College of Arts and Sciences Archives | 性视界 University Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/college-of-arts-and-sciences/ Wed, 20 May 2026 14:03:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png College of Arts and Sciences Archives | 性视界 University Today https://news-test.syr.edu/topic/college-of-arts-and-sciences/ 32 32 Research Professional Cited for Growing Arts and Humanities Support Network /2026/05/20/research-professional-cited-for-growing-arts-and-humanities-support-network/ Wed, 20 May 2026 14:03:28 +0000 /?p=338873 Sarah Workman鈥檚 efforts building a community of arts and humanities research development professionals is recognized for innovation.

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Arts & Humanities Research Professional Cited for Growing Arts and Humanities Support Network

Sarah Workman (right) receives the NORDP Innovation Award at the organization's 2026 annual conference in Indianapolis. Presenting the national honor is Petrina Suiter, NORDP awards official. (Photo courtesy NORDP/Studio 13)

Research Professional Cited for Growing Arts and Humanities Support Network

Sarah Workman鈥檚 efforts building a community of arts and humanities research development professionals is recognized for innovation.
Diane Stirling May 20, 2026

, director of research development for the arts and humanities in the and the (A&S), has been recognized with the 2026 Innovation Award from the (NORDP).

The award recognizes professionals who advance research development through partnerships, new tools and techniques or the creation and sharing of knowledge that produces demonstrable results. Workman and her NORDP colleague, Allison DeVries of Chapman University, received the award in recognition of the evolution of the (CASSH) affinity group, which they founded in 2022. The group, which has grown to more than 150 NORDP members across the country, helps them marshal and create collective resources and share best practices, case studies and challenges in support of faculty in the humanities, creative arts and social sciences areas.

Headshot of a woman with shoulder-length brown hair smiling indoors.
Sarah Workman

鈥淚鈥檓 honored to receive this award and proud to have had a part in bringing the CASSH group together four years ago when it seemed rare to have a designated arts and humanities research development staff member housed in an R1 institution,鈥 Workman says. The group has gained momentum 鈥渂ecause higher education recognizes the value of this support nationwide as integral to the national research landscape and vital to an individual institution鈥檚 research ecosystem,鈥 she says.

Workman came to 性视界 in 2019 and built a dedicated arts and humanities research development infrastructure from scratch. She now connects with more than 200 faculty across eight schools and colleges and partners with and several University-affiliated arts organizations.

Beyond campus, she is part of the , an 11-university consortium for collaborative research, teaching and programming. She co-leads its HF4 Corridor Futures and Initiatives working group with program manager Aimee Germain to offer professional development opportunities for faculty.

Impact on Faculty and Funding

Prior to Workman鈥檚 arrival, scholars navigated grant funding alone or through informal networks, often missing critical opportunities, says , senior director of research development in the Office of Research, who co-nominated Workman for the award.

She says Workman has contributed to faculty winning prestigious awards, including summer stipends, a and a grant. Workman has also supported a fellowship, an digital justice grant and several successful applications.

In 2025, Workman supported 64 grant proposals seeking $44 million in funding. She recently helped nine arts faculty and five organizations secure awards, making 性视界 the only university in the state to receive multiple awards in that cycle, Chianese says.

, professor of women’s and gender studies and director of the 性视界 University Humanities Center and the Central New York Humanities Corridor, says Workman鈥檚 Corridor support has deepened scholarly community across the region and has had significant impact on 性视界 faculty success.

“Sarah has been instrumental in several prestigious Mellon awards, including our first and ensuing New Directions fellowships and many other highly competitive awards and grants,” says May, who co-nominated Workman for the award. 鈥淢any of these awards have been substantial enough to transform individual career trajectories and drive transformational work at the University and in听 wider communities locally and nationally.” May says faculty frequently remark about how much they enjoy collaborating with Workman and appreciate her support.

, assistant professor of music history and cultures in A&S, credits Workman with helping her secure a , a first for 性视界 among 200 competing institutions. “I am deeply grateful for her thoughtful engagement with my research and for helping make its relevance accessible to a broader interdisciplinary readership,” Pe帽ate says.

, associate professor in women鈥檚 and gender studies in A&S, says Workman’s guidance “proved instrumental in shaping two grant proposals into competitive, fundable projects. Her careful feedback led to key revisions that directly contributed to securing a major award from a private funder. In a context of shrinking funding, Sarah’s leadership has been indispensable for the success of humanities’ interdisciplinary, social justice-centered research.”

While Workman focuses on the arts and humanities, the Office of Research supports faculty across disciplines through a broader research development team. Researchers across campus partner with team members on proposal development, funding searches, cohort writing programs for competitive federal awards and strategic guidance on funding opportunities. Faculty interested in support for their projects can learn more about .

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Sarah Workman鈥檚 efforts building a community of arts and humanities research development professionals is recognized for innovation.
Professor Emeritus of Physics Peter Saulson Elected to the National Academy of Sciences /2026/05/19/professor-emeritus-of-physics-peter-saulson-elected-to-the-national-academy-of-sciences/ Tue, 19 May 2026 23:32:40 +0000 /?p=338858 Saulson built the University's gravitational-wave research group and helped lead the quest that produced the first direct detection of gravitational waves.

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Professor Emeritus of Physics Peter Saulson Elected to the National Academy of Sciences

Saulson built the University's gravitational-wave research group and helped lead the quest that produced the first direct detection of gravitational waves.
May 19, 2026

, the Martin A. Pomerantz ’37 Professor Emeritus of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), has been elected to the (NAS), one of the most prestigious honors awarded to a scientist in the United States.

According to the NAS website, election to the Academy recognizes “distinguished and continuing achievements in original research” and is widely regarded as a mark of the highest level of scientific excellence. Its members include many of the world鈥檚 most influential scientists, including hundreds of Nobel laureates.

A professor smiles while posing for a headshot in front of a grey backdrop.
Peter Saulson

The NAS recognized Saulson for his foundational contributions to the field of gravitational-wave astronomy, including work that led to the听first direct detection of gravitational waves听at the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in 2015.

Saulson鈥檚 work is part of a long tradition of gravitational physics at 性视界 that stretches back nearly eight decades to听, a former research assistant to Albert Einstein. Bergmann joined the 性视界 faculty in 1947 and founded one of the first research groups in general relativity in the United States.

Bergmann, along with his students and colleagues鈥攁mong them Joshua Goldberg, Ezra Newman and Rainer Sachs鈥攈elped revive Einstein鈥檚 theory in mainstream physics and laid the theoretical groundwork for gravitational-wave science. Saulson transformed that theoretical legacy into an experimental one, building the group that made 性视界 a central player in proving that gravitational waves are real.

After earning a Ph.D. in physics from Princeton University and spending nearly a decade as a research scientist at MIT鈥攚here he worked with LIGO co-founder Rainer Weiss on the earliest interferometer prototypes鈥擲aulson joined the University鈥檚 听in 1991. There, he established the first LIGO research group at any university outside the LIGO Laboratory at Caltech and MIT.

Saulson鈥檚 experimental program advanced the understanding of thermal noise in interferometric detectors, work that proved essential to the design of Advanced LIGO. His 1994 textbook, “Fundamentals of Interferometric Gravitational Wave Detectors,” remains the standard reference in the field, having trained a generation of scientists in the physics of gravitational-wave detection. From 2003 to 2007, he served as the first elected spokesperson of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the international partnership of more than 1,000 scientists who carried out the search.

Saulson brought the same dedication to his students as he did to the search for gravitational waves. Over three decades at 性视界, he taught introductory physics and astronomy courses to hundreds of undergraduates, served as the physics department鈥檚 undergraduate program director and honors advisor and co-organized a program that brought astronomy into local elementary school classrooms.

He was named the University鈥檚 Scholar-Teacher of the Year in 2003. He mentored generations of graduate students, among them Gabriela Gonz谩lez, who served as the LIGO Scientific Collaboration spokesperson when the first detection was announced in February 2016. He also recruited the faculty who continue to build on his work, including physicist , now director of the University鈥檚听.

鈥淧eter Saulson exemplifies what it means to be a scholar of the highest caliber. His election to the National Academy of Sciences reflects not only the extraordinary impact of his research, but also the way he has elevated our physics department and inspired colleagues and students alike,” says A&S Dean Behzad Mortazavi.

, vice president for research and the Charles Brightman Endowed Professor of Physics, was recruited to 性视界 by Saulson and credits him with building the foundation for the University鈥檚 leadership in the field.

鈥淧eter Saulson created gravitational-wave astronomy at 性视界. He built the group from scratch, brought 性视界 into LIGO and trained the scientists who would go on to lead the collaboration through its greatest discovery,鈥 Brown says. He adds that what set Saulson apart was his seamless integration of research and teaching, mentoring Ph.D. students who became leaders in the field while also introducing undergraduates to astronomy.

