Friday, March 22, 2013

Priority Registration for Summer/Fall 2013

Good day!  

Please see the descriptions below for Fall 2013 seminars offered in EPE.  Priority registration for the 4 WK Summer, 8 WK Summer and Fall terms begins Monday, March 25th.  The majority of our course offerings have been posted to the course schedule accessible at through MyUK.  If you have questions about the registration process or are experiencing difficulty, you should not hesitate to contact Amberly Warnke in the EPE office at aaburk00@uky.edu

Important notes:  
  • EPE/EDP 558 is no longer being offered in the 8 WK Summer term.  
  • EPE 669 is no longer being offered in the Fall term.
  • Members of the EdD in EPE Cohort and the PLS Cohort will be unable to register until further notice.  If you are a member of one of these cohorts, you will be contacted when the issues preventing your registration have been resolved.
Seminar descriptions:
  • EPE 773-004 "Manuscript Writing" taught by Dr. Kelly Bradley on Tuesdays from 9:30-Noon. Bring your research and learn the ins and outs of manuscript writing through various lenses, as you produce a final product of your research, a piece to put under review and hopefully publish. 
  • EPE 525-001/773-005 "Education & Film" taught by Dr. Richard Angelo on Tuesdays from 4-6:30. This seminar is open to graduate students at both the masters (EPE 525) and the doctoral level (EPE 773). Undergraduates with advanced standing are also welcome to enroll under the EPE 525 number.  We’ll be exploring a number of distinct but related themes. Coming-of-age comedies and melodramas are certainly on the docket—Dead Poets Society (1989), Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986), Finding Forrester (2000) and the like. But we will also take the long view. We’ll consider the revolutionary emergence of cinema at the turn of the last century, as well as the hopes, anxieties, and politics that cradled what was still a new technology in the 20’s and 30’s. While Hollywood fare was perceived to be a threat as well as an opportunity for the schools, others were drawn to the promise of “practical cinema”—to non-theatrical releases of one sort or another—to advance a range of educational agendas in a wide variety of venues. While the seminar sheds fresh light on our curricular past—to date, the historiography of American education has all but ignored film and photography—it also affords new perspectives on our digital present.  A paper of 20-25 pages in length on any aspect of these broad topics will be due at the end of term. There will be no final exam.
  • EPE 798-001 "Sociology of Education" taught by Dr. Jane Jensen on Wednesdays from 11-1:30. A study of higher education and society using sociological views and policy perspectives. Topics include inequality and diversity in higher education; universities and colleges as social organizations and cultural institutions; the academic profession, academic departments and disciplines; the social and academic lives of students; as well as the impact of higher education and its relations to labor markets. The examples we'll use in the course will lean heavily toward rural higher education and Appalachian Studies. This course will count toward an elective in the Graduate Certificate in Appalachian Studies, if you are interested, and is a good foundational course for higher education students interested in socio-cultural issues in post-secondary education.
  • EPE 798-001 "Diversity and Education" taught by Dr. Willis Jones on Mondays from 4-6:30.  This seminar will examine how race, class, gender, sexuality, religion, and other issues of diversity impact various areas of post-secondary education.  The goal of the class is for students to develop a greater understanding of how diversity is defined, understood, and conceptualized in higher education research, practice, and policy.  Among the topics to be covered in the course are post-secondary access, the college student experience, the educational impact of diversity, and campus climate. 


Thursday, March 21, 2013

Fall Sociology of Higher Education Course

Greetings from Sabbatical EPE'ers!

I'll be teaching Sociology of Higher Education in the fall on Wednesdays at lunchtime.  Currently this is listed as an EPE798 but will eventually get it's own regular number and I'll likely teach it in the 4:00pm and later slot next time.  Here's the formal description:

Sociology of Higher Education
A study of higher education and society using sociological views and policy perspectives.  Topics include inequality and diversity in higher education; universities and colleges as social organizations and cultural institutions; the academic profession, academic departments and disciplines; the social and academic lives of students; as well as the impact of higher education and its relations to labor markets.    

The examples we'll use in the course will lean heavily toward rural higher education and Appalachian Studies.  This course will count toward an elective in the Graduate Certificate in Appalachian Studies if you are interested.  This is a good foundational course for higher education students interested in socio-cultural issues in post-secondary education.  I'm still working on the full reading list and assignments, so if you have requests, please send them.

Happy Spring!

