Deirdre L. Smeltzer Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/deirdre-l-smeltzer/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Wed, 18 Sep 2019 13:12:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Grad School Q&A: Derek Sauder prepares for a career with real-world, high-stakes implications /now/news/2019/grad-school-qa-derek-sauder-prepares-for-a-career-with-real-world-high-stakes-implications/ Sun, 21 Jul 2019 20:46:23 +0000 /now/news/?p=42618 Derek Sauder 鈥14 is a second-year doctoral student of assessment and measurement at James Madison University, where he also earned a master鈥檚 degree in psychological sciences. Meeting Kierra Stutzman, whom he married in 2015, was one of his highlights of being a student at 黑料正能量 鈥 but he also has found that his subsequent studies 鈥渉ave aligned well鈥 with his math and psychology double major.

What has been your post-黑料正能量 studies and/or career path?听

A week after graduating from 黑料正能量, I began a research assistant job at the American Institutes of Research (AIR) in Washington DC, where I worked for just over a year. I focused primarily on two tasks: database entry of metadata from surveys conducted by the National Center of Education Statistics (NCES) and quality control of NCES publications, to make sure they aligned with NCES standards.听

While I very much enjoyed working for AIR as a company, I wasn鈥檛 particularly enthralled with the work, so I enrolled in James Madison University鈥檚 psychological sciences master鈥檚 program at JMU. After completing that in 2017, I began my doctoral studies.听

I have found that both the master鈥檚 and PhD programs have aligned well with my studies from 黑料正能量, which is rather impressive given that my two undergraduate majors 鈥 math and psychology 鈥 don鈥檛 necessarily overlap much. The focus of both of my JMU programs is on educational assessment, which requires learning statistical analyses (math) and applying them to actual students (psychology).听

I hope to end up working in the testing and licensure field, applying the statistical models I鈥檓 learning to real-world, high-stakes decisions such as whether or not a doctor gets certified.

How did your academic studies and professors at 黑料正能量 prepare and inspire you for your graduate studies and/or current work?

As I was a double major and in the honors program, I didn鈥檛 have a lot of time to take courses outside of my majors. Fortunately, the courses I took, particularly in math, have served me well in the statistics portions of my current PhD program. I was able to make connections between what seemed like abstract concepts at the time (e.g., linear algebra) with real-world applied statistics (e.g., multiple regression). Even outside of coursework, both my math and psychology courses helped to foster a researcher mindset within me.听

Similarly, the courses I took instilled in me a strong interest in scientific inquiry. I am in my current program because I wanted an answer to the question, 鈥淗ow do we know tests work and tell us what we think they tell us?鈥澨

I want to give a shout-out to Deirdre L. Smeltzer, who was one of my math professors and was also a mentor for me through the honors program. She always encouraged me to pursue graduate education, and I enjoyed all of our one-on-one meetings in Common Grounds, even if they became less frequent as the years went on.

What attracted you to attend 黑料正能量 as an undergraduate?

My older sister, Alexis Sauder Rutt, attended 黑料正能量 for her undergraduate education, and I really enjoyed the location and feel of campus when I visited her.听

However, the main attraction for me was the cross-cultural opportunity. The required semester-long cross-cultural appealed to me because it was more than just a study abroad. Students weren鈥檛 just attending a different university in a different country; they were actually living and interacting with people vastly different than themselves.听

My sister went to New Zealand, and I had my sights set on India. When I started at 黑料正能量, however, the India cross-cultural was not going to be offered while I was there. Instead, I had the awesome opportunity to go to South Africa and Lesotho in the fall of my junior year. It was amazing, and I loved the place and the people.听

Lastly, I wanted to attend 黑料正能量 because it was a Mennonite institution, where I knew I would have a set of shared values with a large portion of the student body.

What are some favorite memories of your time at 黑料正能量?