鈥淓very gravitational-wave discovery that 性视界 has contributed to traces back to Peter’s vision, and his election to the National Academy of Sciences is a recognition the scientific community has long known was deserved,鈥 Brown says.

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An artistic rendering of two celestial objects emitting gravitational waves depicted as concentric rings across space.
A&S Psychologist: Recess Is a Health Necessity, Not a Reward /2026/05/19/as-psychologist-recess-is-a-health-necessity-not-a-reward/ Tue, 19 May 2026 18:43:11 +0000 /?p=338802 Cutting recess doesn't just shortchange kids on playtime. A 性视界 University researcher says it can have real consequences for their health and development.

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A&S Psychologist: Recess Is a Health Necessity, Not a Reward

Cutting recess doesn't just shortchange kids on playtime. A 性视界 University researcher says it can have real consequences for their health and development.
Daryl Lovell May 19, 2026

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is sounding the alarm on a growing trend in American schools: the steady erosion of recess. In its first on the subject in over a decade, the AAP recommends that all students鈥攆rom kindergarten through high school鈥攔eceive at least 20 minutes of unstructured play each day, and warns that cutting recess puts children’s health, behavior and learning at risk.

Katie Kidwell, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology in 性视界 University’s College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), says the research backs that up. She provides the following quote which can be used directly:

Play and physical activity are essential for children’s mental and physical health, not optional extras during the school day. Recess supports emotional regulation, attention, stress reduction and social development. Losing recess as punishment can be especially harmful because the children struggling behaviorally are often the ones who most need opportunities for movement and regulation.”

Research consistently shows that recess and unstructured physical activity support children’s physical and mental health in meaningful ways. Regular opportunities for movement during the school day are associated with better attention, emotional regulation, mood, social functioning and overall well-being. Recess should not be viewed as separate from learning鈥攂ecause children learn through play.”

To arrange an interview with Professor Kidwell, contact Daryl Lovell, associate director of media relations, at dalovell@syr.edu.

Faculty Expert

Assistant Professor
Psychology

Media Contact

Daryl Lovell
Associate Director of Media Relations

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A game of jumping on a school playground with chalk numbers and squares representing childhood innocence and children having fun during recess or after school.
Study Links Virus Genetic Variations in Wastewater to Community Transmission /2026/05/18/study-links-virus-genetic-variations-in-wastewater-to-community-transmission/ Mon, 18 May 2026 15:46:39 +0000 /?p=338737 Published in Science, the findings from University researchers could transform how public health officials could monitor and detect a host of communicable diseases.

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性视界 University Impact Study Links Virus Genetic Variations in Wastewater to Community Transmission

Dustin Hill (left), a Maxwell postdoctoral scholar, and Professor of Public Health Dave Larsen

Study Links Virus Genetic Variations in Wastewater to Community Transmission

Published in Science, the findings from University researchers could transform how public health officials could monitor and detect a host of communicable diseases.
Cort Ruddy May 18, 2026

New research in the journal听by Maxwell postdoctoral scholar Dustin Hill, Professor of Public Health Dave Larsen and a team of researchers has found a strong connection between the prevalence of genetic variations of the COVID-19 virus and higher community transmission.

Testing wastewater to detect viruses in a community is a well-established scientific practice. But knowing the prevalence of a disease has always presented challenges, with science relying on sheer volume and concentration of virus load found to make inexact assumptions.

The team, which included colleagues from SUNY Upstate Medical University, SUNY College of听Environmental Science and Forestry and the New York State Department of Health, looked closely at existing data and genomes from wastewater surveillance collected during the COVID-19 emergency, measuring genetic variation through small, insignificant changes in the virus genome, and comparing that to transmission levels.

To put it simply: they found that the more variation in the viral material in wastewater, the more people were infected.

鈥淣ot only do infections rise when diversity of the virus increases, infections decline as diversity declines,鈥 says Hill, the study鈥檚 lead author. 鈥淲e tested three different ways to measure diversity of the virus genome in wastewater, and all three measures predicted infections with extremely high statistical power.鈥

While the study analyzed COVID-19, this connection could change how wastewater surveillance is used not just to detect, but to measure disease transmission with implications for monitoring other diseases, including influenza, measles, polio and future viruses that may arise.

These findings open up new areas of exploration in genetic epidemiology,鈥 says Larsen. 鈥淲e will now be able to estimate transmission from sequencing data, something that has previously not been possible.

Person in a lab coat, gloves, and mask uses a pipette to transfer liquid into a test tube at a laboratory bench with bottles and a large flask.
Researcher prepares wastewater samples for further investigation of viral material.

Key Takeaways From the Study

  • Genetic diversity measured in wastewater is highly predictive of community infection numbers, and superior to current methods that use concentration
  • Wastewater genetic data can tell us more than just what variants or subtypes are circulating in each community
  • Methods can be applied to any pathogen found in wastewater that can have genetic material sequenced

鈥淭his is exactly the kind of research Maxwell exists to support鈥攔igorous, evidence-based and consequential well beyond the laboratory,鈥 says Maxwell Dean David M. Van Slyke. 鈥淭he collaboration between Professor Larsen, Dr. Hill and their partners at the New York State Department of Health is a model for how transformative research unfolds: without a roadmap, assembling the right collaborators, working through what didn’t work and ultimately arriving at findings that can make communities healthier and safer. The ability to move from detection to prediction changes what policymakers can do, and when they can do it. That’s not just scientific progress鈥攖hat’s the public good.”

The research project grew from a partnership between 性视界 University, the New York State Department of Health, SUNY Upstate and SUNY ESF that began in March of 2020, in the earliest days of the COVID-19 outbreak.

As the virus first spread in New York and elsewhere, Larsen proposed using wastewater to detect and monitor the virus at 性视界 University. He assembled a team of researchers from 性视界 and nearby universities to begin developing the wastewater surveillance technology that would eventually become critical to New York State鈥檚 response to the disease and developed into the听.

鈥淭he wastewater program was further developed in 2022 by the addition of sequencing of the detected virus, work that was undertaken by the 5-site sequencing consortium set up by the Wadsworth Center in 2021,鈥 says Kirsten St. George, director of the Virology Laboratory at the Wadsworth Center and co-author of the study. 鈥淭he sequence data generated by the consortium provided the information needed for the genetic variation analysis and transmission correlations reported in this study. Initiated to monitor circulating and emerging variants of the virus, the sequence data generated by the consortium has now proven to be a powerful tool for additional applications.鈥

Person wearing a face shield, mask, and gloves holds a sample container beside a gray collection bin in an outdoor setting.
Researcher collects wastewater samples on the 性视界 University campus in 2020.

In 2024, the New York State Wastewater Surveillance Network was designated as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Northeast Region Center of Excellence.

鈥淭he valuable partnerships the department and our world-renowned Wadsworth Center have developed with 性视界 University, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry and SUNY Upstate Medical University are leading to important new discoveries that are advancing our understanding of not only how to detect COVID in wastewater, but also how to analyze those samples to better predict community transmission,鈥 says New York State Health Commissioner Dr. James McDonald. 鈥淭he researchers involved in this study remain on the cutting edge of scientific discovery that could change how we look at other pathogens in wastewater, including polio, influenza and measles and establishing wastewater sampling as a reliable public health early warning system for public health threats.鈥

This latest research, in the article titled 鈥,鈥 appears in the May 14 issue of听Science, a leading outlet for scientific news and research.

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Two conference attendees wearing badges stand together in front of research posters, with other participants and poster boards visible in the background.
Simulated Disaster Training on Campus Provides Real-World Lessons /2026/05/18/simulated-disaster-training-on-campus-provides-real-world-lessons/ Mon, 18 May 2026 14:44:35 +0000 /?p=338408 A live hazard response exercise brings hands-on learning to forensic science students in the College of Arts and Sciences.

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Campus & Community Simulated Disaster Training on Campus Provides Real-World Lessons

The view inside a Civil Support Team mobile lab.

Simulated Disaster Training on Campus Provides Real-World Lessons

A live hazard response exercise brings hands-on learning to forensic science students in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Sean Grogan May 18, 2026

When a mock chemical hazard call came in on South Campus last month, forensic science students from the (A&S) were granted a rare opportunity to watch and learn.

The New York National Guard’s 2nd Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Team (CST) conducted a multiday training exercise from March 31 through April 3, bringing together five agencies to simulate a coordinated chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear response. For students in the College鈥檚 (Forensics Institute), the exercise became an uncommon window into the world their coursework is preparing them for.

“This offered an exceptional opportunity for students to connect what they have learned in their courses to a real-world scenario,” says Kathleen Corrado, Forensics Institute executive director. “Including communications, sample identification and collection, working with hazardous materials, and use of analytical field equipment that mirrors what they have used in their laboratory courses.”

