Faculty Research Symposium is Feb. 8

Twenty faculty members and eight graduate counseling students will present their research at the 23rd annual Faculty Research Symposium Thursday, Feb. 8, in Adams Hall.

The purposes of the event are threefold: to inform students, faculty, and staff about faculty research and scholarly interests; to watch faculty present and perform; and to show students how to present research in various disciplines, so that they may apply the techniques to their own presentations.

Here is a list of this year's presenters, their titles and the schedule for the presentations:

3:30-3:50 p.m.

• Dr. Emily Isaacson (Adams Hall 101): Shakespeare Out of Time, Out of Context: A Case Study Using Marvel's The Vision

• Dr. Carol Dusdieker (Adams Hall 104): Embracing the Growth Mindset: Pre- and Post-Testing in Vocal Diction

• Dr. Aaron Roerdink & Dr. Nate R. Beres (Adams Hall 201): Development of a Non-Majors Chemistry Course Including an International Travel Component

• Mary R. Garrison (Adams Hall 204): Black Coffee & Bouquets: Photos, Oral History and Narrative

4:00-4:20 p.m.

• Dr. Heleana Theixos (Adams Hall 101): The MeToo Movement and the Value of (Some) Perpetrator Statements

• Christopher T. Wimer (Adams Hall 104): Policy Diffusion, Market Saturation and the American Casino Industry

• Dr. Daryl Close (Adams Hall 201): Why Student "Evaluations" of Faculty Are Unethical

• Dr. Stacey Pistorova & Lindsey Haubert (Adams Hall 204): Building Capacity for Innovation in the Early Childhood Classroom Through Collaboration Between University Faculty and Public School Teachers

Coffee Break: 4:20-4: 40 p.m. (Adams Hall First Floor)

4:40-5:00 p.m.

• Dr. Justin Pruneski (Adams Hall 101): Hunting for Antibiotics in Our Own Backyard: The Small World Initiative as a CURE for the Common Lab Experience

• Dr. Michele Castleman (Adams Hall 104): Experiments in Classroom Management: How I Encouraged Capitalism and Took Five Points from Slytherin

Dr. Marjorie Shavers (Adams Hall 201): Heidelberg's Sexual Climate Survey

• Dr. Blake Grangaard (Adams Hall 204): A New Edition of ‘A History of the World's Religions’

5:10-5:30 p.m.

• Dr. Marc O’Reilly (Adams Hall 101): Vexing and Bewildering: A Scholar's Struggle to Make Sense of President Donald Trump

• Dr. Robert Chidester (Adams 104): They Don't Like the Negroes, Jews, Catholics, the Federal Government or the 20th Century": Class, Race and Whiteness in a Post-Industrial Baltimore Neighborhood, ca. 1970-1990

• Dr. Peter J. Martini, III (Adams Hall 201): The Friend-Zone: Potential for a Digital Method of Ego-centric Network Generation

• Dr. Mark Mitchell (Adams Hall 204): Green Roofs: An Overview of Their Benefits, Ecology and Current Research

5:40 p.m.

• Dr. Diane Monaco (Adams Hall 101): Economic Growth and Recovery in the Aftermath of a Natural Disaster

• Dr. Maef Woods (Adams Hall 204): A Multifacted Approach to Discussing Ethics in an Accounting Class

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