I really enjoyed my time working with Linda Gnagey in the tutoring center. It was a great experience to help other students with the gifts that I have been given.听

Another thing that has stuck with me has been an ultimate frisbee group that originally started as an 黑料正能量 student group that played on Wednesday nights. Although most of the group has since moved away, there is still a core group that play Wednesday nights that is ever-expanding to include 黑料正能量 alumni, community members and current students.听

As I鈥檝e already mentioned, the cross-cultural was an amazing experience. I would love to go back to South Africa sometime in the future.听

Finally, I also enjoyed just being on campus and hanging out at Common Grounds. I love their Valley Turnpike milkshake!

How would you describe your personal growth while a student at 黑料正能量?

Academically, I grew into a more confident writer and speaker, and these skills have continued to serve me well and develop through my graduate education.

I also certainly feel as though I matured during my time at 黑料正能量. College is a formative time, and I wouldn鈥檛 have wanted to spend it at a large university where I could get 鈥渓ost鈥 in the crowd. While at 黑料正能量 I grew closer to many friends and developed relationships that will last for my lifetime. It鈥檚 always wonderful to meet up with longtime friends here in Harrisonburg, including at annual events like the Virginia Relief Sale.

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Retiring professor Chris Gingrich anchored 黑料正能量’s economics program for 24 years /now/news/2019/retiring-professor-chris-gingrich-anchored-emus-econonics-program-for-24-years/ /now/news/2019/retiring-professor-chris-gingrich-anchored-emus-econonics-program-for-24-years/#comments Wed, 22 May 2019 12:38:31 +0000 /now/news/?p=42316 Jelly beans, tennis balls and cups of coffee 听鈥 these descriptors appear with regularity when former students remember Professor Chris Gingrich. The first two classroom props were used in activities to illustrate consumer behavior, the law of diminishing marginal utility, production capacities and negative returns. The cups of coffee symbolize mentorship, the kind that fostered many students into a love of the same subject and a desire to teach as well.

Professor Chris Gingrich accepts a plaque from President Susan Schultz Huxman at a retirement reception this spring.

Ryan Swartzentruber 鈥16, who recently finished his master鈥檚 degree in agricultural and resource economics at Colorado State University, says he frequently reflects on what makes an excellent educator. 鈥淚鈥檝e concluded that Chris has pretty well hit the nail on the head.鈥

With a legacy of several 黑料正能量 grads now teaching at large universities, 鈥淐hris has multiplied himself,鈥 said his colleague, business professor Spencer Cowles. 鈥淚sn鈥檛 that the sign of a great teacher, to inspire a lifelong love of the subject amongst their students?鈥

Despite initial aspirations to work at a large, R-1 university, Gingrich chose to spend 24 years at 黑料正能量, where he has enjoyed a sustainable balance of teaching and research, prioritized mentoring relationships, and anchored the economics program. He retired at the end of the spring 2019 semester, earlier than he would have liked due to health reasons.

黑料正能量 has been 鈥渁 great place to come to every morning,鈥 Gingrich said in an interview during the last week of classes. 鈥淚 have always appreciated working in an academic environment with colleagues who support you and want you to do your own thing. … My students have kept me on the young side over these years and it鈥檚 been very rewarding to see them go off after graduation and be successful in their chosen field.鈥

The teacher

Gingrich was known among his colleagues as an astute and innovative teacher. In a tribute announcing his retirement, Undergraduate Dean Deirdre L. Smeltzer noted: 鈥淩ather than rely on past success in the classroom, Chris has demonstrated a commitment to pedagogical growth, including a willingness to try out and master entirely new teaching methods in his classes.鈥

Matt Gnagey 鈥05, now an assistant professor of economics at Weber State University, recalls an innovative classroom game in which students acted as a cartel, accumulating extra credit points instead of money.

鈥淭he class tried over and over to collude,鈥 Gnagey recalled, 鈥渂ut the incentives to forgo collusion for personal gain were strong, and just like OPEC we ended up overproducing, hurting ourselves collectively in the process. This same lesson explains many other international issues, for example why we have such a hard time mitigating climate change.鈥

Gingrich came to teaching as 鈥渁 leap of faith,鈥 he said. Applied research was his initial interest. From a farming family, Gingrich earned his bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees in agricultural economics at University of Illinois and then, with his wife, spent three years in Haiti with Mennonite Central Committee. Returning to the states, he was accepted to the doctoral program at Iowa State University. His advisor helped him find a dissertation topic: household consumption patterns in Lima, Peru.