The exercise, coordinated by the University鈥檚 Emergency and Environmental Risk Services division in partnership with A&S, is among the first times a live chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) field exercise has also served as an academic platform. Over two site visits鈥攐n March 31 and April 2鈥攕tudents observed multiagency incident command coordination, CST personnel collecting samples in full chemical proximity protective suits, and a mass-casualty decontamination corridor erected and operated by 性视界 Fire Department’s HazMat Response Team. All training used simulated materials only.

Students examine field detection equipment outdoors during a CBRN training exercise on South Campus.
Students examining investigative equipment at a Civil Support Team seminar.

Joseph Hernon, associate vice president for emergency and environmental risk services, says the setting offered students something a classroom cannot replicate.

“When students step onto a scene alongside the New York National Guard’s 2nd Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Team, the 性视界 Fire Department HazMat unit and Onondaga County Emergency Management, they’re not just observing. They鈥檙e experiencing the actual tempo, communication and decision-making of a real CBRN response,” Hernon says. “That exposure is irreplaceable.”

Between the site visits on South Campus, the civil support team hosted a seminar in Lyman Hall for forensic science and other A&S students and faculty. The session covered their mission, demonstrations of portable detection equipment and a Q&A period.

Kevin Early, a master’s student in forensic science, says seeing the team’s analytical instruments in a field context reframed what he had learned in the lab.

“I really enjoyed seeing all of the scientific equipment that is employed and all of the differing applications of the machinery in the field,” Early says. “The mobile lab was so cool鈥擨 didn’t think that a GC-MS (gas chromatography鈥搈ass spectrometry) would be effective in a mobile capacity, so that was interesting.”

“What I hope students took away is a sense of professional context, and an understanding of where their skills fit within a much larger response system, and a recognition that the work they’re learning to do has real-world stakes,” he says.

Corrado says the partnership opened students’ eyes to career possibilities at the intersection of forensic science and national security, and that the CST is eager to continue the collaboration. “The members of the 2nd WMD-CST were clearly excited to share their expertise and experiences with our students, and they look forward to continued collaborations in the future.”

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The interior of a mobile command unit with multiple monitors displaying maps, surveillance feeds and data.
Annual Showcase Highlights University-Community Collaborations /2026/05/15/annual-showcase-highlights-university-community-collaborations/ Fri, 15 May 2026 19:53:03 +0000 /?p=338674 The Engaged Humanities Network brought together faculty, students and community partners to celebrate projects addressing local needs through research, teaching and creative work.

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Arts & Humanities Annual Showcase Highlights University-Community Collaborations

Sarah Dias (left), a policy studies and anthropology major in the Maxwell School, and Jahnavi Prayaga (right), a psychology major in A&S, present their project from A&S Professor Amanda Brown鈥檚 linguistics course Advanced Methods for Language Teaching at the EHN Community Showcase.

Annual Showcase Highlights University-Community Collaborations

The Engaged Humanities Network brought together faculty, students and community partners to celebrate projects addressing local needs through research, teaching and creative work.
Dan Bernardi May 15, 2026

From insightful conversations to shared reflections on meaningful work, the听听(EHN) Community Showcase offered a powerful reminder of what鈥檚 possible when people come together in collaboration.

The event brought together faculty, students and staff from the University with community partners to celebrate projects that address local and regional needs and opportunities through research, teaching and creative work.

The third annual showcase featured panel discussions and table presentations highlighting dozens of initiatives connected to EHN, housed in the (A&S). Collectively, the showcased work represented collaborations across more than 50 departments from nine schools and colleges at 性视界 University, and partnerships with more than 75 community-based organizations.

Projects ranged from arts- and storytelling-based initiatives to STEM research and educational programs focused on community empowerment, environmental sustainability and cultural preservation.

鈥淭his is an annual event where we showcase all of the projects, courses and community engagement happening all across the city and region,鈥 says Mary-Jo Robinson, program manager for the EHN. 鈥淭he hope is to demonstrate the incredible work that鈥檚 being done, broaden exposure to these projects and help strengthen connections between partners.鈥

The event featured panel discussions, allowing speakers to share lessons learned, reflect on challenges and discuss opportunities to sustain and grow their work. Panels focused on EHN鈥檚听听and听 initiatives, the new听, sustained long-term partnerships and听.

The showcase underscored the continued growth of EHN since its founding in 2020 by听, Dean鈥檚 Professor of Community Engagement and associate professor of writing and rhetoric in A&S. Today, EHN supports more than 350 collaborators from across the University and works with dozens of community partners locally and nationally, from neighborhood-based organizations in 性视界 like the Northside Learning Center to the nation鈥檚 preeminent cultural institutions such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

鈥淭he EHN approaches the humanities not as a bounded academic domain, but as a set of practices that span disciplines and permeate everyday life鈥攁cross ages, institutions, cultures and communities,鈥 says Nordquist. 鈥淭he work of the EHN is to recognize, support and connect these practices so that we can collectively respond to the demands of the present while sustaining long traditions of reflection, inquiry, creativity and learning.鈥

Robinson emphasized that the event is as much about relationship-building as it is about visibility. 鈥淓HN exists to support this work and to help make connections,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen people come together in a space like this, it creates new possibilities for collaboration and helps ensure that community-engaged work remains central to the University鈥檚 mission.鈥

Five panelists stand behind a table at the Engaged Humanities Network Community Showcase as one speaker addresses the audience with a microphone during a discussion on the Engaged Courses initiative.
Stephanie Shirilan (second from right), associate professor of English in A&S, discusses her course We/Re-do Shakespeare, part of the 2025鈥26 Engaged Courses cohort. Her class was featured in a panel on the Engaged Courses initiative, which provides funding and cohort-based support for faculty integrating community-engaged learning into their curriculum.

Free and open to the public, the Community Showcase welcomed attendees of all ages and backgrounds, reinforcing EHN鈥檚 commitment to accessibility and mutual exchange. As the network continues to grow, the annual showcase remains a key moment to reflect on the impact of community-engaged scholarship in Central New York.

Projects and courses represented at the event included: The Refugee Assistants Program鈥檚 Artisan Pathways, Black Women’s Art Ecosystems, Black/Arab Relationalities Initiative (BARI), CODE鈭HIFT, Deaf New Americans CODA Tutoring Program, Documenting the Haudenosaunee Influence on American Democracy (EHN Engaged Course), Environmental Storytelling Series CNY, Geography of Memory: Unsettling Stories (EHN Engaged Course), Hear Together, La Casita, Advanced Methods for Language Teaching (EHN Engaged Course), ME/WE Art Therapy Lab and Studio, Mindfully Growing, Narratio, Native America and the World: The Haudenosaunee (EHN Engaged Course), Natural Science Explorers Program, NOON, Not in the Books, Indigenous Values Initiative, Poetry and Environmental Justice (EHN Engaged Course), Project Mend, Public Scholarship Certificate Program, Safeguarding 性视界 Communities, Southside Connections/Southside Stories, Stories of Indigenous Dispossession Across the Americas (EHN Engaged Course), Teens with a Movie Camera, Traveling Teaching (EHN Engaged Course), Visualizing Care and Resisting Gentrification, We/Re-do Shakespeare (EHN Engaged Course) and Write Out.

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Two students sit behind a table at the Engaged Humanities Network Community Showcase, displaying linguistics teaching materials including a QR code poster and sentence diagrams. One wears a Mary Ann Shaw Center for Public and Community Service shirt.
The Test Got It Right: Mathematician Leaves Lasting Legacy /2026/05/14/the-test-got-it-right-mathematician-leaves-lasting-legacy/ Thu, 14 May 2026 19:41:53 +0000 /?p=338580 Jack Graver retired this spring from the Department of Mathematics in the College of Arts and Sciences after 60 years on the faculty.

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The Test Got It Right: Mathematician Leaves Lasting Legacy

Jack Graver retired this spring from the Department of Mathematics in the College of Arts and Sciences after 60 years on the faculty.
Sean Grogan May 14, 2026

likes to about a vocational aptitude test he took in sixth grade. It asked students which activities they preferred 鈥 things like fixing a bicycle, building things or working with people. When the results came back, they said he was best suited to be a teacher.

Studio portrait of an older adult wearing a blue cardigan over a plaid shirt, facing forward against a plain gray background.
Jack Graver (Photo By Stephen Sartori)

That gave everyone who knew him a good laugh.

“How the hell is this guy going to teach when he can’t get through his own courses?” Graver recalls them saying.

He was dyslexic before the word was widely known. To his teachers, he was just lazy. Reading and writing were extremely difficult and he failed German four times. A Latin professor even gave him a D and kindly asked him not to come back for the second semester.

