2013 Degree & Certificate Directory
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Fall 2014 Landscape Magazine
Landscape Summer/Fall 2014 FOR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS OF LANDMARK COLLEGE Uncut Diamonds Landmark College’s first national fundraising event, featuring Whoopi Goldberg, alumni tributes, and more! Page 9 Russell Cosby ’99 shares the Cosby family’s Landmark College connections. Page 10 SUCCEEDING ON THE SPECTRUM Page 5 CLASS NOTES What’s new with THE ARTS our alumni ARE ALIVE Page 28 AT LC Page 16 From the Desk of Dr. Peter Eden President of Landmark College Dear Alumni and Friends of Landmark College, Our College opened its doors to students 29 years ago. Over these years we have driven change, and we have adapted to changes in higher education and in the LD field; we have faced and overcome significant challenges, and we have seen life-altering outcomes from our students. Throughout our history, Landmark College (LC) has succeeded because we have one of the most operational missions in higher education. Every day, we work to transform the way students learn, educators teach, and the public thinks about education, to ensure that students who learn and operate differently due to LD achieve their greatest potential. We deliberately engineer our efforts, initiatives, programs, curriculum, and strategic Landmark College planning to LD-related needs and opportunities. Indeed, we often feel that everything we do is a highly adaptable, must be directly connected to LD. But this is not necessary. While LD defines us, we must have the courage to not feel that everything we plan and do at the College involves LD. progressive institution This summer, for example, we are starting construction on the new Nicole Goodner BOARD OF TRUSTEES EMERITUS MEMBERS with a student body that MacFarlane Science, Technology & Innovation Center in order to offer the best physical Robert Lewis, M.A., Chair Robert Munley, Esq. -
Curriculum Vitae
CURRICULUM VITAE BRIAN C. CAMPBELL Present Position: Associate Professor, Berry College, Director, Environmental Studies Program Evans Hall 212, Mount Berry, GA, 30149-0081 Email: [email protected] Phone Number W: (706) 368-6996 Citizenship: United States of America Languages: English and Spanish Research Program: Agricultural Biodiversity Conservation and Food Sovereignty in Floyd County, GA, and Visual Environmental Anthropology in the US Southern Highlands (Ozarks, Appalachia) and Belize, Central America RESEARCH APPROACHES, INTERESTS, REGIONS Agroecology, Applied, Community-Based, Ethnoecology, Political Ecology, Visual Anthropology Agrarianism, Agrobiodiversity, Environmentalism, Food Sovereignty, Justice, Methods, Sustainability Andes, Appalachia, Central America, Ozark Highlands EDUCATION 2005 Ph.D., Cultural Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA Concentrations: Agricultural Anthropology, Environmentalism, Ethnoecology 2002 Conservation Ecology and Sustainable Development, Graduate Certification University of Georgia Institute of Ecology 1994-1998 B.A., Summa Cum Laude, Truman State University, Kirksville, MO Majors: English, Anthropology Minors: Spanish, International Studies 1996 Attended Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica, Heredia, C.R., Central America PROFESSIONAL AND ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE 2018 Development of “Food, Ecology and Culture in Greece” Study Abroad course and 6-week summer and semester courses at the American Farm School / Perrotis College, Thessaloniki, Greece 2016 Tenured at Berry College, Mount Berry, -
University of the Arctic: the First Year Report to the Senior Arctic Officials of the Arctic Council Oulu, Finland, May 16, 2002
