBLIC LECTURE: Introduction to Climate Science and to the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sara Pryor, Indiana University