This spring, Graver retires from the Department of Mathematics in the (A&S) after 60 years on the faculty. The 鈥渓azy鈥 student who struggled to read and write has authored five books and dozens of research papers spanning multiple mathematical fields. One such paper, originally dismissed as of no practical value, became foundational to algorithm design a decade later. The aptitude test, it turns out, was right.

Finding His Way to 性视界

Graver grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio, in a working-class family, with no path to college.

After two years in the Navy, he used the G.I. Bill to attend Miami University in Ohio, where he planned to study forestry. A mentor redirected him toward a mathematics major instead and another visiting mathematician took him under his wing. By the time Graver finished his Ph.D. at Indiana University in 1964, his philosophy of teaching was already taking shape.

His first faculty position was a postdoctoral instructorship at Dartmouth. Combinatorics, the field of math related to counting and properties of finite structures, was more active in Canada than in the United States at the time. As it emerged as his specialty, Graver interviewed at the Universities of Alberta and Manitoba. Both offered him positions, but he still opted to interview at 性视界 University.

“This was a very, very friendly place,” he says. “One of the most collegial schools.”

Graver chose 性视界 and has been here ever since.

Working in the Corners

In a document he calls his “Mathematical Obituary,” Graver describes the research philosophy that guided his career with characteristic frankness. Rather than compete with the hotshots of the day who worked on the big, popular problems, he learned to 鈥渨ork in the corners,鈥 that is, find the connections others had walked past.

“I wasn’t setting out to make big changes,” he writes. “I just wanted to understand things better, and the research followed.”

That approach produced a body of work that moved across a variety of mathematical fields 鈥 algebraic topology, combinatorics and graph theory, rigidity theory, integer linear programming and, most recently, the combinatorial structure of fullerenes. His 1975 paper “On the Foundation of Integer Linear Programming I” was dismissed by its original referee as interesting but of no practical value. A decade later, as computer memory expanded, it became foundational to algorithm design. He still finds the reversal amusing.

His longest collaboration had been with听. Their textbook “Combinatorics with Emphasis on the Theory of Graphs,” published in 1977 as volume 54 in Springer’s Graduate Texts in Mathematics series, remains a standard reference. Two decades later, the pair produced a second major work together. Graver also co-authored “Combinatorial Rigidity” with Brigitte and Herman Servatius, published by the , and wrote “Counting on Frameworks,” an accessible treatment of rigidity theory for the .

Collaboration is a key element to Graver鈥檚 career.

“I like working with coauthors,” he says, in part because dyslexia makes solo writing slow and error-prone. He is currently working on another book with a former graduate student.

Read the full story on the College of Arts and Sciences website:

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Building Community in A&S /2026/05/14/building-community-in-as/ Thu, 14 May 2026 19:39:46 +0000 /?p=338567 A new engagement program connects the school's highest-achieving first-year students with peer mentors, career experiences and a community built just for them.

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Campus & Community Building Community in A&S

Scholars attended social and academic events, including dinner at the Inn Complete with Otto.

Building Community in A&S

A new engagement program connects the school's highest-achieving first-year students with peer mentors, career experiences and a community built just for them.
Sean Grogan May 14, 2026

Even small gains in a student’s sense of belonging can meaningfully听. A new initiative is , connecting its highest-achieving first-year students with the community and support they need to thrive, so that they can make the most of their time in college.

Earlier this academic year, more than 300 A&S students were recognized at a Universitywide banquet for earning the听. The ceremony was only the start of the college鈥檚 plan to support its top students.

“In Arts and Sciences, this banquet is just the beginning,”听, A&S associate dean for academic initiatives and curriculum, told the scholars. “We have a whole series of events planned for you.”

The program builds on the University’s Invest in Success Scholarship, a $500 award granted to all first-semester students who earn at least a 3.75 GPA. This year, 302 students with an A&S major or who were undeclared and enrolled in the college qualified. Machia and , assistant dean for student success, launched the initiative to help those students form a community unique to A&S.

“What I wanted to do is help them find their people within their disciplines and their pathways faster,” Machia says.

To do that, 15 upper-division students serve as peer mentors, drawing from Coronat scholars, the Ren茅e Crown University Honors Program, the College’s international peer mentoring network and recommendations from faculty and advisors. Each mentor was matched to a group of scholars by academic discipline, giving students a point of contact and a cohort of peers who share their academic interests.

鈥淚’m grateful for being part of a community of students who have similar struggles and experiences to me,” Jonathan Bispott ’29 says. “Especially having mentors who overcame trials I will soon face and having access to their ‘future knowledge’ has been really impactful.”

Events span social and academic programming. Scholars met for dinner at the Inn Complete where Machia placed icebreaker questions on the tables to spark conversation. An invitation to sit together at a 性视界 women鈥檚 basketball game followed. Lastly, Schaffling’s office organized a career immersion trip open exclusively to Success Scholars鈥攁n opportunity typically more common for upperclassmen鈥攇iving first-year students an early introduction to professional networking and alumni connections.

Three people posing indoors at a wood-paneled venue with large windows and warm lighting.
Machia attends dinner at the Inn Complete with Director of Academic Strategic Plan Implementation Pamela Young and Arts and Sciences Dean Behzad Mortazavi.

Brooke MacDonald 鈥29, a psychology major with minors in business marketing and Asian/Asian American studies,听 says she appreciates the many opportunities now open to her.

鈥淚t鈥檚 led me to meeting some amazing new people as both friends and networks,” she says. “I found it super helpful to have a mentor I could contact with any questions. With them being in the same major, it opened up perspectives for me.鈥

鈥淚 loved playing a part in making students feel like they could tell me about what they wanted out of the experience and supporting them in the process on a more personal level,鈥 says mentor Madeline Battista 鈥26, a psychology major. 鈥淪ometimes, as a student, you don’t have the opportunity to build a foundational relationship with your advisor, especially when entering the sophomore year with a new advisor. I looked forward to being someone who was stable, reliable and approachable and refined those essential skills throughout the journey.”

Another key event was an advising mixer designed to smooth one of the more anxiety-inducing transitions in a student’s first year: moving from working exclusively with a first-year advisor to working with an upper-division one. Rather than learning about the change through an email, scholars met their new advisors in person鈥攊ntroduced by the advisor they already knew.

“Things that can be done via email, but you do in person, bring people together,” Machia says.

She notes that scholars have expressed gratitude for having a dedicated space to meet people outside of large lecture courses.

While the A&S Success Scholar community initiative is still in its infancy, Machia is already thinking about how to grow it. The peer mentor ratio鈥攔oughly one mentor for every 20 students鈥攊s at the top of her list. Next year, she hopes to draw on this year’s mentees to build a mentor cohort of around 50, bringing the ratio closer to 1-to-5.

“It’s going to get better and better,” Machia says.

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Two people posing beside a round orange mascot wearing a navy cap with an 鈥淪,鈥 inside a wooden event space.
A&S Students Find Purpose in Writing /2026/05/14/as-students-find-purpose-in-writing/ Thu, 14 May 2026 17:05:49 +0000 /?p=337589 Through student-involved publications, A&S writers and editors build career-ready skills and create work that reaches well beyond campus.

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Arts & Humanities A&S Students Find Purpose in Writing

Members of the Intertext editorial team, a journal featuring undergraduate writing from the Department of Writing Studies, Rhetoric and Composition, along with community partners. Pictured front row, left to right: Alexis Kirkpatrick, Jules Vinarub, Chloe Fox Rinka and associate professor Patrick W. Berry; back row: Cruz Thapa, Kairo Rushing and Jack VanBeveren.

A&S Students Find Purpose in Writing

Through student-involved publications, A&S writers and editors build career-ready skills and create work that reaches well beyond campus.
Dan Bernardi May 14, 2026

In an age when artificial intelligence can generate content instantly, the human ability to write with clarity, originality and critical insight has become more essential than ever.

Students in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S) have ample opportunity to strengthen their writing through a rich landscape of publications and digital platforms. Aurantium, Broadly Textual, Intertext and Mend are among the outlets where students build strong portfolios, sharpen their professional communication skills and engage in experiential learning that prepares them for careers in writing, publishing, media and advocacy.

Aurantium: Making Philosophy Accessible and Alive

Cover of Aurantium, Edition 2, Issue 4, Fall 2025, featuring the theme "The Mind in Monochrome: Sketches from the Edge of Reason," with ornate lace border design on a dark background.
The Fall 2025 cover of Aurantium

Like its namesake, 听(the Latin word for orange) is vibrant, inviting and full of fresh perspective. Founded in 2023, this student-led undergraduate philosophy journal was created to invite curiosity, creativity and conversation across disciplines. Supported by the and the Philosophy Club, the journal publishes two issues each year: one focused on the 性视界 University and SUNY ESF community and another open to contributors worldwide.