Professor Chris Gingrich developed research interests in public health and international development over a 30-year career in the field of economics.

Hired in 1995, Gingrich was 黑料正能量鈥檚 first 鈥渢rue blue economist,鈥 said former 黑料正能量 colleague, Professor Emeritus听Rick Yoder, a specialist in international development who had worked overseas with the UN and USAID.

Cowles, then department chair, hired Gingrich for the position with a prescient sense of what he would bring to 黑料正能量. 鈥淗e was the right person for the job, a true economist who enabled us to build a rigorous economics major around him and his passion and knowledge for the subject. But he was also someone who supports and cares about students.鈥

Gingrich, who had never taught before, says Yoder 鈥渢aught me how to be a respectable teacher.鈥 The duo shared the university鈥檚 growing economics teaching load, as several majors required at least introductory econ coursework. Gingrich would eventually teach economics in the MBA program when it began, as well as undergraduate courses in quantitative research and finance.

One of their challenges was to make class time interesting and engaging. Hence the jelly beans and tennis balls: Gingrich was adept at developing lessons 鈥渂eyond lectures and other didactic methods鈥 that encouraged unique interaction and active learning with concepts, Yoder said.

He also appreciated their many conversations about concerns and challenges, trips to economics conferences with students, and a shared perspective. 鈥淲别 both believe that economics is a tool to solve some of humanity鈥檚 intractable problems, such as racism and inequality.鈥

Solutions: The researcher

Gingrich was a prolific and exemplary scholar while balancing a heavy teaching load, Cowles said, and his research was practical and applied, 鈥渘ot about some arcane financial matter, but instead using his economics knowledge to reach out and make a difference in the lives of people.鈥

His contributions in the field of economic development and public health were part of a larger effort by 黑料正能量 professors to be active contributors to their scholarly fields.

Together with biology colleague Roman Miller (now professor emeritus), the business and economics department rallied to call for the 黑料正能量 administration to support release time for research projects and importantly, to become 鈥渒nowledge producers instead of knowledge consumers,鈥 Yoder said. 鈥淲别 use textbooks someone else wrote, articles someone else wrote and we go to conferences where other people present. 鈥 Our point was 鈥榃here鈥檚 the Anabaptist voice of peace and justice and equity and the common good? How do we become part of this conversation?’鈥

Gingrich took a two-year leave in 2001-03, working with Mennonite Central Committee in Nepal as a consultant on microcredit and microfinance. Articles about his findings, published in the Journal of South Asian Development and the Journal of Microfinance, illustrate Gingrich鈥檚 focus on applied research: the success of microfinance programs in serving the poor and the sustainability of microfinance delivery through community-based savings and credit cooperatives.

What Answer to Malaria?

During the 2015-16 academic year, he continued research into distribution of anti-malarial bednets in Africa, as a visiting scholar at the Center for Communication Programs, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health.

鈥淎 lot of research in grad school is pure theory and not much application and there鈥檚 a role for that, but the stuff I鈥檝e been able to work on the past few years was very much policy oriented, and that feels good because I鈥檝e been able to take economic skills and apply them to something more practical,鈥 Gingrich said. 鈥淗opefully we鈥檝e shifted the debate a little bit in a different direction and influenced policy makers. Our footprint is there and I think it鈥檚 a fairly significant contribution to how to best distribute nets in a public policy debate.鈥

The mentor

Gingrich has enjoyed seeing the success of program alumni in academia, including Swartzentruber, Gnagey, Doug Wrenn 鈥02, assistant professor of environmental and resource economics at Penn State; and Taylor Weidman 鈥13, who is finishing a doctorate at Pitt. He also follows the careers of grads in business, for example, Isaac Wyse, director of revenue operations at YipIt Data in New York City, and Joe Mumaw, technical coordinator at Secure Futures, a solar business in Staunton, Virginia.

鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to meet with them, keep up with what they鈥檙e doing, see them get out of the classroom and develop their own careers,鈥 Gingrich said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been here long enough to see former students evolve into mature professionals in a number of different fields, which is rewarding.鈥

Wrenn, now at Penn State, researches urban and land use economics, unconventional energy development and impacts of hydraulic fracking. He traces his professional path directly back to Gingrich and Yoder. He added a second major in economics after after taking one of Gingrich鈥檚 classes, joined Yoder in a research project, and went to work for Mennonite Central Committee after graduation. Gingrich provided invaluable advice as he prepared his grad school application.

Gnagey, now at Weber State, says that Gingrich鈥檚 support and guidance, four years after he had graduated, helped him. Gnagey also worked for MCC after graduation; his current research builds on those ties, as he and a former MCC colleague conduct analysis of property markets in Indonesia.

And finally, to return to Ryan Swartzentruber, for a last word on Gingrich鈥檚 influence: 鈥淐hris has influenced my path in life, and I am forever grateful. He encouraged me, challenged me and been a role model to me. I’ve greatly appreciated – and benefited from – his relational attitude toward life, emphasizing people over other priorities.

Any comments posted below will be shared with Chris.

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New programs of study beginning this fall: political and global studies /now/news/2019/new-programs-of-study-beginning-this-fall-political-and-global-studies/ /now/news/2019/new-programs-of-study-beginning-this-fall-political-and-global-studies/#comments Mon, 25 Mar 2019 21:34:56 +0000 /now/news/?p=41650 黑料正能量鈥檚 two newest programs of study embody its mission to prepare students to 鈥渟erve and lead in a global context.鈥

A political science major and revised minor and a global studies major and minor will be offered beginning this fall.

鈥淭hese new majors reflect an expanding awareness that community, which 黑料正能量 has long emphasized, also happens at national and global levels,鈥 said Provost Fred Kniss. 鈥淲ith these new majors, students will develop knowledge and skills that will help them effect positive change in diverse settings.鈥 听

Political science

The political science major will train students to apply their research and analytical skills to current political affairs and offer students real-world learning through internships. It will prepare students to pursue further studies and careers in fields such as law and public policy.

Students in the 黑料正能量’s Washington Community Scholars’ Center program live, work and study in the nation’s capital.

鈥淭his major will closely align with 黑料正能量鈥檚 core mission,鈥 said Professor Mark Metzler Sawin. 鈥淲hile many universities offer political studies, our program will be distinctive in its embodiment of our university鈥檚 values.鈥

Students will learn to think critically and analytically about power, authority and legitimacy, examining 鈥渢he traditional role of relevant political actors, institutions, and mechanisms through a critical lens,鈥 said Professor Ji Eun Kim. In addition to developing theoretical and moral ways of understanding political events, they will gain critical oral and writing skills for 鈥渟peaking and understanding the language of these key actors鈥 based on rigorous reasoning and dignity and respect for others.

Its interdisciplinary approach and diverse curriculum includes course topics such as human rights and dignity, political reconciliation, international relations, American politics, and peace and security in East Asia.

The major also requires a term at the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center in Washington DC, where internships offer real-world extensions to classroom learning and vocational experience in policy, politics, advocacy and law. WCSC internship sites in these fields include working on Capitol Hill with the Catholic social justice lobby NETWORK or Mennonite Central Committee鈥檚 Washington Office;听and working to increase civic exchange political dialogue with the Faith and Politics Institute. [Learn more about internship sites in these fields.]

Global studies

The global studies major is fitting for a university that for 35 years has required students to have cross-cultural experience. In the program, students will identify a regional and language focus to prepare them for cross-cultural engagement, in addition to further study and careers in fields such as international development, human resources, intelligence and research analysis, and education in public and private sectors.

For the past 35 years, 黑料正能量’s strong cross-cultural program has prepared students, here in Kenya, for cross-cultural engagement in their future profession. (Photo by Christy Kauffman)

鈥満诹险芰库檚 identity and history positions us to create and offer a global studies program to undergraduate students in a unique way,鈥 said Professor Tim Seidel, who helped develop the major with vice president and undergraduate academic dean Deirdre L. Smeltzer, cross-cultural program director Ann Hershberger, and professors Adriana Rojas, Jim Leaman and Ji Eun Kim. 鈥淕raduates will be equipped with solid knowledge and relevant skills 鈥 and be equipped for postgraduate study and for professional opportunities including working in governments, nongovernmental organizations, and the private sector.鈥

With three areas of concentration 鈥 sustainability, justice and peacebuilding, and societies and cultures 鈥 the major will focus on intercultural communication and the role of faith in global studies while exploring global political and economic actors beyond the state.

