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Articles 1 - 30 of 70
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
2019 Celebration Of Scholarship, Creativity, And Engagement, Beth Heldebrandt, Todd Bruns, Seth Yeakel, Matthew Eifrid
2019 Celebration Of Scholarship, Creativity, And Engagement, Beth Heldebrandt, Todd Bruns, Seth Yeakel, Matthew Eifrid
Programs
Scholarship, creativity, innovation, and the many forms of collaborative engagement that shape faculty life and student learning are central to the mission of Eastern Illinois University. For that reason, our faculty, department chairs, college deans, the Provost, and the entire campus community celebrate the achievements and outstanding contributions of our colleagues and students to their disciplines and professions every year. And, as the following pages illustrate, faculty engaged in continuing scholarly and creative activities that have provided outstanding mentoring experiences for our undergraduate and graduate students.
In addition to recognizing faculty performances, shows, publications, grants and other professional efforts, the …
Artful Nature And The Legacy Of Maria Sibylla Merian, Emily N. Roush, Shannon R. Zeltmann, Felicia M. Else, Kay Etheridge, Shannon Egan
Artful Nature And The Legacy Of Maria Sibylla Merian, Emily N. Roush, Shannon R. Zeltmann, Felicia M. Else, Kay Etheridge, Shannon Egan
Schmucker Art Catalogs
The exhibition Artful Nature and the Legacy of Maria Sibylla Merian celebrates the skills and influences of a remarkable woman from seventeenth-century Europe. Curated by Emily Roush ’21 and Shannon Zeltmann ’21 with the guidance of Professors Kay Etheridge (Biology) and Felicia Else (Art History), Emily and Shannon selected the prints, organized them into categories, and carried out research on them, much of which was relatively obscure and would have been challenging even for graduate students.
Maria Sibylla Merian lived and worked in a time of vibrant intersections of art and science in Europe. Her images of insects and plants …
Are Humans Natural? Part 3: Nature Relatedness And The American Dream, Nathan Ruhl, Taylor Dobson
Are Humans Natural? Part 3: Nature Relatedness And The American Dream, Nathan Ruhl, Taylor Dobson
Open Educational Resources
This learning module is part of a series of activities designed to encourage students to develop relational values with nature. In this activity, students reflect on their relationship with nature and consider the impact of their plans/goals for the future on the environment and the larger goal of sustainability. Students evaluate their relationship with nature through the Nature Relatedness (NR-6) Test (Nisbet and Zelenski, 2013), compare their NR-6 score to others, consider how their goals (“dreams”) are related to the American Dream, and speculate on the attainability of sustainability given our individually driven goals for the future. This activity challenges …
Are Humans Natural? Part 2: Exploring Human-Nature Relational Values And The Balance Of Nature, Nathan Ruhl
Are Humans Natural? Part 2: Exploring Human-Nature Relational Values And The Balance Of Nature, Nathan Ruhl
Open Educational Resources
This learning module is part of a series of modules that seeks to help students develop human-nature relational values. Relational values are more readily developed when the methods employed reference species/environments/landscapes/situations that students are familiar with already and may encounter during their everyday lives. In this activity students are asked to consider whether nature is in balance. The idea that nature is in balance extends deep into human history, but modern scientific evidence clearly demonstrates that nature is not in balance. Despite scientific evidence, the perception that nature is stable or in balance persists in human culture. This activity challenges …
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 3, Summer 2019, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 3, Summer 2019, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine
16 - PROTECTING THE HEART To grow the campus, we must care for the thing unchanging at its center—its Mission. Take a journey through the restoration of Mission Santa Clara de Asís. By Lander Eicholzer ’19.
22 - A LOBBY FOR JUSTICE What do you do when it is impossible for the innocent to prove their innocence? Change the law. The Northern California Innocence Project teamed up with state lawmakers and others to do just that. By Deborah Lohse.
26 - FINDING CENTER Outgoing Frank Sinatra Chair in the Performing Arts Taye Diggs reflects on celebrating who are you, where …
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 4, Summer 2019, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 4, Summer 2019, Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine
16 - PROTECTING THE HEART To grow the campus, we must care for the thing unchanging at its center—its Mission. Take a journey through the restoration of Mission Santa Clara de Asís. By Lander Eicholzer ’19.
22 - A LOBBY FOR JUSTICE What do you do when it is impossible for the innocent to prove their innocence? Change the law. The Northern California Innocence Project teamed up with state lawmakers and others to do just that. By Deborah Lohse.