Essays, reflections, creative writing and artwork all find a home in Aurantium, making it a space where philosophy is explored not as an abstract exercise, but as a living, interdisciplinary practice.

For editor-in-chief Brielle Brzytwa 鈥28, discovering philosophy was anything but immediate. 鈥淚n high school it felt abstract, inaccessible and frustratingly stuffy,鈥 she recalls. It wasn鈥檛 until college that philosophy began to feel meaningful, and that transformation shaped her vision for Aurantium. 鈥淧hilosophy doesn鈥檛 have to be confined to dense texts or exclusive academic spaces,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t can鈥攁nd should鈥攊nvite curiosity and conversation.鈥

As editor-in-chief, Brzytwa has made accessibility a guiding principle. She describes the journal as a place where ideas are not only preserved but 鈥渟hared, challenged and reimagined,鈥 with an emphasis on amplifying a range of undergraduate voices.

Broadly Textual: Building Community Through Public Scholarship

Purple banner logo for Broadly Textual Pub, featuring a stylized number 3 designed to resemble a film strip with a musical flourish.For graduate students eager to share their ideas beyond the boundaries of academic journals, 听offers an inviting and meaningful platform. Overseen by William P. Tolley Distinguished Teaching Professor , the online publication highlights graduate student work designed for public audiences, featuring literary and cultural commentary, , and thoughtful explorations of digital media and identity. With its focus on a broad variety of subject matter, the publication encourages students to see scholarship as both collaborative and accessible.

Co-editor Elena Selthun first encountered Broadly Textual as a contributor during their first year of graduate study and quickly recognized its value. They describe the experience as 鈥渓ow-pressure and supportive,鈥 an ideal introduction to publishing. Equally important, Selthun was drawn to the publication鈥檚 commitment to public humanities. 鈥淭he public-facing nature of the blog allows graduate students to apply what we learn beyond academia,鈥 they say.

For fellow co-editor Meg Healy, the appeal initially lay in skill-building and community engagement. Over time, she gained a deeper appreciation for the publication鈥檚 role in demystifying the publishing process. 鈥淭here is a strong incentive to publish while in graduate school, but that can be daunting,鈥 Healy says.

Both editors emphasize the sense of connection the publication fosters. Selthun points out that graduate research can often feel siloed, and “Broadly Textual” helps bring students across departments into conversation.

Intertext: Celebrating Writing Across WRT Courses

For more than three decades, has celebrated writing by undergraduate students in the (WRT), and community partners. In April 2026, editors and contributors gathered to mark the release of the journal鈥檚 .

Cover art for Intertext 2026 at 性视界 University, featuring a moody blue illustration of a figure peering downward at scattered objects, rendered in a sketchy, expressive style.
Cover of Intertext 2026

Reflecting on their involvement, editors Jules Vinarub and Kairo Rushing wrote in the introduction to the 2026 issue, 鈥淭his publication relies on the willingness of 性视界 University students to be vulnerable enough to let their truth be on display鈥攕haring themselves with you, allowing you to hear and see their stories.鈥

Throughout the year, students met with publishing professionals and authors like Rand Timmerman, member of the at 性视界 University, whose essay about a is published in the 2026 issue along with a .

Any student who has taken a WRT course can submit their work to “Intertext,” and submissions are accepted on a rolling basis. Students interested in joining the editorial team can enroll in WRT 340: Advanced Editing Studio. For more information, contact Professor Patrick W. Berry.

Mend: Amplifying Voices, Honoring Stories and Creating Purpose

听is an annual publication started by , WRT associate professor, and is dedicated to celebrating the lives and creative work of incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people, as well as individuals impacted by the criminal legal system. Featuring fiction, poetry and nonfiction on a wide range of topics, the publication offers contributors the freedom to explore personal experience while centering dignity, creativity and voice.

Cover art for Mend 2026, featuring a mixed-media collage portrait of a figure with a painted face, newspaper elements, buttons, and a black ribbon bow, set against a vibrant abstract background of yellow, red, and blue.
Mend 2026 cover

Editor Drew Murphy 鈥26, who is majoring in writing and rhetoric, and in psychology in A&S, first encountered Mend as a junior through an Engaged Humanities course, WRT 413: Rhetoric and Ethics after Prison, taught by Berry. Guest visits from formerly incarcerated writers involved with Mend left a lasting impression.

鈥淭heir stories represented a powerful intersection of my two majors, writing and rhetoric and psychology,鈥 Murphy says, describing the experience as one that immediately sparked curiosity on both personal and professional levels. When Murphy learned about internship opportunities with , the decision felt natural.

鈥淭he opportunity to work with impacted individuals while contributing to a publication that shares their stories has been meaningful for both my academic studies and future career ambitions,鈥 she explains.

As Murphy prepares for graduate study in social work, she credits Mend with deepening her belief that thoughtful writing can contribute to meaningful change.

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A group of seven students and a faculty member sit together on outdoor campus steps, smiling on a sunny day.
A&S Students Shine at Annual Undergraduate Research Festival /2026/05/14/as-students-shine-at-annual-undergraduate-research-festival/ Thu, 14 May 2026 14:28:41 +0000 /?p=338495 Students gathered at the Life Sciences Complex to present their work to faculty, staff, peers and guests.

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Campus & Community A&S Students Shine at Annual Undergraduate Research Festival

From left to right, Julia Bruno, Katie Southard, Arina Stoianova, Katherine Wendler and Liz Linkletter pose for a photo in front of their research poster.

A&S Students Shine at Annual Undergraduate Research Festival

Students gathered at the Life Sciences Complex to present their work to faculty, staff, peers and guests.
Casey Schad May 14, 2026

Nearly 140 undergraduate students showcased their academic work at the College of Arts and Sciences鈥 (A&S鈥) annual Undergraduate Research Festival on April 17 in the Life Sciences Complex’s Milton Atrium. Faculty, staff, peers and guests鈥攊ncluding members of the Dean鈥檚 Advisory Board, who received 鈥攖urned out to see the breadth and quality of student scholarship on display.

This year’s festival featured projects spanning an impressive range of disciplines, with titles from 鈥淣ew Frontiers in Forensic DNA Analysis Evaluating Single Cell Sequencing鈥 (Ava Polak 鈥26) to 鈥溾楩orgive My Northern Attitude鈥: Are Northeasterners Really That Rude?鈥 (Abram Speek 鈥26). Together, the projects reflected A&S’ commitment to research that bridges the sciences and the humanities, examining the world’s most pressing questions through rigorous, creative inquiry.

A student wearing glasses presents her research poster to an attendee at a university research festival, gesturing as she explains her work on food insecurity and diet-related chronic disease.
Olutoyin Green, a health humanities and political philosophy student, explains her project, Beyond Treatment: Food Homology and the Limits of Current U.S. 鈥楩ood is Medicine鈥 (FIM) Programs in Addressing Structural Drivers of Diet-Related Chronic Disease.

With 99 poster exhibitions and 26 faculty-moderated presentations, this year’s festival continued its annual tradition of being among the largest of any such event at 性视界 University.

Students from across A&S participated, representing departments and programs including African American studies, art and music histories, biology, biotechnology, chemistry, communication sciences and disorders, Earth and environmental sciences, forensics, human development and family science, languages, literatures, and linguistics, mathematics, neuroscience, philosophy, physics, and psychology.

To learn more and check out interviews with student researchers, visit the A&S website:

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Five young women pose together at a 性视界 University research festival, standing in front of academic poster presentations including one titled "Are First-Generation Students Happy at 性视界 University?"
Chie Sakakibara Is Changing Climate Research From the Inside Out /2026/05/13/chie-sakakibara-is-changing-climate-research-from-the-inside-out/ Wed, 13 May 2026 19:32:57 +0000 /?p=338469 The professor鈥檚 decades-long partnerships with Indigenous Arctic and Japanese communities are yielding a new model for climate research.

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Health, Sport & Society Chie Sakakibara Is Changing Climate Research From the Inside Out

After a successful whale hunt, members of the I帽upiaq community in Arctic Alaska gather to give thanks. Chie Sakakibara, associate professor of geography and the environment, is shown with the group, honoring the ecological knowledge, cooperation and cultural practices that have guided I帽upiaq whaling for centuries. (Photo by Flossie Nageak)

Chie Sakakibara Is Changing Climate Research From the Inside Out

The professor鈥檚 decades-long partnerships with Indigenous Arctic and Japanese communities are yielding a new model for climate research.
May 13, 2026

When Chie Sakakibara first traveled to an I帽upiaq community in Arctic Alaska as a graduate student, an elder gave her advice that would define her career.

鈥淣ever disappear,鈥 she told her.

