The Bulletin is published every month for faculty, staff, and students.
Submit a News StoryMarch 2019 Contents
NDMU News
Registration
Mid-term exams are just around the corner and that means registration for the Summer and Fall semesters isn’t too far behind. Beginning March 11, students will be able to log onto WebAdvisor and begin making their class selections.
However, before registration there are a few things you need to make sure are in order. You will need to make sure your account is up to date, meaning there is no balance or holds. If you have any questions, contact the Business Office or log onto WebAdvisor for an overview of your account.
Once everything is up to date, you will need to meet with your advisor. Once these things have been completed, you will be able to register.
As for financial aid, now is the time to complete your 2019-2020 Free Application for Federal Student Aid - FAFSA, and it’s not too late to apply for financial aid for the current aid year to include summer term.
Busta Forum
Every year the Charles J. Busta III Business Forum brings women leaders to campus to discuss their inspirational and relatable journeys. This year’s forum (formerly known as lecture) took place on Tuesday, March 5.
This year’s theme focused on growth, connections, and access. And thanks to the honesty, vulnerability, and humor of our panelists, 150 attendees enjoyed an engaging discussion with truly fantastic leaders:
- India Gary-Martin, CEO of Leadership for Life
- Kate Bowers, Vice President of Public Relations Client Services at Weinberg Harris & Associates
- Janese Murray, Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion, Exelon Corporation (Ret.)
- Linda Singh, Major General of the Maryland Army National Guard
Morrissy Presentations
Earlier this month, 11 Morrissy Honors students presented a variety of papers at the Maryland Collegiate Honors Council Annual Conference at Morgan State University. Topics for our students ranged from literary analysis to biology, economics and sociology. Congratulations to the following students for proudly representing NDMU:- Christine Roa
- A Celebration of Existentialist Freedom in Sartre’s The Flies
- Uloaku Onwumelu
- Development of In Vitro Species-Specific Environmental DNA (eDNA) Markers for Kichulchoia brevifasciata (Cobitidae), South Korean Endangered Freshwater Fish
- Ashley Anderson
- The Effect of One’s Perceived Influence as a Voter on One’s Likelihood to Vote
- Myra Beyene, Ciarese DeTorres, Diana Liz-Cabrera, and Jessie Willinghan
- The DJ-MC Equation for Measuring Income Inequality
- Lorelie Soriano
- RacismandTrauma:ImplicationsforPublicHealthofUrbanMinorityCommunities
- Kristina Pickering
- DNA Adversity: The Role of Rosalind Franklin in Discovering its Structure
- Katherine Martínez
- Men Hollering Creek: Dismantling Machismo in the Borderlands of Sandra Cisneros’s Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories
- Keira Mull
- One Identity For Another: Life in the System
Nancy Kreiter Research Day 2018
Research Day Submission Deadline
NDMU’s annual Nancy Kreiter research day is steadily approaching with the deadline to submit proposals on March 15th. During this time, Graduate and Undergraduates from all fields present their work in research, display original art and discuss projects that they have worked on, to their NDMU community. Now is the time to talk to your professors and see how projects from past semesters can be showcased on Research Day. To learn more or submit your work check out the Research Day website.Notre Dame Day
The campus came together on February 6 to celebrate Notre Dame Day! The day recognizes the accomplishments of our students and our rich history.
Dawn Bradshaw accepts the Distinguished Staff Award
This year’s award recipients included:
- Distinguished Staff Award – Dawn Bradshaw
- SSND Mission and Ministry Award – Mary Alice Adams
- Service-Learning Faculty Award – Juliann Dupuis
- Student Service Award – Nia Willis
- Mary Ann O’Donnell Team Academic Achievement Award – 2017-2018 Lacrosse Team with cumulative team GPA of 3.391
- Art- Caroline O'Donnell
- Biology- Keira Mull
- Business and Economics- Megan Morales
- Chemistry- Lilly Gordon
- Communication Arts- Darian Barton
- Criminology- Alexandra Guerrero
- Education- Sierra Vancek
- English- Katie Cardinal
- History/Political Science- Tavia Williams
- Mathematics- Marion Smedberg
- Modern Foreign Language- Christine Roa
- Nursing- Heather Barry
- Philosophy- Tavia Williams
- Physics- Sarah Hasnain
- Psychology- Chinwendu Nwokeabia
Busy Person’s Retreat
This year’s Busy Person’s Retreat is set for March 10 through the 14. The event is an on-campus guided prayer retreat that provides an opportunity for prayer and reflection in the midst of busy school activities. Participants commit to spending some time in prayer and/or reflection and meeting with an SSND spiritual companion each day. The retreat begins March 10 with dinner at 5:30 p.m. and closes with dinner at 6 p.m. on March 14.NDMU Hosts Japanese Students
NDMU will play host to several students from Aoyama Gakuin Women’s Junior College and Kyoto Notre Dame High School.
