Monday Minutes
Graduate Edition
Here are your Monday Minutes for September 28 - October 2, 2020
From the Department Head
Dear Faculty, Students, and Staff,
We are nearly halfway through the semester and we have much to celebrate! I encourage you to take part in MSU’s Homecoming Week activities. Keep the Bobcat spirit alive from your corner of the globe during Montana State University’s Stay-HOMEcoming. Throughout the week, each day, you will have the opportunity to share themed photos and stories on the Facebook page @msu.alumni.foundation or on Instagram using #MSUHouseCats. Play along, and you may even win a few prizes!
Take good care,
Dr. Ann Ewbank
News and Announcements
- Any member of the MSU community concerned about another's well-being can submit a CARE Referral which is a simple, non-emergency way to help connect a person with help they may need.
- PhD Completion Awards are open. Due: Oct 5, 2020. The PhD Completion Award application period is now open until Oct 5. MSU PhD students who will be in their final term of PhD research and dissertation writing can apply for a PhD Dissertation Completion Award. The expectation is that recipients of this award will graduate at the end of the term of the award. This will be a competitive process with a limited number of these awards for Spring 2021. For more information and the application link, visit the Graduate School’s Funding & Fellowship page under Student Initiated Opportunities for internal funding opportunities.
Extra! Extra! Read all about it!
- Congratulations to Becky Hammack who is collaborating as pedagogy expert and evaluator on two grants: USDA-NIFA, A retrospective approach to guide agricultural literacy in the 21st century (Carl Igo, PI, MSU Department of Agriculture and Technology Education, and NASA, STEM Pathways for Native Americans: Bridging Native Knowledge of Earth and Sky with Traditional STEM Programing through the Native Earth Native Sky Program; PI: (Kat Gardner-Vandy, PI, Aviation and Space Education, Oklahoma State University). Thank you for sharing your expertise in these interdisciplinary collaborations!
- Our department’s success is determined by our collective accomplishments. Share your own accomplishments with pride! Or if you hear of a colleague or student’s accomplishment, please share. Please send accomplishments and kudos to [email protected].
Professional Development & Engagement Opportunities
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On Thursday, October 1st, from 12:15-1:30, the Center for Bilingual and Multicultural Education will hold a discussion on cultural identity, diversity, and inclusion as highlighted in Ken Liu’s short story titled Paper Menagerie. Please see the attached flyer for future CBME offerings.
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Please register for the 2020 MSU Faculty Symposium: Inclusive Excellence in Equity-Minded Education, 10/6, 9:30am-2:00 pm. Dr. Christine Stanton and Deb Blanchard (PhD in Education candidate) are presenters!
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Public Comment Needed on ESSA Waiver: The Montana Office of Public Instruction (OPI) seeks public comment on a waiver to the United States Department of Education that will allow the OPI to waive the definition of out-of-school time found in ESSA Section 4201(b)(1)(A) for the 2020-2021 school year. This will provide local programs with more flexibility to meet community needs related to COVID-19 by allowing for the use of 21st Century Community Learning Centers (21st CCLC) funds to support programming when schools are currently operating. Virtual public comment meetings are on October 5 and October 16.
Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Resources
- Sundown today marks the end of Yom Kippur, the most holy of holidays in the Jewish Faith. Learn about the High Holy Days (Rosh Hashanah- Jewish New Year, and Yom Kippur- Day of Atonement) from this interfaith resource and the contributions of the Jewish people in Montana at the Jewish Museum in the American West. Finally, check out the documentary The Rabbi Goes West, to learn more about Judaism in Montana today.
- The EHHD Diversity Task Force invites you to a book study facilitated by Dr. Kris Olsen and PhD candidate Hailey Hancock. If you would like to participate, please get the book and email Kayte Kaminski.
From the facilitators: “The only way to undo racism is to consistently identify and describe it - and then dismantle it.” Please join us in a book study on Ibram X. Kendi’s How to be an Antiracist. We will meet via WebEx on Wednesdays from 12:00 - 1:00 (you can join for whatever portion is possible). We acknowledge our positionality as white scholars and will lean on Dr. Kendi’s expertise as an antiracist scholar to chart a path forward. Our initial meeting will focus on introductions, collectively set norms for our time together and an opening discussion on the Introduction and Chapters 1-3. Dr. Kendi is releasing a reflective journal, “Be Antiracist”, to accompany the book - it is being released October 6th. This is not required, but we may include some of the exercises or questions to guide our study. All meetings will be held in Kris’ Olsen’s WebEx Room. We look forward to learning with you!
October 7th: Introductions, Norms, Introduction & Chapters 1 - 3 (pp. 3 - 43)
October 14th: Chapters 4 - 7 (pp. 44 - 91)
October 21st: Chapters 8 - 11 (pp. 92 - 150)
October 28th: Chapters 12 - 15 (pp. 151 - 200)
Nov 4th: Chapters 16-18 (pp. 201 - 238)
- Do you have a resource to share? Please email Ann Ewbank.