Four people sit on a gymnasium floor examining a spread of black-and-white historical photographs and documents, with one woman leaning in and gesturing as she leads the discussion.
At an oral history workshop in Nibutani, Hokkaido, Chie Sakakibara (second from left, back) examines historical photographs of the village with Ainu, I帽upiaq, and Japanese collaborators. (Photo by Michio Kurose)

For generations, researchers had come to Indigenous lands, documented stories and environmental knowledge, and left鈥攐ften without returning results or sustaining relationships. Community members asked Sakakibara to do something different: to document climate change from their perspective and to show that they were not simply victims of environmental disruption, but creative and resilient people adapting to change.

鈥淚 was honored, and I stayed,鈥 Sakakibara says. 鈥淧lacing yourself in a community means reciprocating and emphasizing their priorities, not just your own interests.鈥

More than two decades later, she is still returning.

Now an associate professor of geography and the environment in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Sakakibara has built her scholarship around long-term collaboration and Indigenous research sovereignty鈥攖he idea that communities themselves should guide how their knowledge is used, represented and shared. Another focus of her work: the interconnected survival of people, animals and environments in a rapidly changing Arctic.

鈥淐hie鈥檚 work is a model of what engaged scholarship looks like at Maxwell,鈥 says Shana Kushner Gadarian, associate dean for research and professor of political science. 鈥淏y centering Indigenous voices and building lasting partnerships across the globe, she demonstrates that rigorous research and genuine community responsibility are not competing values鈥攖hey are inseparable ones.鈥

Connecting Communities

Sakakibara鈥檚 current initiative, 鈥淚ndigenous Northern Landscapes: Visual Repatriation and Climate Knowledge Exchange,鈥 connects the I帽upiaq people of Arctic Alaska with the Ainu community of northern Japan to explore environmental memory, cultural preservation and climate adaptation.

Both communities have endured land dispossession and the suppression of traditional language and faith. Both have retained and revitalized Indigenous ways of being鈥攖he I帽upiat through their relationship with the bowhead whale, sea ice and tundra; the Ainu through kinship with the brown bear, salmon, rivers and forests of Hokkaido.

鈥淭heir voices are only getting stronger through connecting and building relationships with other Indigenous communities and their allies within and beyond academia,鈥 says Sakakibara, a research affiliate for the East Asia Program in Maxwell’s Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs and a member of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program and Center for Global Indigenous Cultures and Environmental Justice in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Her project employs repeat photography alongside community-led ethnography, fieldwork, oral history, archival research and collaborative museum curation. It emphasizes Indigenous knowledge and collaboration and juxtaposes early 20th-century and contemporary images, revealing sea ice loss, coastal erosion and shifting subsistence patterns due to environmental transformation.

Working with the University of Alaska Fairbanks and the National Snow and Ice Data Center, the project collaboratively produces environmental knowledge by interpreting these historical photographs with the Indigenous descendants of the communities where they originated.

Future work will involve storymapping, participatory digital storytelling and traveling museum curation bridging 性视界, Arctic Alaska and Japan.

Two people in traditional Alaska Native clothing share a joyful embrace on the floor of a packed gymnasium, as a large crowd of smiling, applauding community members looks on
Chie Sakakibara performs the raven dance with her adopted nephew, whaler Ernest Aiviq Nageak, at the biennial Kiv摹iq festival of dance and music that unites Indigenous communities across the circumpolar Arctic. (Photo by Bill Hess)

Challenging the Myth

A persistent misconception frames Indigenous cultures as unchanging and separate from the modern world. Sakakibara sees that stereotype as an obstacle to effective climate policy.

鈥淲hen policymakers or scientists assume that Indigenous peoples are merely relics of the past, they fail to recognize that communities like the I帽upiat and Ainu actively observe, interpret and respond to environmental change,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat blocks opportunities to incorporate Indigenous expertise into climate solutions.鈥

I帽upiat hunters continuously adjust whaling routes in response to sea ice change. Ainu communities combine historical ecological knowledge with contemporary observations to protect salmon runs. These are dynamic systems of environmental monitoring refined over generations, not static traditions.

Rather than separating Western science from Indigenous knowledge systems, Sakakibara argues the two must be in conversation, especially as policymakers confront accelerating climate disruption. Climate change, she notes, is not solely a scientific challenge but a cultural and political one.

鈥淐limate disruption is among the most consequential challenges of our time, with implications that span policy, governance, culture and human well-being,鈥 says Maxwell Dean David M. Van Slyke. 鈥淥ur students benefit from the wide-ranging expertise and experiences that Professor Sakakibara and colleagues provide.鈥

Students as Research Partners

Sakakibara brings her knowledge back to 性视界鈥攊nto classrooms, workshops and partnerships that give students direct exposure to the communities and questions at the center of her work.

In July 2024, Sakakibara partnered with public history experts from

A group of women and children ride together in the bed of a small Suzuki Carry truck in a parking lot, smiling and flashing peace signs, with green trees and a metal structure visible in the background.
Katsitsatekanoniahkwa Destiny Lazore, front right, is shown during fieldwork with her professor, Chie Sakakibara, in Nibutani, Japan. Joining Lazore in collaborator Kenji Sekine鈥檚 truck are local children, fellow student collaborator Charlotte Dupree and Danika Medak-Saltzman, assistant professor and director of undergraduate studies for women and gender studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. (Photo by Chie Sakakibara)

StoryCollab to facilitate a on campus with Ainu collaborators. That same year, Sakakibara brought two Haudenosaunee undergraduate students to Japan to participate in workshops with Ainu community members, contributing to mapping projects and oral history initiatives conducted across English, Japanese and Ainu.

One of those students, Katsitsatekanoniahkwa Destiny Lazore 鈥26, is a member of the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe and a 2025 Udall Scholar in Tribal Public Policy. Hearing the stories of 听Ainu community members resonated in a personal way.

鈥淚t reminded me of what my own ancestors experienced, the struggle to protect culture, revitalize language and reclaim sovereignty,鈥 says Lazore. 鈥淭here was something powerful in recognizing that shared desire: the simple but profound wish to safeguard your people, your traditions and your future for the next generations to come.鈥

Rooted in Relationships

Sakakibara鈥檚 听project has cultivated partnerships with major institutions including the Penn Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Yale Peabody Museum, the National Museum of Ethnology in Japan and the Center for Ainu and Indigenous Studies at Hokkaido University.

鈥淭he core goals鈥攃entering Indigenous knowledge, documenting environmental change and supporting cultural sovereignty鈥攔emain active and impactful,鈥 Sakakibara says, adding that the elder鈥檚 advice鈥攏ever disappear鈥攔emains central to her approach. 鈥淩esearch is about relationships. And relationships require responsibility.鈥

Story by Catherine Scott

Read the full story on the Maxwell School website:

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A group of about 20 people in heavy winter clothing celebrate on a snowy Arctic shoreline, with two individuals raised up with arms triumphant and a blue flag on a pole behind them.
Former A&S Dean Samuel Gorovitz Reflects on University Career /2026/05/12/former-as-dean-samuel-gorovitz-reflects-on-university-career/ Tue, 12 May 2026 20:17:40 +0000 /?p=338378 As Gorovitz prepares to retire this month, the former College of Arts and Sciences Dean and founding figure of looks back on bioethics, the field he helped build.

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Campus & Community Former A&S Dean Samuel Gorovitz Reflects on University Career

Samuel Gorovitz is retiring after more than four decades of service to the College of Arts and Sciences.

Former A&S Dean Samuel Gorovitz Reflects on University Career

As Gorovitz prepares to retire this month, the former College of Arts and Sciences Dean and founding figure of looks back on bioethics, the field he helped build.
Sean Grogan May 12, 2026

has spent more than half a century asking uncomfortable questions at the intersection of philosophy, medicine and public life. When he began his career in the 1960s, ethics was largely a theoretical pursuit鈥攏uanced debates taking place away from the realities of human struggles.

But medicine was changing rapidly. Organ transplantation, life-support technology, in vitro fertilization and genetic research were raising questions that no clinical guideline could answer, like who deserves scarce life-saving treatment and when does a physician’s obligation to a patient end?

Gorovitz was among the first to argue that philosophy had not just a role but a responsibility in grappling with them. In a career spanning more than six decades, Gorovitz has testified before Congress, served on the New York State Task Force on Life and the Law, advised the World Health Organization and been recognized by the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute as a听.

After four decades of service to the , Gorovitz will retire at the end of this semester.