UNIVERSITY OF THE ARCTIC University of the Arctic: the First Year Report to the Senior Arctic Officials of the Arctic Council Oulu, Finland, May 16, 2002 Introduction The University of the Arctic was officially launched in Rovaniemi, Finland, in conjunction with the first Senior Arctic Officials of the Arctic Council meeting under Finland’s chairmanship and the 10th anniversary of the Rovaniemi process on June 12, 2001. Over 200 people celebrated the Launch of the new University. The guest speakers included Maija Rask, Finland’s Minister of Education, who invited all the Arctic governments to work hard at finding collaborative ways to fund the University of the Arctic and its program, and Professor Asgeir Brekke from the University of Tromsø in Norway , the Chair of the Council of the University of the Arctic since the inception of the idea, who symbolically passed on the Council’s gavel to Sally Adams Webber, President of Yukon College in Canada. The Launch marked the shift from planning of governance structures and programs to the actual implementation of programs. The first year of operation for the University of the Arctic has meant real students, real programs, and a growing enthusiasm and expectation of more to come for those students. The first evaluations of the University of the Arctic’s pilot programs, are being conducted at the time of writing this report. Preliminary results from these evaluations show that, first of all, the early enthusiasts were right in saying that we do need structural solutions to address the need for truly Circumpolar education that takes the needs of the primary client group to heart. -
WHS Profile 2018-19
School Profile Windsor 2018-2019 High School Community Administrative Staff Windsor High School is located in historic Windsor, the Tiffany Cassano Principal birthplace of Vermont. Marked by picturesque Ascutney Colleen DeSchamp Assistant Principal Mountain, WHS welcomes students from Windsor, West Matthew Meagher Dean of Students Windsor, Weathersfield, Hartland, and Cornish, New Hampshire. These Windsor Yellowjackets live and learn in a Terri Hage Administrative Assistant community with a rich history alongside the Connecticut River, Paradise Park - our Town Forest, and unique shopping and dining opportunities downtown and at Artisan’s Park. Guidance Services Terri Herzog School Counselor Greg Pickering School Counselor Colleges Accepted Laurie Brown Registrar by Recent Graduates Admin. Office 802-674-6344 Guidance Services 802-674-8304 Albany College of Pharmacy San Diego State University Fax 802-674-9802 California Polytechnic Inst. Simmons College Castleton University Smith College Champlain College Saint Michael’s College School Dartmouth College Stony Brook University Comprehensive high school for grades 9 –12. Courses not Endicott College Temple University weighted. Fairfield University United States Naval Academy Gordon College Student Enrollment: 234 University of Massachusetts Johnson State College Faculty: 25 Keene State College University of New Hampshire Accreditation: Vermont Agency of Education. Lyndon State College University of Rhode Island Merrimack College University of Southern New York University California Northeastern -
Degrees, Academic Offerings, and Accreditations
Degrees, Academic Offerings, and Accreditations Associate degrees A.A. -- Associate of Arts A.A.S. -- Associate of Applied Science A.S. -- Associate of Science A.S.N. -- Associate of Science in Nursing Bachelor’s degrees B.A.-- Bachelor of Arts B.F.A.-- Bachelor of Fine Arts B.M..-- Bachelor of Music B.S.-- Bachelor of Science B.S.B.A.-- Bachelor of Science in Business Administration B.S.Ed.-- Bachelor of Science in Education B.S.N.-- Bachelor of Science in Nursing Master’s degrees M.A.-- Master of Arts M.B.A.-- Master of Business Administration M.Ed.-- Master of Education M.S.-- Master of Science M.S.L.S.-- Master of Science in Library Science M.S.N.-- Master of Science in Nursing Academic Offerings at Clarion University *Academic Concentrations Bachelor and Master’s Degrees Accounting (BSBA) Anthropology (BA) Art (BA, BFA) Ceramics* Drawing* Dual Drawing* Fiber/Fabrics* Graphic Arts* Painting* Printmaking* Sculpture* Athletic Training (BSAT) from California University of Pennsylvania Biology (MS) Biological Sciences* (graduate levels) Environmental Sciences* (graduate levels) Biology (BA, BS) Ecology and Evolutionary Biology* Business Administration (MBA) Accountancy* Economics* Finance* International Business* Management* Marketing* Chemistry (BS) Biochemistry* Chemistry/Business* Chemistry/Cooperative Engineering* Computer Science (BS) Early Childhood Education (BSED) Economics (BA) Economics, Business (BSBA) Education (MED) Coaching* Curriculum and Instruction* Early Childhood* English* History* Literacy* Mathematics* Reading Specialist* -
