Upcoming Events

14
Mar

Training Doctoral Writing Development with Dr. Barbara Sarnecka

Lecture/Readings

The Emma Eccles Jones College of Education & Human Services presents the Evidence-Based Practice in Graduate Education Speaker Series. Dr. Barbara Sarnecka will be speaking on specific evidence-based interventions to improve graduate student writing through cascading mentoring. Dr. Sarnecka is the Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Research at the University of California Irvine School of Social Sciences and principal investigator for an Innovations in Graduate Education grant from the National Science Foundation. During the talk at noon, she will review evidence-based interventions and their impacts. At 2pm, Dr. Sarnecka will lead a roundtable to discuss strategies for the practical aspects of implementation within programs and departments in SCCE 209. Attendees can submit a reflection of their takeaways in the ETE10 course to earn the ETE Affiliated Events & Workshops engage-level digital badge. Students, Faculty, and Staff are encouraged to join. For Zoom participation, please contact David Feldon: david.feldon@usu.edu

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm | Geology building |
15
Mar

"The Unsettling Histories of Glen Canyon Dam" with Erika Bsumek

Lecture/Readings | Diversity, equity, and Inclusion

Come and hear Dr. Bsumek speak about the historical political, and social context of the controversial Glen Canyon Dam. She will explore the impact settler colonialism has had and continues to have on the region and the indigenous people who have long lived there.

1:30 pm - 3:00 pm | USU Libraries |
16
Mar

GN&C Colloquium

Lecture/Readings

Overview of the Orion Spacecraft and the Artemis Missions, by USU alumnus and NASA engineer Shane Robinson

3:30 pm - 4:30 pm | Engineering Building |
24
Mar

“Swipe Wrongs: Sexual Racism in Dating Apps and Dating Culture”

Lecture/Readings

Dr. Apryl Williams (University of Michigan) will discuss research from her upcoming book, "Not My Type: Automating Sexual Racism in Online Dating" (Stanford University Press), in which she examines algorithmic inequities in online dating and explores how match-making algorithms perpetuate racism.

1:00 pm - 2:15 pm | USU Libraries |
24
Mar

LAEP Speaker Series: Sean Burkholder

Lecture/Readings

Managing Muddy Methods As climate-induced shifts make our coastal environments increasingly volatile and unpredictable, establishing new ways of working that move beyond the tried-and-true assumptions that past observations provide accurate examples for future conditions has become necessary. This becomes even more prescient when considering the objectives of designing or engineering with nature as opposed to simply protecting ourselves against it. Experimentation and contextual knowledge are finding new applications where once we relied on established and universal standards of best practice. With a focus on liminal coastal environments of both fresh and salt water, this talk will span a range of recent design work, organized around the subject of landscape research methods and this role of experimentation.

3:30 pm - 4:30 pm | Fine Arts Visual |
29
Mar

"How the Great War Ended: Making Peace on the Middle Eastern Front" with Michelle Tusan

Lecture/Readings | Diversity, equity, and Inclusion

This talk will explore the peace process between the Allies and the Ottoman Empire at the end of the First World War. It reveals the human cost of nearly 10 years of uninterrupted war when peace finally came in 1923.

4:30 pm - 5:30 pm | Old Main |
29
Mar

Make Do and Mend: The Impact of the Second World War on the Style and Acquisition of Clothing

Lecture/Readings

Join us for the Spring Friends of the Merrill-Cazier Library Lecture Series with speaker Nancy Hills, Head of USU's Theatre Costume Design Program! Immediate, basic human needs include food, clothing and shelter. When societies engage in war these necessities are compromised. It might seem irreverent to consider fashion in the context of conflict, but the experience of war and the upheaval it foists on society is always reflected in the way society attires itself.

7:00 pm - 8:30 pm | USU Libraries |
29
Mar

Make do and Mend: The Impact of the Second World War on the Style and Acquisition of Clothing

Lecture/Readings

Join us for the Friends of the Merrill-Cazier Library Spring Lecture! Nancy Hills, Head of USU's Theatre Costume Design Program, will deliver Make do and Mend: The Impact of the Second World War on the Style and Acquisition of Clothing on March 29th at 7:00 p.m. Immediate, basic human needs include food, clothing, and shelter. When societies engage in war these necessities are compromised. It might seem irreverent to consider fashion in the context of conflict, but the experience of war and the upheaval it foists on society is always reflected in the way society attires itself.

7:00 pm - 8:30 pm | USU Libraries |
31
Mar

LAEP Speaker Series: Anna Cawrse and Joshua Brooks

Lecture/Readings

Leading with Landscape

Anna Cawrse and Josh Brooks will explore how leading with landscape lets Sasaki tackle some of the most complex and challenging urban design and landscape architecture projects across the world. By starting with environmental systems as the driving framework, they will explore the urban constraints at Denargo Market in Denver, CO; how to create a more ecologically resilient future for University Lakes in Baton Rouge, LA; how to transform abandoned infrastructure in Athens, Greece into Europe's largest urban waterfront park; and how research can help cities and parks tackle climate change.

3:30 pm - 4:30 pm | Fine Arts Visual |
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