The curriculum will include course topics such as globalization and justice, biblical theologies of peace and justice, and cultural anthropology. Region-focused studies may include, for example, history and culture of Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and Asia.

The major was developed with funding from a United States Department of Education Undergraduate International Studies and Foreign Languages grant.

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The story of an 鈥榚xquisite鈥 new discrete math textbook by 黑料正能量鈥檚 Owen Byer and Deirdre L. Smeltzer /now/news/2018/the-story-of-an-exquisite-new-discrete-math-textbook-by-emus-owen-byer-and-deirdre-l-smeltzer/ /now/news/2018/the-story-of-an-exquisite-new-discrete-math-textbook-by-emus-owen-byer-and-deirdre-l-smeltzer/#comments Thu, 06 Dec 2018 16:13:38 +0000 /now/news/?p=40629 Sometimes the thrill of mathematics doesn鈥檛 come from the question, but from a beautiful solution.

Consider the approach 黑料正能量 math professor Owen Byer took when deciding which problems to include in the new textbook he co-authored with math-professor-turned-vice president and academic dean Deirdre Longacher Smeltzer, and Regent University professor Kenneth Wantz:

鈥淚n my own view,鈥 he said, 鈥渆ither it should be a really interesting question, or 鈥 lacking that 鈥 the solution should be beautiful. Even average problems are worth including if the solution teaches you something.鈥

This November marked the publication of the long-anticipated 鈥 and, already, long-used 鈥 textbook Journey into Discrete Mathematics (Mathematical Association of America Press, 2018).

鈥淭his is definitely the best math textbook that I鈥檝e ever used,鈥 said sophomore Andrew Nord after a recent session of his discrete math class, which is the latest to use the 鈥 until now, pre-published 鈥 book. 鈥淚t explains the concepts very fully and in a way that can be understood fairly easily.鈥

From the start

Byer, Smeltzer and Byer鈥檚 University of Delaware PhD advisor Felix Lazebnik began talking about writing Journey at about the same time the trio鈥檚 earlier textbook Methods for Euclidean Geometry (MAA, 2010) was published. All three had doctoral training in discrete math and had taught it many times, and 鈥渋t seemed like a good second joint project,鈥 Smeltzer said.

Professor Owen Byer and his colleagues began using the textbook long before it was published.

A year into the writing of Journey, however, Lazebnik needed to bow out 鈥 but generously granted permission for materials that he had developed to remain in the textbook. Byer and Smeltzer then invited Wantz, a former grad school colleague of Byer鈥檚, to join them, and the new trio continued even as a new wrinkle developed: Smeltzer鈥檚 transition to being undergraduate dean left her little time to focus on the textbook. While each author ultimately made similar contributions, she said, Byer provided leadership and did 鈥渕ore of everything, especially generating problems and solutions.鈥

Once drafted, Journey entered what Byer modestly dubbed 鈥渁 long process鈥 of revising and polishing. For Smeltzer, that process posed the biggest challenge of writing Journey, second only to her limited time: 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to see something with fresh eyes when you鈥檝e been working on it for a long time.鈥

There was a beautiful way to help with that problem, however.

A beautiful solution: students

As early as half a decade ago, Byer and his colleagues at 黑料正能量 began using Journey in the classroom, first in pdf form 听and later 鈥 including this fall, even as the book was heading to press 鈥 in three-ring binders in Professor Daniel Showalter鈥檚 discrete math class.

Doing that had distinct benefits: Students could learn from a textbook grounded in experienced educational practice. Plus, students鈥 fresh eyes would help tease out what needed better explanation 鈥 and they鈥檇 find mistakes, discoveries that were often rewarded with bonus points.

