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AAC&U officers and staff
regularly travel throughout the country, and occasionally
the world, to speak and consult at AAC&U member schools
through seminars, institutes, and workshops as well as in
more informal gatherings. AAC&U staff also regularly speak
on the value of liberal education at various media and public
affairs events. These meetings are an opportunity for the
membership to influence the direction of AAC&U's initiatives.
We look forward to seeing you the next time we are on your
campus.
Staff and Participants of
AAC&U's SENCER Initiative Participate in Workshop in Nairobi
In December, several AAC&U staff
members and participants from the Science Education for New
Civic Engagements and Responsibilities (SENCER) project participated
in a three-day workshop that also featured teams from twelve
universities and research institutes in Kenya, Uganda, and
Tanzania. The workshop emerged from a collaboration that includes:
AAC&U, the American Association for the Advancement of
Science (AAAS), and International Women in Science and Engineering
(IWISE) at Iowa State University. The goals of the collaboration
and the workshop include:
- mobilizing resources within African
colleges and universities to focus on reducing the spread
of HIV/AIDS (a disease that currently infects an estimated
25 million Africans);
- improving science education, especially
within the challenge of improving general education, at the
post-secondary level by using the SENCER approach; and
- supporting the growth, development,
and influence of African Women in Science and Engineering
(AWSE) as an organization.
AAC&U team members included:
Monica Devanas,
Rutgers University;
Marion Field Fass,
Beloit College;
Karen Kashmanian Oates,
George Mason University and AAC&U; and David
Burns, AAC&U.
One significant outcome of the Nairobi
meeting was the decision by participants to form a consortium
of institutions dedicated to collective action on HIV in particular
and science reform in general. In the face of the enormous
crisis of HIV/AIDS in Africa, what seemed palpable to the
American delegation was the hope that the workshop released
among attendees. While the energy generated by joining together
in a common effort of commitment was inspiring in itself,
it was a breakthrough in "thinking" that inspired
the most hope. The idea—placing the study and consideration
of HIV near the center of an institution's curricular offerings—was
new to many. The promise—that placing an academic focus on
HIV would improve learning and contribute to the common good
at the same time—seemed to galvanize those in attendance.
More information on the Africa
initiative will be available http://www.aacu.org/sencer/index.cfm
and http://www.aacu.org/phhe/index.cfm.
If you have comments or questions, e-mail David Burns at burns@aacu.org.
On November
2nd, Eliza Reilly,
director of programs for SENCER and the American Conference
of Academic Deans (ACAD) executive director, visited Franklin
and Marshall College to discuss the SENCER project with a
group of administrators and faculty. On the 15th, Reilly gave
a presentation to faculty members in the Morgan State University
School of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences on
SENCER (with Dr. William Bennett, senior fellow at AAC&U).
In early December, she gave a welcome address at SUNY Stony
Brook entitled "Western Traditions in Medical History"
to New York-area high school students participating in Stony
Brook's Program for Health and Higher Education (PHHE) Partners
Project.
Amy Castner,
associate director of AAC&U's Program on Health and Higher
Education (PHHE), visited SUNY-City College of New York on
November 30 to attend the Peer Education Conference: Partnerships
in Health: You and HIV/AIDS. In December, she traveled to
the University of San Francisco to give a PHHE presentation
on National Leadership Resource Database and other HIV/AIDS
curriculum resources.
AAC&U Senior Science Fellow
Karen Oates
presented "Science
and the Undergraduate Community Research" at the Odyssey
of Inclusion-6th Annual Conference on Learning Communities
in Chicago.
On January 14, AAC&U President
Carol Geary
Schneider attended
a meeting on "Pedagogies of Engagement" co-sponsored
by the Atlantic Philanthropies and the Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching in Menlo Park, California.
President Schneider will present Dr. Bobby Fong at the presidential
inauguration ceremony at Butler University in Indianapolis,
Indiana on February 9th.
Daniel Teraguchi,
program and research associate in the Office of Diversity,
Equity, and Global Initiatives, presents "Investing in
America's Future: The Value of Asia Pacific American Leadership"
at the 2002 Leadership Excellence Annual Conference on February
7-9, hosted by the Center for Leadership Studies at Our Lady
of the Lake University in San Antonio, Texas. The presentation
focuses on the dearth of Asian Pacific Americans in leadership
roles and research on promotions to executive positions that
prove to be based on social capital rather than on technical
expertise. For more information on the Leadership Excellence
Conference, visit http://www.leadershipstudies.org/conference.
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