26 - FINDING CENTER Outgoing Frank Sinatra Chair in the Performing Arts Taye Diggs reflects on celebrating who are you, where …
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-16, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-16, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-09, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-09, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-02, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-05-02, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-25, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-25, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
George Finley Ledger 20, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 20, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 16, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 16, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 15, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 15, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 10, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 10, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 8, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 8, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 7, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 7, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 6, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 6, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
George Finley Ledger 5, George Finley
George Finley Ledger 5, George Finley
Deeply Rooted
This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-18, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-18, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-11, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-11, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-04, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-04-04, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 2, Spring 2019 [Print Issue V. 60:1], Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 60 Number 2, Spring 2019 [Print Issue V. 60:1], Santa Clara University
Santa Clara Magazine
28 - TECHNOLOGY, WONDER & US We’re at the epicenter of the biggest ecosystem of information exchange in history. How do we ensure tech fosters human flourishing? By Dorian Llywelyn, S.J. Illustrations by Derek Brahney.
36 - QUERY RESULTS What questions should we be asking about ethics and AI? Here are six. By Irina Raicu J.D. ’09. Illustrations by Paul Blow.
40 - A CURIOUS CASE If you want to innovate for the world, you need the room to do it. Sanjiv Das and a tale of machine learning, mortgages, and mistaken identity. By Deborah Lohse. Illustrations by Ellen Weinstein. …
Spring 2019, Joëlle Walls
Spring 2019, Joëlle Walls
The Investigator Research Magazine
We are excited to launch The Investigator, a new magazine which will be produced annually by the Office of Research at Kennesaw State University. You will find stories that span the spectrum and which impact the community through the research, service and creative activities conducted by KSU faculty, staff and students.
One feature describes how Jonathan McMurry and John Salerno partnered to create KSU’s first incubator company, New Echota Biotechnology. Another feature details the first year success of KSU Upward Bound programs, implemented in Polk and Paulding county high schools which help prepare students for college.
You will read how …
The Santa Clara, 2019-02-28, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara, 2019-02-28, Santa Clara University
The Santa Clara
No abstract provided.
Japanese Pamphlets, Volume Iv, 1907-1925
Japanese Pamphlets, Volume Iv, 1907-1925
Japanese Pamphlets
Ten politically oriented pamphlets published between 1907 to 1925 that set forth largely anti-Japanese contentions against those residing in the United States and California. The White population continued to be concerned about the mixing of races and wanted additional laws that not only excluded the Japanese who were living in the United States (including children born in the United States) from citizenship but also from leasing or owning land. The arguments found in the first three volumes of pamphlets continued on into Volume IV including a V.H. McClatchy’s 1925 pamphlet entitled: “Guarding the Immigration Gates: What Has Been Done; What …
Japanese Pamphlets, Volume Iii, 1918-1925
Japanese Pamphlets, Volume Iii, 1918-1925
Japanese Pamphlets
Twenty-two politically oriented pamphlets published between 1906 to 1914 that set forth the pros and cons of Japanese continuing to reside in the United States and California. The White population was particularly concerned about the mixing of races and wanted laws that not only excluded the Japanese who were living in the United States (including children born in the United States) from citizenship but also from leasing or owning land. Those who were anti-Japanese described the Japanese as an inferior race incapable of assimilating into the White population and includes a pamphlet entitled “Preliminary Report of the Mental Capacity of …
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Iii, 1857-1902
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Iii, 1857-1902
Chinese Pamphlets
Eleven pamphlets published between 1857 and 1902 regarding the treatment of the exempt classes of Chinese in the United States, arguments in favor of immigration with measurers recommended by the Immigration Union, the church and the Chinese, competition with Chinese and the necessity of a stringent exclusion clause, and letters written by members of the Chinese community on the Chinese question.
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume I, 1876-1914
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume I, 1876-1914
Chinese Pamphlets
Seventeen pamphlets published between 1876 and 1914 that set forth the pros and cons of Chinese immigration into the United States, including arguments as to why the Chinese should be excluded. Those claims were in part that the Chinese being non-assimilative, undesirable, destructive to competition and hence the need to protect American labor and White citizens. The Chinese were blamed for the spread of slavery, criminal activities, highbinders (assassins), opium smoking, leprosy and other imported evils and the overall corruption of California.
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Iv, 1855-1908
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Iv, 1855-1908
Chinese Pamphlets
Nine pamphlets published between 1855 and 1908 regarding Chinese in the United States and, in particular, in California, containing arguments for and against the Chinese being in America, past relations with the Chinese, describing the Chinese as heathens and a continuation of the claims made against the Chinese in the first three volumes of Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets.
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Ii, 1870-1906
Chinese Immigration-Exclusion Pamphlets, Volume Ii, 1870-1906
Chinese Pamphlets
Eight pamphlets published between 1870 and 1906 consisting of topics such as the treatment of the exempt classes of Chinese in the United States, Chinese immigration, Chinese mining license tax, the evils of the Mongolian immigration, the “true sentiments” of the Republican Party of California on the Chinese question, the nature and effect of the competition by Chinese with American labor, the church and Chinese immigration, cholera in San Francisco and the conflict of the races.