Another of Showalter鈥檚 students, sophomore Silas Clymer, remembers 鈥 with a note of satisfied glee in his voice 鈥 finding a misleading hint in a homework problem. But more importantly, 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely cool having the writer of the book downstairs in an office,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou can go to talk to him if you need to.鈥

Showalter often teaches using a flipped classroom model, a model that depends on having a clearly written textbook: students learn concepts on their own from the textbook, and show up to class for answers to their questions and content-related activities. Even prepublicaton, he said, the evolved Journey proved an effective flipped-classroom text.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very clear,鈥 Showalter said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 rigorous and precise, and has plenty of examples.鈥

His students agree.

鈥淚鈥檝e never really learned from a textbook before,鈥 said first-year student Jeremiah Yoder after a recent class period during which Showalter guided students in applying newly learned concepts to solve a variety of famous problems. 鈥淭he textbook was always supplementary. But with this textbook, I feel like I鈥檓 on course without assistance, so I鈥檓 learning well.鈥

鈥淲别 really don鈥檛 need a teacher,鈥 his classmate Isaac Andreas joked. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we can just play math games in class every day. I mean, we spend a little bit of time on the content during class, but then we go off and [solve fun problems]. It鈥檚 still math.鈥

鈥楨xquisite and engaging鈥

Byer expects Journey to be adopted more widely than the 鈥渘iche鈥 Methods, as discrete math is taken not only by math majors but also students in computer science, and since MAA Press is now an imprint of the American Mathematical Society.

The publisher describes the text鈥檚 exposition as 鈥,鈥 with 鈥渄etailed descriptions of the thought processes that one might follow to attack the problems of mathematics. The problems are appealing and vary widely in depth and difficulty.鈥

That鈥檚 no surprise, of course, taking into account the authors鈥 cumulative expertise from decades of teaching 鈥 and loving the beauty of 鈥 math.

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Faith and climate change: experts give input at BOR meeting for Center for Sustainable Climate Change /now/news/2018/faith-and-climate-change-experts-give-input-at-bor-meeting-for-center-for-sustainable-climate-change/ Tue, 27 Mar 2018 16:23:12 +0000 /now/news/?p=37501 With a series of new programs taking shape, hosted its first board of reference meeting March 9-10 at 黑料正能量.

The nine-member board 鈥渂rought a huge range of expertise to our discussion,鈥 said the center鈥檚 executive director , a biology professor at 黑料正能量. 鈥淭he meeting was an opportunity to get feedback on our activities and think about how we might want to adjust our plans. I have so many new ideas that my head is spinning.鈥

Board of reference members Ben Brabson, professor emeritus of physics at Indiana University, Bloomington, and Shantha Alonso, executive director of Creation Justice Ministries, praised the work so far 鈥 especially 鈥渢he evidence-based shaping of the center鈥檚 mission and programs,鈥 Alonso said.

The Center for Sustainable Climate Solutions Board of Reference includes: front, from left: Ray Martin, Russell De Young, Vurayayi Pugeni, Mitch Hescox. Back: Ben Brabson, Lawrence Jennings, Lyubov Slashcheva, Shantha Alonso. Not present: Chad Horning and Jacqui Patterson.

Joining Alonso and Brabson on the board are:

  • Ray Martin, lead donor and honorary chair;
  • Russell De Young, retired NASA engineer;
  • Mitch Hescox, president/CEO, Evangelical Environmental Network;
  • Chad Horning, chief investment officer, Everence;
  • Lawrence Jennings, lay pastor, Infinity Mennonite Church, New York City;
  • Jacqui Patterson, director, NAACP Environmental and Climate Justice Program;
  • Lyubov Slashcheva ’11 D.D.S.;
  • Vurayayi Pugeni, humanitarian relief and disaster coordinator, Mennonite Central Committee Canada.

Careful groundwork leads to plans in motion

This is the second major meeting since the center was founded in May 2016, funded by a $1 million donation from Martin, a Goshen College (Indiana) alumnus who worked in international development and global health. The collaborative initiative, which includes 黑料正能量, Goshen and Mennonite Central Committee, seeks to advance thinking and action in Anabaptist and other faith communities to mitigate climate change.