“We are deeply grateful to Sam Gorovitz for his seven years of leadership as dean of this College, and for a career in bioethics that has served not just A&S but the nation’s conscience,鈥 says Behzad Mortazavi, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. 鈥淗is work has defined the field, shaped federal policy and informed WHO guidelines. His institutional leadership and enduring public scholarship have benefited so many in A&S and beyond.鈥

A man holds an open book at a desk beside a bronze bust, with a wall of bookshelves behind him.Gorovitz, a Boston native, earned a bachelor’s degree and a Ph.D. in philosophy from Stanford University. He joined the faculty at Case Western Reserve University in 1964, where a conversation with a Nobel Prize-winning medical school dean set him on a path that would help define an entirely new field.

He arrived at 性视界 University in 1986 as A&S dean, later became Founding Director of the Ren茅e Crown University Honors Program, and has been a professor of philosophy in the College all along. His 10 books include Doctors’ Dilemmas: Moral Conflict and Medical Care, the embedded hospital ethnography听Drawing the Line: Life, Death, and Ethical Choices in an American Hospital听and his most recent,听Illuminating Philosophy: Stories Beyond Boundaries, published in 2023.

Gorovitz recently reflected on the field he helped build and the challenges it continues to face.

Q:
A 1962 LIFE magazine article about a Seattle dialysis committee was an early spark for your work in medical ethics. What was it about that story that impacted you so deeply?
A:

Several things were converging for me at the time. I was finishing graduate school, working on scientific explanation and cause and effect, and separately thinking about decision-making under uncertainty. Then there was something unusual about how that story moved through the culture. Typically, an important discovery appears first in professional journals, works its way to something like Scientific American, and eventually reaches a general audience. But with the Seattle dialysis case, it worked in the opposite direction鈥攁 mass market magazine captured public attention first, and that pressure eventually prompted professionals to take the questions seriously. I found that fascinating. Here was an example of public attention creating pressure that made experts think in new ways about what was even worth thinking about.

Q:
And the question was who deserves life-saving treatment when there鈥檚 not enough to go around?
A:

Exactly. The doctors who developed dialysis at the University of Washington were saying, 鈥榃hy are you asking us? We know about kidneys and filters and blood flow. We don’t know anything about who’s worth saving.鈥 That’s not a medical or technical question. So then the question becomes: well, who should decide, and how? What attributes of a patient are actually relevant to that kind of selection? Those are philosophical questions. And I was sitting in a philosophy department at a university with a medical school, thinking鈥攖here’s a tremendous amount of work to be done here and nobody has any idea how to do it.

In 1966 I walked across the street and made an appointment with the new dean of the medical school, a man named听. I told him I thought there were important ethical issues in medicine that weren’t being adequately explored, and I asked if he’d be willing to help. He looked at me for a moment, then turned around, picked something up, and handed it to me. It was his gold Nobel Prize medal鈥攈e’d co-developed the vaccine against polio. But he said, 鈥業 had to do that work in Sweden, because I wasn’t allowed to do it in the United States.鈥 The research involved fetal tissue, which was blocked on ethical grounds. He said he’d been wondering ever since, 鈥業f what I did was so valuable that it earned a Nobel Prize, why was it considered so wrong that I couldn’t do it in my own country?鈥 Then he said, 鈥業’ll help you any way I can.鈥 In that moment, the dean of the medical school and a young assistant professor of philosophy became colleagues, collaborators and, eventually, very close friends.

Q:
You mentioned there was a lot of work to be done. What happened when you tried to get it out into the world?
A:

I had between 12 and 15 rejection letters from publishers who kept saying the same thing: nobody’s teaching medical ethics, there’s no such field, don’t send it. When I finally got Moral Problems in Medicine听published by Prentice Hall in 1976, one year later the book had been adopted by 100 universities. That’s when it became clear pedagogically. But the research side took longer.

What I did, in part, was function as an accelerant. The Haverford seminar I ran in the summer of 1974 brought together faculty from across disciplines interested in exploring bioethical issues and pedagogy. They committed to going back to their institutions and teaching these questions. Years later, someone did a literature search and found over 500 bioethics articles written by people who had attended that summer. I didn’t write those articles, but I helped catalyze the work.

Q:
How did moving between the academic and policy worlds throughout your career change how you think about ethical questions?
A:

There’s an idea I’ve always found important, that medicine saved ethics from a sterile irrelevance. For a long time, academic ethics was very pure鈥攃areful, nuanced discussions with no real connection to what people were actually experiencing. What bioethics did was force a connectedness between scholarly work and what people truly care about in their lives. I remember drafting testimony for Al Gore’s subcommittee and bringing the draft to my graduate seminar to critique and anticipate what questions Congress might ask. We’d revise it after the testimony and it would become a published article.

Q:
You came to 性视界 in 1986 as Dean of this College and have been here ever since. What has 性视界 and A&S given you intellectually?
A:

It gave me colleagues. Cathryn Newton鈥攚ho became dean after me and served eight years, longer than anyone else鈥攊s a world-famous oceanographer and paleontologist who cares as deeply as I do about the connectedness between serious scholarship and what people actually need from an education. That kind of colleague shapes you. The students here have shaped me too. I’ve always believed my job in the classroom is to listen first鈥攖o understand what a student is actually asking before I try to answer it. You can’t do that if you’re in a hurry to perform.

Q:
Over your career, how well do you think academic ethics has kept pace with the moral questions that medicine and science keep generating?
A:

We’re always running late, and we’re always trying to show up early. You can’t react to something that hasn’t happened yet, but you can try to anticipate what’s emerging. I’ve been getting inquiries lately about designer babies, about cloning, about the ethics of diagnostic algorithms. Some of that is reacting to what people are already doing. Some of it is trying to get ahead of what might happen and probably should be anticipated. Both matter. The field has never been static, and it can’t afford to be.

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Anatomy and Physiology Sequence Gives Students Strong Foundation in Human Biology /2026/05/12/anatomy-and-physiology-sequence-gives-students-strong-foundation-in-human-biology/ Tue, 12 May 2026 20:06:45 +0000 /?p=338364 Through a flipped classroom, weekly labs and a medical school visit, the anatomy and physiology sequence prepares students for the demands of healthcare.

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Campus & Community Anatomy and Physiology Sequence Gives Students Strong Foundation in Human Biology

Students take one another's blood pressure during an Anatomy and Physiology II for biology majors lab session.

Anatomy and Physiology Sequence Gives Students Strong Foundation in Human Biology

Through a flipped classroom, weekly labs and a medical school visit, the anatomy and physiology sequence prepares students for the demands of healthcare.
Sean Grogan May 12, 2026

A strong foundation in human biology is essential for students pursuing careers in medicine, nursing, physician assistance (PA) and the health sciences. For those students, anatomy and physiology鈥攖he study of the body’s structures and how they function鈥攊s often among the most demanding and consequential courses of their undergraduate education, serving as both a prerequisite for graduate programs and a proving ground for the scientific thinking those programs require.

Students have an innovative opportunity to build that foundation in the two-semester anatomy and physiology sequence taught by Vera McIlvain, an associate teaching professor in the Department of Biology in the .

The course draws more than 200 students per lecture including biology majors and other allied health students. Intentionally demanding, the comprehensive course covers the systems, structures and physiological processes that form the basis of human health. But what sets it apart, students say, is how it is taught.

McIlvain鈥檚 students don鈥檛 walk into class to hear a lecture for the first time鈥攂ecause the lecture has already happened. In what educators call a flipped classroom, McIlvain has built a library of more than 170 original instructional videos that students work through before they arrive: short, focused lessons on a platform that pauses to test comprehension in real time.

By the time students are in the room, the basics are behind them. That frees every minute of class time for the harder work: clinical application, concept mapping, real-time polling that surfaces misconceptions on the spot and the kind of problem-solving that mirrors how healthcare professionals actually think.

For Niamh McGuinness 鈥26, a student planning to attend PA school after graduation, that approach has been transformative. 鈥淒r. V has helped me learn what study strategies are most effective for this type of learning,鈥 she says, 鈥渨hich is one of the most valuable takeaways from this course.鈥

That preparation extends to how students are tested. McIlvain鈥檚 exams use a select-all-that-apply format designed to reveal what students actually know rather than what they can eliminate.

A professor instructs students during a lab exercise as a student uses a stethoscope to take a peer's blood pressure.
Vera McIlvain (far left), an associate teaching professor in the Department of Biology, explores a topic with students in the two-semester anatomy and physiology sequence.

The course also extends beyond at-home and in-person lectures. Lab sections meet weekly, where sessions include exercises such as students examining slides of microscopic tissues using equipment McIlvain says produces images of textbook quality. Students capture their own micrographs of each tissue type, building a personal image library they use throughout the course.

One of the most impactful elements of the upper-division course is an annual visit to the cadaver lab at , where medical students lead anatomy instruction. For students considering graduate and professional school, the experience of being able to interact with their older peers is both practical and motivating.

鈥淚 learned a lot about not only anatomy and physiology from the medical students but also different paths and perspectives for a future in healthcare,鈥 McGuinness says.