The students from Aoyama will be on campus through March 12. Morrissy students will be returning the hospitality they enjoyed from their Aoyama hosts when they visited Tokyo. This will be the final exchange with Aoyama, as the women’s college is being absorbed into the university.
Additionally, 36 students from Kyoto Notre Dame High School will experience a taste of American college life during their campus visit on Thursday, Mar. 7. They will learn about the English language program at the ELI, dine in the cafeteria, and participate in several other academic and social activities.
Career Center News
Spring Career Fair Get your resume in order. On Wednesday, Apr. 17 from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. dozens of employers will be on campus for the Spring Career Fair. The event is designed to connect students to employers in specific areas. However, many employers recruit from across all majors and train college students for a variety of internships or careers. Employers represent business, government, non-profit, technical, healthcare and social services and local Baltimore sectors. Even if you are not ready to apply, you can start preparing by networking with recruiters and learning about upcoming opportunities and requirements. Some employers scheduled to attend include the Baltimore Orioles, Howard County Police Department and Baltimore City Public Schools! Don’t forget to stop by the Career Center to make sure you are prepared! World of Workshops Series The Career Center will be hosting a World of Workshops Series throughout March and April! The workshops will cover a variety of tools and skills like resume editing, virtual interviewing practices, intersectionality in the workplace, how to brand yourself professionally, and more. Check out their workshops on the ndm.edu/events page for more details! Handshake Social Media Campaign Get ready to win some prizes! The Career Center is hosting a social media contest. Here is what you will need to do to take part:- find the Yellow Handshake Chair in its secret spot on campus
- take a creative photo and tag us @career_ndmu on social media
- nominate another student, club/org, or department/office to find the chair next!
- StandOut is the Career Center’s newest tool for improving interviewing skills! It is an interactive website that allows free practice interviewing via real life video questions. Stop by the Career Center to learn more about any of our newest tools and resources in Theresa Hall 120, 8:30am-4:30pm, Monday through Friday.
Registration Underway for A Child’s Place Preschool Programs for 2019-2020
A Child’s Place offers a Preschool for Threes program as well as Prekindergarten classes for four-year-olds. In addition, ACP has a State-approved Kindergarten program for five-year-olds and an “Early Kindergarten” for children whose birthday just misses the cut-off date for kindergarten! At ACP, each child’s emotional, social, cognitive, and physical development is promoted through a holistic approach to learning for young children. Ask the early bird discount as well as faculty, staff, student and alumna discounts!Summer Camp at A Child’s Place
Staffed by our experienced preschool teachers, A Child’s Place offers ten weeks of fun-filled theme-oriented camp sessions to excite our young campers. Entertaining age-appropriate activities for children from 3 to 6 years old (entering first grade) provide opportunities to stimulate curiosity, creativity, and imagination! Check out the early bird discount as well as faculty, staff, student and alumna discounts!NDMU Athletics
The NDMU spring sports will get their season started in early March. Lacrosse opened the spring schedules last Saturday, falling to Wilkes University, 15-16. The inconsistent weather has delayed the start of tennis and softball. Both teams were slated to start this weekend, but will face some cancelations and rescheduled games. Tennis will host its first home match on March 12 against McDaniel and softball will host its first home double-header on March 15 (location TBD) against Valley Forge. Track will open its inaugural season on March 16 at Mary Washington University. All up-to-date schedules can be found on the athletics website. Follow the Notre Dame Gators on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube. Gator Rallies- March 12 - Lacrosse
- March 26 - Track
- April 4 - Softball
- April 16 - Tennis
Loyola Notre Dame Library News