Marlboro College
Potash Hill Marlboro College | Spring 2020 POTASH HILL ABOUT MARLBORO COLLEGE Published twice every year, Marlboro College provides independent thinkers with exceptional Potash Hill shares highlights of what Marlboro College community opportunities to broaden their intellectual horizons, benefit from members, in both undergraduate a small and close-knit learning community, establish a strong and graduate programs, are doing, foundation for personal and career fulfillment, and make a positive creating, and thinking. The publication difference in the world. At our campus in the town of Marlboro, is named after the hill in Marlboro, Vermont, where the college was Vermont, students engage in deep exploration of their interests— founded in 1946. “Potash,” or potassium and discover new avenues for using their skills to improve their carbonate, was a locally important lives and benefit others—in an atmosphere that emphasizes industry in the 18th and 19th centuries, critical and creative thinking, independence, an egalitarian spirit, obtained by leaching wood ash and evaporating the result in large iron and community. pots. Students and faculty at Marlboro no longer make potash, but they are very industrious in their own way, as this publication amply demonstrates. Photo by Emily Weatherill ’21 EDITOR: Philip Johansson ALUMNI DIRECTOR: Maia Segura ’91 CLEAR WRITING STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: To Burn Through Where You Are Not Yet BY SOPHIE CABOT BLACK ‘80 Emily Weatherill ’21 and Clement Goodman ’22 Those who take on risk are not those Click above the dial, the deal STAFF WRITER: Sativa Leonard ’23 Who bear it. The sign said to profit Downriver is how you will get paid, DESIGN: Falyn Arakelian Potash Hill welcomes letters to the As they do, trade around the one Later, further. -
LOVE, LEARNING, and LIFE with DYSLEXIA Page 2
Summer 2017 LandscapeFor Alumni and Friends of Landmark College LOVE, LEARNING, AND LIFE WITH DYSLEXIA Page 2 HASBRO INTERNSHIPS: A WIN-WIN Page 12 Lorissa & Wes MacAllister LC’S NEW ATHLETIC FIELD reflect on their transformative Page 23 education at Landmark College. PRESERVING LC’S STORIES Page 25 Landmark College’s mission is to transform the way students learn, educators teach, and the public thinks about education. BOARD OF TRUSTEES TABLE OF CONTENTS Diane Tarbell, B.S. Robert Lewis, M.A., Chair Chief Administrative Officer Partner, CKL2 Strategic Partners, LLC Rhodes Associates, Inc. Francis Fairman, M.B.A., Vice Chair 2 Love, Learning, and Life with Dyslexia EMERITUS TRUSTEES Head of Public Finance Service, Piper Jaffray & Co. Robert Munley, Esq. 8 Love Blooms at LC Robert Banta, Esq. Partner, Munley Law Banta Immigration Law LTD John Perkins, Esq. 10 Alumni Association Corner William Cotter, Esq. Palmer & Dodge (retired) Retired Owner, Food Manufacturing Business 11 Putting Landmark into Song Charles Strauch, B.S. Robin Dahlberg, Esq. Owner, GA Services Documentary Photographer 12 Hasbro Internships: A Win-Win COLLEGE ADMINISTRATION Peter Eden, Ph.D. Peter Eden, Ph.D. 15 Preparing Students for Success President, Landmark College Barbara Epifanio, B.A. President 16 Profile in Giving Stylist, W by Worth Manju Banerjee, Ph.D. Jane Garzilli, Esq. Vice President for Educational Research and Innovation 17 Alumni Features President, Garzilli Mediation Bretton Himsworth, B.S. ’90 Corinne Bell, M.B.A. 23 Landmark Unveils New Athletic Field Director, CentralEd Chief Technology Officer and Linda Kaboolian, Ph.D. Director of IT 25 Unscripted: Preserving LC’s Stories Lecturer, Kennedy School of Government, Mark DiPietro, B.A. -
PRE-CHAMPIONSHIP MANUAL Table of Contents Introduction