Adrien Schmitt 鈥26, a pre-health undergraduate, agrees.

鈥淏eing able to ask actual medical students questions about their time in medical school was invaluable,鈥 he says, 鈥渁s I will be applying to medical school myself.鈥

McIlvain鈥檚 doctoral work in systems neuroscience and postdoctoral research in genetics shaped how she teaches, bringing a research lens to curriculum design, assessment and course development. The classroom, she says, is where she found her greatest impact.

She has stayed in touch with many former students, collecting feedback long after they leave her classroom. For McIlvain, that kind of feedback is what drives continued refinement of the course, which she updates each semester based on student feedback. The goal, she says, is straightforward: prepare students not just to pass an exam, but to carry what they鈥檝e learned into whatever comes next.

鈥淭he A&P two-semester sequence has been my favorite biology courses I鈥檝e taken in my four years here at 性视界,鈥 Schmitt says. 鈥淭he simple fact that she (McIlvain) learns the names of every single one of her more than 200 students in the lecture is a testament to her character and love for teaching. She鈥檒l take the time during lab to explain topics to you and there is no such thing as a bad question.鈥

It is a standard McIlvain says she holds herself to every semester.

鈥淭here鈥檚 more than 200 students in the class sitting in a lecture hall,鈥 McIlvain says, 鈥渂ut I try to make every one of them feel like they鈥檙e not just a number.鈥

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A student takes another student's blood pressure in a lab setting.
Celebrating 5 Decades of Innovation on Campus /2026/05/12/celebrating-5-decades-of-innovation-on-campus/ Tue, 12 May 2026 18:28:31 +0000 /?p=338355 Ann Marie McGinnis has spent 48 years building the infrastructure that helps students register, progress and graduate.

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Campus & Community Celebrating 5 Decades of Innovation on Campus

Ann Marie McGinnis (right) accepts the Chancellor's Citation for Excellence Acting Chancellor Mike Haynie at the One University Awards Ceremony. (Photo by Amy Manley)

Celebrating 5 Decades of Innovation on Campus

Ann Marie McGinnis has spent 48 years building the infrastructure that helps students register, progress and graduate.
Sean Grogan May 12, 2026

In the mid-1990s, a 性视界 radio reporter broadcasting from a helicopter described a line of students stretching from Steele Hall across the Quad to College Place and beyond鈥攁ll waiting to register for classes. Ann Marie McGinnis was listening on her way to work听as the University鈥檚 associate registrar for registration and scheduling.

“As the person who managed the process, I knew it would be a challenging day ahead,” McGinnis recalled years later. “Administrators vowed to never let it happen again.”

It was McGinnis who made sure of that.

McGinnis joined the University in 1977 as a student receptionist in the Registrar’s Office. Over the decades, she rose through eight roles鈥攆rom data coordinator to manager to director鈥攂efore landing in her current position, a data analyst in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S) | Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs’ .

Her response to that infamous registration logjam became one of her most enduring contributions. McGinnis developed AutoReg, an automated system that built course schedules for incoming first-year students before they arrived on campus. The University has since moved to commercial scheduling tools, but AutoReg established the model still in use today.

She followed that with ePort, a degree-tracking check sheet she built, updated with every curriculum change and emailed to every A&S student before each registration period鈥攕omething no other office at the University did. A transfer credit database she developed became the foundation for a system later adopted university-wide by the Registrar’s Office. The First Term Enrollment System she built was eventually adapted into the University’s current Qualtrics process.

In her current role, McGinnis designs and maintains Tableau dashboards that give advisors real-time visibility into student enrollment status, holds, credit levels, flags and progress toward degree completion. The tool enables staff to intervene early rather than react too late.

Her degree certification dashboard cut the time required to process approximately 1,000 degrees each spring from six weeks to three. A separate retention tracking system monitors every incoming cohort from first semester through graduation, providing what Stephen LeBeau, director of operations for the Office of Student Success, calls the “gold standard” for understanding and improving student outcomes.

“At 48 years of service, Ann Marie remains on the front line of student success because of the unique way she adapts, modifies and evolves,鈥 says Steve Schaffling, assistant dean for student success. 鈥淲ithout her, our nationally recognized Office of Student Success would not be what it is.”

McGinnis has been recognized with the听Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence in the category of Outstanding Contributions to the Student Experience and University Initiatives鈥攐ne of the University’s highest staff honors. The award caps a 48-year career that has shaped how A&S registers, tracks, advises and graduates its students.

“There isn’t a student or advisor who walks this campus today that hasn’t benefited from Ann Marie’s dedication,” Cindy Zazzara, an assistant director in the Office of Student Success, wrote in a nomination letter.

University Registrar Kelly Campbell, one of several colleagues who submitted letters of support, noted that McGinnis recognized early that effective advising requires both human expertise and the right tools. She spent her career building those tools before the rest of higher education caught up.

“Long before ‘analytics’ and ‘student success dashboards’ were common in higher education, she was designing proprietary tools and early appointment-tracking systems to streamline workflows and improve transparency,” wrote Francesco Riverso, the Falk College of Sport鈥檚 director of corporate partnerships and external advancement.

The Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence is presented annually at the听One University Awards Ceremony, recognizing individuals whose work has enhanced the student experience or advanced the University’s mission.

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A person receives a certificate from a university official in academic regalia on a flower-adorned stage.
Biotechnology Students Connect With Industry Leaders /2026/05/12/biotechnology-students-connect-with-industry-leaders/ Tue, 12 May 2026 15:02:55 +0000 /?p=338315 The third annual Biotechnology Conference included a day of networking with companies, a panel discussion and a poster session, connecting students with career-building opportunities.

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STEM Biotechnology Students Connect With Industry Leaders

Biotechnology students and faculty joined by industry leaders during the third annual Biotechnology Conference.

Biotechnology Students Connect With Industry Leaders

The third annual Biotechnology Conference included a day of networking with companies, a panel discussion and a poster session, connecting students with career-building opportunities.
Dan Bernardi May 12, 2026

Internship and job leads, career insights and cutting-edge research were all on display at the third annual Biotechnology Conference on March 28. Six industry scientists from leading life sciences and diagnostics companies gave students in the College of Arts and Sciences’ (A&S’) an inside look at careers during the event which drew more than 100 attendees spanning academia and industry.

The heart of the conference was a series of morning presentations from the six scientists. They included:

  • Tonya Villafana, vice president of franchise and medical and scientific affairs at AstraZeneca;
  • David Chafin, principal scientist at Roche Diagnostics;
  • Cody Hastings and Bharat Chaudhary, both scientists at LOTTE Biologics;
  • Alyssa Lau, senior scientist at Precede Biosciences; and
  • Benjamin Mason, scientist at IQVIA.

For students, hearing directly from working scientists was a highlight of the day. , professor of biology and executive director of the biotechnology program in A&S, emphasized the career-focused dimension of the event.

“The conference provided biotechnology students with valuable exposure to current advances in the field and helped them connect with industry leaders and alumni, offering insight into career pathways and potential internships or job opportunities,鈥 Raina says. 鈥淭he poster session also gave students the opportunity to present their work and engage in meaningful discussions with attendees.”

Eight panelists seated at the front of a lecture hall during a SU Biotechnology Department event, with an audience of students listening from tiered seating
Biotechnology students Taryn Keefe (fourth from left) and Vanessa Newbauer (fifth from left) lead the panel discussion during the Biotechnology Conference.

All six speakers reconvened in the afternoon for a panel discussion titled “The Future of Biotechnology,” moderated by A&S biotechnology graduate student Vanessa Newbauer and undergraduate student Taryn Keefe ’27. The session gave attendees the opportunity to ask questions and engage directly with professionals across a range of specializations, from vaccine development and diagnostics to biologics manufacturing and precision medicine.

The day also featured a poster competition showcasing more than 30 student research projects. Top honors went to Faeze Mousazadeh, Taryn Keefe, Jyoti Devendra Adala, Isabella Fuschino, Allison Hellman, Chidansh Mehta and Prathna Patel.

The event was organized by biotechnology faculty leads Ramesh Raina, Surabhi Raina, Allison Oakes and Jason Boock, alongside student organizers from two groups: the Biotech GO Executive Board, comprising Vanessa Newbauer, Kye Desbiens, Venkatesh Lottipalli and Nithyasree Senthil; and the Biotechnology Society at SU (BSSU), comprising Aliana John, Taryn Keefe, Shahina Alibekova, Janiya Clarke, Kaltra Qilleri, Cameron Miller, Katherine Bakley and Leah Landry.

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A diverse group of approximately 20 people wearing conference lanyards pose together for a group photo outside the Jack and Laura Milton Atrium, with red, blue, and orange star-shaped balloons visible in the background.