Jane
--
Dr. Jane McEldowney Jensen
Associate Professor
Educational Policy Studies & Evaluation
University of Kentucky
859-489-7050

Education Abroad opportunities through UK

While many of UK's programs are oriented for undergraduate education abroad, some 
include opportunities for graduate students, including scholarships to help with
expenses for education and internships abroad.  The following is from Tony Ogden,
UK's Director of Education Abroad and EPE adjunct professor:
 
 
During this second half of the semester, we'd like to make a final push to students
about 2013 summer and fall semester Education
Abroad<http://www.uky.edu/educationabroad/> programs.   UK offers a wide array of
high-quality, academic programs that are still accepting applications, but students
will need to act quickly.


1.       UK offers Study Abroad, Research Abroad, Intern Abroad, Teach Abroad and
Service Abroad programs.  There really is a program for everyone and all programs
are credit-bearing.

2.       Students can enroll in discipline-specific faculty-directed programs,
affordable exchange programs, and an array of other programs this summer, next fall,
or even for the entire academic year.

3.       Application deadlines vary and many are fast approaching.

4.       There are still many scholarships available for summer, fall and full-year
programs.

Finally, students should be encouraged to attend a First Steps Information
Session<http://www.uky.edu/educationabroad/contact/hours.html>, Mondays & Tuesdays
at 4pm and Wednesdays and Thursdays at 3pm.   Information sessions are held in 207
Bradley Hall.

And please don't forget that our Education Abroad Peer
Advisors<http://www.uky.edu/educationabroad/contact/ambassador.html> are poised and
eager to make brief Classroom Presentations.  To request a classroom presentation,
just schedule it here<https://uky.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_9WARPkjPnudeJGA>, and
we'll be there.

Thanks everyone!

- Tony

Anthony C. Ogden, Ph.D.
Director, Education Abroad
University of Kentucky International Center
www.uky.edu/EducationAbroad<http://www.uky.edu/EducationAbroad>

As of January 2013, our office name has changed from Office of International Affairs
(OIA) to University of Kentucky International Center (UKIC); please update your
records accordingly.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Lecture on Siberia, March 22

Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer will be presenting on Friday, March 22 as part of this
year's Imagining Russia's Realms series.
 
There is also currently one spot available for lunch that afternoon for anyone who
is interested. Please email Jeanmarie Rouhier-Willoughby if you are interested in
joining for lunch. Her email is: j.rouhier@uky.edu<mailto:j.rouhier@uky.edu>

"Interrelating Shamans, Politics, Ecology and Spirituality in Siberia"

Siberian indigenous peoples' intertwined striving for self-determination and
spiritual vitality has been an impressive trend in the past twenty years, but their
efforts are threatened by political, social and ecological change. This talk, based
on long-term fieldwork in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia) and beyond, probes the
implications of indigenous peoples' concerns. Focus is on the Sakha (Yakut), who are
the farthest North of the Turkic language speakers and the majority indigenous group
of their multiethnic republic in the Far East of the Russian Federation. Since the
Soviet Union collapsed, they have been coping with the tensions of increased
development, mixed signal federal policies and valiant attempts at cultural
revitalization. How far do the ripple effects of climate change go? How do
indigenous land keepers discuss the dangers and potential remedies of change? Are
indigenous peoples yet again at the forefront of human rights abuses?

Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer is Research Professor at Georgetown University in the
Anthropology Department and the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European
Studies (CERES).

Friday, March 22, 2013 - 2:00pm, New Student Center Room 230

Monday, March 4, 2013

Dr. Michael Wsch Lecture on Teaching 3/19

Dr. Michael Wesch, a cultural anthropologist and media ecologist at Kansas
State University, is coming as our guest to give a talk entitled The End 
of Wonder in the Age of Whatever on March 19th at 12:30 pm
<https://exchange.uky.edu/owa/UrlBlockedError.aspx
in the W.T. Young Auditorium.

Dr. Wesch regularly teaches large classes and was the 2008 U.S. Professor 
of the Year for Doctoral and Research Universities selected by the Carnegie 
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. He will be talking about 
creating a sense of "wonder" in the classroom by giving students the gift of 
"big questions." We are very excited about Professor Wesch's visit and 
believe his instructional methods and experiences may be inspirational for 
the faculty in your college. We are hopeful that his talk will begin an 
important dialogue on our campus around educational topics such as the
use of technology in the classroom and innovative teaching methods for 
larger courses.