PRE-CHAMPIONSHIP MANUAL Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................5 NCAA Staff Contact Information ................................................................................6 Sports Committee Contact Information .......................................................................6 Regional Alignment ......................................................................................................6 Regional Advisory Committee Information ................................................................6 Important Dates ............................................................................................................9 Date Calculation Formula ............................................................................................9 Dates and Sites .............................................................................................................9 Concussion Management .............................................................................................9 Division III Philosophy ..............................................................................................10 Equipment ...................................................................................................................10 Ethical Behavior By Coaches ....................................................................................10 Religious/Commencement Conflicts Policy ..............................................................11 -
Natural Resource Management Among Small-Scale Farmers in Semi-Arid Lands: Building on Traditional Knowledge and Agroecology
Annals of Arid Zone 44(3&4): 365-385, 2005 Natural Resource Management among Small-scale Farmers in Semi-arid Lands: Building on Traditional Knowledge and Agroecology Miguel A. Altieri1 and Vìctor M. Toledo2 1 Department of Environmental Science Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, USA 2 Centro de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas, Universidad Nacional Autònoma de Mèxico Abstract: Although risk and uncertainty dominate the lives of most rural inhabitants of the semi-arid regions of the world, many farmers have been able to develop durable farming systems through the use of innovative soil and water management systems and the use of locally adapted crop species and varieties. In this paper we provide examples of farming systems developed by traditional farmers well adapted to the local conditions of the semi-arid environment, enabling farmers to generate sustained yields meeting their subsistence needs, despite harsh conditions and low use of external inputs. Part of this performance is linked to the ingenious soil and water conservation systems but also to the high levels of agrobiodiversity exhibited by traditional agroecosystems, which in turn positively influences agroecosystem function. We also give examples of projects aimed at assisting rainfed resource-poor farmers in the development of a variety of practical techniques and strategies to enhance production and resiliency in the midst of resource constraints typical of semi-arid environments. Many of these efforts use elements of modern science but that build upon -
VSCS Fact Sheet 2008
Enrollment Vermont State Colleges Fall Semester Headcount Workforce & Business t 14,000 t 12,590 Development Network e e Vermont State 12,000 2,162 e 9,834 9,896 17% Customized training, consulting, and e 10,000 advisory services for Vermont businesses, Colleges h 1,792 h 1,965 18% large and small . Nearly 20,000 Vermonters 8,000 20 % S participate annually in VSC workforce S For the Benefit education and training programs. Thousands 6,000 t t of Vermont of Vermonters will access these services 7,869 8,104 10,428 c 4,000 80% 82% 83% through VIT, Vermont’s videoconferencing c and distance learning system. a a 2,000 F Small Business Development Center F VSC Student Profile 0 (SBDC) Over 19,000 students s 1990 2000 2007 s Vermont Manufacturing Extension enrolled annually e e Fall Semester Center (VMEC) 82.5% Vermonters g Full-time Equivalency (FTE) g 10,000 Technology Extension Division (TED) e 9,041 e 51% first in family to l Vermont Interactive Television (VIT) l attend college 1,944 l 8,000 6,499 22% l 6,447 38% over the age of 25 o 1,647 o 6,000 25% 1,935 VSC Economic Impact 57% of Vermonters C 30% C attending undergraduate 4,000 With over 2,200 employees , the VSC is the college in Vermont attend e 5th largest employer in Vermont. Higher e 4,512 4,852 7,097 the VSC t t 2,000 70% 75% 78% education is the 3rd largest industry in a Vermont, contributing at least 2.5 times its a Over 26,000 VSC alumni budget to the local, regional and state live and work in Vermont t 0 t 1990 2000 2007 economy: S S Total Out-of-State In-State VSC FY08 All -