Common Read Event: “The Price of Sex” Film Screening When: Thursday, March 28, from 6-8 p.m. Where: Library Auditorium Please join us for a screening of the Emmy-nominated “The Price of Sex,” followed by a guided discussion. This film will enrich campus awareness of issues related to human trafficking that were raised in this year’s Common Read text, Girls Like Us. From the publisher: An unprecedented and compelling inquiry, “The Price of Sex” sheds light on the underground criminal network of human trafficking and experiences of trafficked Eastern European women forced into prostitution abroad. Photojournalist Mimi Chakarova’s feature documentary caps years of painstaking, on-the-ground reporting that aired on Frontline (PBS) and 60 Minutes (CBS) and earned her an Emmy nomination and a Webby for Internet excellence. Filming undercover with extraordinary access, even posing as a prostitute to gather her material, Bulgarian-born Chakarova travels from impoverished rural areas in post-Communist Eastern Europe, including her grandmother’s village, to Turkey, Greece, and Dubai. This dangerous investigative journey brings Chakarova face to face with trafficked women willing to trust her and appear on film undisguised. Their harrowing first-person accounts, as well as interviews with traffickers, clients, and anti-trafficking activists, expose the root causes, complex connections, and stark significance of sexual slavery today. Winner of a Nestor Almendros Award for courage in filmmaking at the Human Rights Watch Film Festival. Library Workshop for Faculty, Students, and Staff: “Copyright or Copyleft? Making Sense of Creative Commons” When: March 13, 3-4 p.m. Where: Library Collaboratory This workshop will take an in depth look at questions about Creative Commons licenses. What are Creative Commons licenses and how do they work? What are the implications for licensing your work under a Creative Commons license? Where can you find works licensed under Creative Commons? Upcoming Library Pop-Up Classes for Students, Faculty, and Staff- “3D Printing: New Dimensions for Teaching and Learning” (March 13, 3-5 p.m., in the LNDL IdeaSpace and Innovation Station)
- “Internet of Things Workshop” (March 16, 9 a.m. – 1 p.m., in the LNDL IdeaSpace)
- "Explore the Universe with Virtual Reality” (March 21, 6-8 p.m., in the LNDL IdeaSpace and Innovation Station)
- "Learning LabVIEW: An Introduction” (March 22, 3-5 p.m., in Loyola University’s Donnelly Science Center, Room 155)
- "Paper Engineering” (March 28, 6-8 p.m., in the LNDL IdeaSpace)
- "Learning LabVIEW: Working with Arduino Microcontrollers” (April 5, 3-5 p.m., in Loyola University’s Donnelly Science Center, Room 155)
- "Getting Started with Cricut Design Space and Cricut Maker” (April 11, 5-7 p.m., LNDL IdeaSpace and Innovation Station)
Events
March 8
Silent Sky Kathleen Price Bryan Planetarium, 8 p.m. A staged reading of Silent Sky followed by a presentation with Dr. Brian Christy, Assistant Professor of Physics. General Admission is $15 or $9 for students with code NDMUSTUMarch 10
Silent Sky Kathleen Price Bryan Planetarium, 2 p.m. A staged reading of Silent Sky followed by a presentation with Dr. Brian Christy, Assistant Professor of Physics. General Admission is $15 or $9 for students with code NDMUSTUMarch 11
Campus Activities Board (CAB) Gator Live! Doyle Hall, Lower Level, Gator Alley, 7:30-9:30 p.m.March 12
SWE Membership Event Knott 121, 2-3 p.m. Hosted by NDMU Society of Women Engineers Bob Ross Paint Night Doyle Hall, Lower Level, Gator Alley, 5-7 p.m. Hosted by the Psychology Club NDMU Tennis vs McDaniel College 3:30 p.m. Interviewing 101 Career Center, 4:30-5:30 p.m.March 13
WLAX vs Chatham University 4:15 p.m.March 14
Your Major Your Future Feeley International Center (FIC) 003, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Join the Trailblazers to find out which academic program is right for you.March 15
NDMU Softball vs University of Valley Forge 3 p.m. HOSA general Meeting Roland Park Elementary, 3-4 p.m. Women’s Empowerment Sleepover Meletia 2nd Floor Lounge, 7-11:45 p.m. Event will consist of movies, trivia, games and free health and beauty supplies. UN Club Women of the World Trivia Meletia Hall Lounge, 7-8 p.m.March 16
NDMU Lacrosse vs Lancaster Bible College 1 p.m.March 18
Branding like a Boss Workshop Career center, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Discuss developing and promoting your brand and online activities into your job search.March 19