A May 2017 consultation at Goshen drew 25 representatives from Mennonite organizations to set the mission and objectives for the center.

The CSCS Oversight Board includes (front, from left) 黑料正能量 Provost Fred Kniss, CSCS Executive Director Doug Graber Neufeld, 黑料正能量 Vice President and Undergraduate Dean Deirdre L. Smeltzer. Back: Professor Jim Yoder, Mennonite Central Committee Great Lakes Executive Director Eric Kurtz, Merry Lea Environmental Learning Center (Goshen College) Executive Director Luke Gascho, Mennonite Central Committee Senior Legislative Associate Tammy Alexander. Not present; Ken Newbold, provost, Goshen College.

鈥淭hat 10 months since that consultation has been really important to developing a mission-focused, data-driven foundation,鈥 said Graber Neufeld. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much we can try to do towards our goals, but we want to focus our efforts on making the most impact, and it鈥檚 taken some time to find out what that means.鈥

Following a winter 2017 survey of Anabaptists, the center has rolled out a slate of programs focused on student leadership, pastoral and congregational leadership, and support for research into best practices and innovative solutions for climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts.

Graber Neufeld says that continuing to build strategic partnerships will be key to the center鈥檚 success. Founding partner Mennonite Central Committee, for example, is a member of Alonso鈥檚 ecumenical organization, .

鈥楢 new, able and unique partner鈥

CSCS will be a 鈥渘ew, able and unique partner,鈥 said Alonso, who welcomed the board of reference meeting as a way to learn more about the Mennonite faith and its connection to sustainable climate solutions. 鈥淐SCS can not only draw more Mennonites into care for God鈥檚 creation, but also be a witness of peacemaking and simple living for the broader climate movement, as well as the general public.鈥

From a personal perspective, veteran climate scientist Brabson said his participation was a rare opportunity to 鈥渇orm new friendships with a magnificent group of people dedicated to doing God鈥檚 work on Earth.鈥

He praised the center鈥檚 strong financial and organizational foundation and its careful goal- and action-oriented planning to spend resources where they have maximum impact.

Outreach to other faith communities is happening 鈥渂y word and by example from the Mennonite tradition,鈥 Brabson said. 鈥淢oral agency, so well represented by the Mennonite tradition, is critical to the survival and enhancement of all of our lives, especially the disenfranchised among us.

鈥淒iscussion is good, but without action, very little benefit results,鈥 he added. 鈥淭he center鈥檚 careful planning bodes well for the ability of the center to deliver on its promise.鈥

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A meditation on vocation: academic departments host chapel services /now/news/2018/a-meditation-on-vocation-academic-departments-host-chapel-services/ /now/news/2018/a-meditation-on-vocation-academic-departments-host-chapel-services/#comments Thu, 01 Mar 2018 16:46:26 +0000 /now/news/?p=37140 Professor Ryan Thompson is a former Christian Church youth pastor who began a master鈥檚 degree in counseling at Richmont Graduate University, affiliated with the evangelical church, and then finished his master鈥檚 degree and a doctorate in psychology at George Fox University, an institution with Quaker roots.

Now at 黑料正能量, he recognizes a rooted affinity to Anabaptist teachings, 鈥渨hich I鈥檝e come to realize I鈥檝e followed for longer than I knew it existed.鈥

Ben Bailey, administrative assistant for the Department of Applied Social Sciences, talks with junior peace and development major Noah Haglund during chapel in Common Grounds coffeehouse.

Thompson shared how his work and faith are deeply intertwined during a special chapel service last week jointly hosted by 黑料正能量鈥檚 STEM academic departments. Around campus, at the same time, other departments hosted special, unique chapel gatherings.