School of Undergraduate Studies Faculty Main Campus • See Also Regional Faculty
Faculty School of Undergraduate Studies Faculty Main campus • See also regional faculty Nancy Yates, M.A. Azusa Pacific Univ.; Undergraduate and Graduate Office of the Dean Coordinator, Southern California James S. Lee, Ed.D. Northeastern University; Dean Tahia Bell-Sykes, M.M., Administrative Manager Core Faculty Michael Dickinson, M.A., Director of Academic Advising Boston Rebecca Heimel, M.F.A. Goddard College, Visiting Lecturer and Program Chairs & Site Coordinators McCormack Chair of Humanities William D. McMullen, Ph.D. Boston Univ., Faculty Emeritus Stephanie Brown, M.F.A., M.Arch; Undergraduate Programs Stephen Merther, M.A. Counseling Psychology, Antioch New England Coordinator, Springfield Graduate School, Assistant Professor Carol Pepi, M.Ed. Cambridge College; Program Chair: Human Ronda Goodale, Ph.D. Boston College; Program Chair, Early Services, Human Services Management, Criminal Justice, Assistant Childhood Education & Care Professor Rebecca Heimel, M.F.A. Goddard College, Co-Chair, Undergraduate Barbara Koffske Reid, Ph.D. Brandeis Univ. Program Chair, Wellness General Education and Multidisciplinary Studies & Health Promotion; Professor Anne Lee Scott, M.A. Univ. of Massachusetts; Professor Emeritus James S. Lee, Ed.D. Northeastern University; Chair, Natural & Applied Michael Siegell, Ph.D. Union Graduate School; Chair, Psychology, Sciences Professor Lucilia M. Valerio, Ph.D. Tufts Univ. Coordinator, Writing, Literature, Donald Jeffrey Lokey, M.A. Tusculum College; Program Chair, and Capstone, Associate Professor Management Gitte W. Wernaa, Ph.D. Univ. of Virginia; Associate Professor Carol Pepi, M.Ed. Cambridge College; Program Chair: Human Springfield Services, Human Services Management, Criminal Justice, Abigail Dolinger, M.Ed. Cambridge College, Professor Barbara Koffske Reid, Ph.D. Brandeis Univ.; Program Chair, Wellness & Health Promotion Michael Siegell, Ph.D. -
Diversity and Worldliness at the Compass School
SIT Graduate Institute/SIT Study Abroad SIT Digital Collections Capstone Collection SIT Graduate Institute 5-5-2021 Diversity and Worldliness at the Compass School Luiz A. Batista S.I.T Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/capstones Part of the Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education Commons, Curriculum and Instruction Commons, Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research Commons, Educational Leadership Commons, Educational Methods Commons, and the Elementary and Middle and Secondary Education Administration Commons Recommended Citation International Education This Dissertation (Open Access) is brought to you for free and open access by the SIT Graduate Institute at SIT Digital Collections. It has been accepted for inclusion in Capstone Collection by an authorized administrator of SIT Digital Collections. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Running head: DIVERSITY AND WORLDLINESS DIVERSITY AND WORLDLINESS AT THE COMPASS SCHOOL: A PROJECT IN INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION Luiz A. Batista SIT Graduate Institute Dr. Sora Friedman A capstone submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Master of Arts in International Education at SIT Graduate Institute in Brattleboro, Vermont, USA. DIVERSITY AND WORLDLINESS Consent to Use I hereby grant permission for World Learning to publish my capstone on its websites and in any of its digital/electronic collections, and to reproduce and transmit my CAPSTONE ELECTRONICALLY. I understand that World Learning’s websites and digital collections are publicly available via the Internet. I agree that World Learning is NOT responsible for any unauthorized use of my capstone by any third party who might access it on the Internet or otherwise. Student name: Luiz A.