Class of 2020 Meeting Doyle Hall, lower level, Gator Alley, 1-1:30 p.m. Care Package Making for the Homeless Doyle Formal, 12:15-1:30 p.m. Hosted by Class of 2022 Copyright or Copyleft? Making Sense of Creative Commons LNDL, 3-4 p.m. Girls Night Doyle Hall, Lower Lever, Gator Alley, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Hosted by Class of 2021March 20
Author’s Rights and Publication Contracts: What to Know Before You Sign LNDL, 3-4:15 p.m. NDMU Softball vs The College at Old Westbury 3 p.m. Movie Night: My Friend Dahmer Knott Auditorium, 6-8:30 p.m. Hosted by the Women for Justice ClubMarch 21
Get to Know Road Scholars Gator Alley, 12:15-1:15 p.m. NDMU Tennis vs Trinity (DC) 3:30 p.m.March 21
Branding Like Boss Workshop Career Center, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Save the Turtles Run Softball Field, 3-4 p.m. Hosted by the Track and Field Club Movie Night: Pop Culture Icon Feeley International Center, 003, 7- 9 p.m. Hosted by the Hispanic Culture Club Life Skills: Photoshop Class Gibbons Hall, Room 430A, 7-9 p.m. Hosted by Class of 2020March 22
Tips for Finding Federal Jobs and Internships Feeley International Center (FIC) 003, 10-11 a.m. School of Pharmacy Panel Event Knott Auditorium, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Hosted by the Pre- Pharmacy ClubMarch 23
NDMU Lacrosse vs Centenary University 1 p.m. NDMU Softball vs Cairn University 1 p.m.March 25
Campus Activities Board (CAB) Gator Live! Doyle Hall, Lower Level, Gator Alley, 7:30-9:30 p.m.March 26
Financial Literacy Fourier Hall, Room 214, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Hosted by the Business and Economics Club Becoming: Intersectionality in the Work Place Workshop Career Center, 4:30-5:30 p.m.March 28
TED Talk Marathon LNDL, 4:30-6 p.m. Hosted by NDMU Society of Women Engineers HCC Movie Night Feeley, 001, 6:30-8 p.m. Hosted by the Hispanic Culture ClubMarch 29
NDMU Lacrosse vs Cedar Crest College 1 p.m. NDMU Tennis vs Cedar Crest College 4 p.m. HOSA General Meeting Roland Park Elementary, 3-4 p.m.March 30
Spring Open House Knott Science Center Lobby, 9:30-12:30 p.m.April 2
SGA Senate Meeting Bunting Hall, Room 220, 12:15-1:30 p.m.April 3
ACSA General Meeting Doyle Hall, Lower Level, Gator Alley, 5-6 p.m.April 4
Pre- Pharmacy Club General Meeting Knott 218, 12:15-1:15 p.m.School of Arts, Sciences, and Business
Faculty Accomplishments
NDMU Art Therapy Program Director, Cathy Goucher, will be presenting at this upcoming free, open to all, half-day workshop in Anne Arundel County, hosted by Pathfinders for Autism.Art therapy associate faculty Elizabeth Hlavek was appointed to the American Art Therapy Association's Board of Directors in November 2018. Elizabeth will serve as the speaker to the association's assembly of chapters, and sit on additional board committees.
Ashley Fundack, Assistant Professor in the Criminology Department, has been chosen to be one of the first educators in the city appointed to the Baltimore City Human Trafficking Collaborative. This collaboration currently includes law enforcement, prosecutors, city and state agencies as well as victim service providers. Its focus is being able to work in a collaborative effort by using education, training and awareness to combat human trafficking in the Baltimore City area.
Dr. Rachel Burk, Assistant professor of Spanish here at NDMU as well as Chair of the Department of Classic and Modern Foreign Languages, was invited to share her paper “Gender and Gore: Staging Blood Purity in Early Modern Spanish Theater” at an international conference in Madrid this past February. Her paper discuses early modern theater in relation to both the gendering of purity and how staged- bloodshed had an evolving association among purity, women’s bodies, and race. Twenty-one of the most accomplished historians of early modern Europe were in attendance during the presentation. The conference, “Of Blood and Milk: Race and religion in the late medieval and early modern Iberian worlds,” was held at the Residencia de Estudiantes in Madrid, a historic cultural center which once housed intellectual and artisan greats Federico García Lorca, Luis Buñuel, and Salvador Dalí. Dr. Burk, who specializes in early modern Spain and Portugal, is also currently working on a book called Con sangre entra: Blood and Purity in Early Modern Iberia, which examines the portrayal of blood in literature and art in relation to early race laws in 16th century Iberia.