Just as his immersion in various 鈥渄enominational streams has shaped my relationship with Christ and made it more full,鈥 Thompson told the gathered, 鈥渓ikewise, the science and art of psychology has contributed to my understanding of what it means to be made in the image of God. My faith informs my work. My work informs my faith. I don鈥檛 know any other way to do it.鈥

Thompson鈥檚 words were encouraging to psychology major Lydia Musselman. 鈥淗earing a professor’s personal story and reflection opens doors to conversation and deeper relationship, and gives hope to those struggling with our faith journey,鈥 she said. 鈥淐onnections and growth make sense in reflection. It was good to be reminded of that truth.鈥

黑料正能量鈥檚 professors tend to be 鈥渄own to earth and open people, but there鈥檚 a clear difference between a classroom and a chapel,鈥 said junior English and writing major Josh Holsapple, who attended the Language and Literature Department gathering. 鈥淗aving that extra layer of chapel is important.鈥

黑料正能量鈥檚 annual departmental chapels offer students, faculty and staff the opportunity to talk about understanding, finding and living the work to which one is divinely called. While exploration and recognition of the Christian faith is part of the university鈥檚 core curriculum, these chapels are another time and place where faculty and students relate in deeply meaningful ways, said Undergraduate Dean Deirdre Longacher Smeltzer.

鈥淭he connection of faculty, staff and students around the idea of vocation is a piece of the faith mentoring and personal relationship-building that makes the 黑料正能量 experience special,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he fact that we care about students as whole people is a value that students cite over and over again as something they really appreciate.鈥

Junior biology major Caroline Lehman agreed. 鈥淭he professors at 黑料正能量, are, in my opinion, the school鈥檚 best asset. Being surrounded by people who not only do their jobs exceptionally well but also seem to love their work and grow in faith along the way has had a huge impact on what I hope to find in my future career. What that career will be, however, and how I will get there is still clouded with uncertainty, which can be really stressful at times. Hearing 黑料正能量’s professors, people who excel in their work and love their jobs, speak about their own experiences in finding their career paths and using faith as a guide through the uncertainty has been both comforting and inspiring.鈥

Poetry and stories for enlightenment and new energy

Rebekah York ’15 catches up with Undergraduate Pastor Lana Miller. A graduate student at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary, York was on campus representing the school at Career and Service Days.

In the Roselawn gathering space on the second floor, Professor Vi Dutcher opened the Language and Literature Department chapel with the introduction of alumna and novelist Patricia Grace King, on campus for her Writers Read event later that week. Those present were invited to offer a single-word descriptor of their early childhood religious experience 鈥 and all but one person needed more words, with 鈥渘early everyone offering a phrase or brief story,鈥 said Professor Marti Eads, adding that everyone鈥檚 contributions were gladly heard and appreciated. The group then joined in a reading of Seamus Heaney鈥檚 “Station Island XI,鈥 a translation of a 16th century poem by Spanish mystic San Juan de la Cruz.

The Student Education Association titled their time 鈥淲alking your faith鈥each like no other,鈥 hosting a discussion around relationships and religion, and how to integrate faith and calling in a constantly changing world.

鈥淲hat I find meaningful in the department chapel is the opportunity for faculty and students to collectively examine how faith and teaching intersect in the classroom,鈥 said department chair Cathy Smeltzer Erb. 鈥淓ach participant brings his/her own story to the conversation, and leaves with a reservoir of new stories to shape one鈥檚 faith journey.鈥

In other chapels鈥

Students, staff and faculty of the Department of Applied Social Sciences gathered in Common Grounds coffeehouse for readings, prayer and conversation.

The Business and Economics department hosted four students who attended the Mennonite Economic Development Associates (MEDA) convention in November 2017. MEDA works at the intersection of faith and business as an international economic development organization with the mission of creating business solutions to poverty. The students shared about how they were personally and professionally inspired by their participation in the conference. Speaking were Lucas Miller, junior economics major; Isaac Brenneman, a junior double major in business administration and recreation leadership and sports promotion; Ryan Faraci, senior double major in accounting and business administration; and Kyungho Yu, a junior economics major.

The Department of Applied Social Sciences based their time around an entry in 鈥淐ommon Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals,鈥 focusing on the anniversary of the assassination of Malcolm X and Hebrew 10:26-39.

The History and Bible and Religion departments joined for a time of reflective scripture reading, prayer and singing around the theme of Living Water, while the Nursing Department also spent the time in worship and reflection.

 

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