School of Education
Principals' Test
Anyone who has Level I Administration Certification for the State of Maryland and is interested in taking the “Principals’ Test” (School Leaders Licensure Assessment) to achieve Level II Certification, may be interested in a review course here at Notre Dame of Maryland University. The course will be offered on Monday, Mar. 18, and Wednesday, Mar. 20, from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. On the first night, we work on strategies for answering the multiple choice section of the test; on the second night, we work on strategies for answering the constructed response section. The cost for both nights is $60.00. Contact Sister Mary Fitzgerald before Monday, March 11 for more information.Faculty Accomplishments
Presentation for SOE Honor Society
Baltimore County Public Schools Assistant Principal Jennifer Pilarski recently presented “From Stickers to Celebrations” to a group of our School of Education students. Pilarski spoke to the school’s new members of the Phi Xi Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi, the International Honors Society in Education. She spoke about restorative practices in the classroom.Faculty Accomplishments
Dr. Angelo Letizia was offered a contract by Palgrave-Macmillan to publish a book titled Graphic Novels as Pedagogy in Social Studies - How to Draw Citizenship. The book will examine how to use graphic novels in the social studies classroom as well as other related courses in an effort grapple with the ideas of citizenship in the Information Age. The book will also show how students can employ visual literacy in the social studies and citizenship education by drawing their own historical comics. The book will be out sometime in 2020.Patty Silver was recently been approved to serve as a national scorer for edTPA in the TESOL content area. Three months ago, Patty agreed to help the SOE expand our expertise in edTPA by pursuing this challenge and now she has succeeded.
Student/Alum Accomplishments
Donielle DeToyis in the process of completing her student teaching internship at the Mary Queen of Peace Catholic school in Cape Coast, Ghana. Donielle is teaching kindergarten and she reports that the students are absolutely adorable. She is also working with the reading specialist for grades 1-4 two mornings a week. To follow along with Donielle’s journey, check out her blog.
NDMU STEM leadership program graduate Tracey Tokarskiwho is currently finishing the administration certification along with Ashley Demski, another NDMU SOE graduate will be joining Dr. Juliann Dupuis in San Diego for the 2019 Teacher Forum. Tracey and Ashley were nominated to participate in the forum by Dr. Dupuis. The two stood out for their “leadership, commitment to advancing STEM teaching, and passion to raise up the voices of teachers and help shape the national conversation around STEM.” Tracey and Ashley will participate in a virtual Teacher Forum Kick-off where they will learn more directly what it means to be a member of the Teacher Forum and also learn how to hold a Listening Session with our local STEM teaching community. Then they will attend the Annual Partner Summit which will take place on Tuesday, March 26 at the San Diego Zoo.
MA in Leadership in Teaching student David Quinton-Schein will soon be helping run a STEM workshop in Detroit. The workshop, titled Car Hacking as Career Exploration will look at a vehicle’s complex infrastructure and connect it to trends in engineering. The workshop is part of the CyberAuto Challenge which brings together high school students, college students, STEAM educators, automotive industry professionals, government employees, computer security professionals and independent researchers for a week-long workshop of instruction and computer hacking on modern vehicle platforms. For more information email David.
School of Nursing
Faculty Accomplishments
Dr. Sabita Persaud presented at the 2018 Sigma Leadership Conference in Indianapolis, IN. The presentation titled Project PLAN: Preparing Leaders to Advance Nursing, showcased School of Nursing activities supported by a 2018 Nurse Support Program II Grant from the Maryland Higher Education Commission.Drs. Marleen Thornton and Sabita Persaud recently published “Preparing Today’s Nurses: Social Determinants of Health and Nursing Education” in The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing.
Student Accomplishments
Senior nursing student, Emma Durham of Millville, NJ was the recipient of the Daily Record 2018 Leading Woman scholarship award. The Daily Record has partnered with Keswick Multi-Care Center to create a Leading Woman scholarship to honor a student who is majoring in/pursuing a degree in public health, nursing, geriatrics or a health-related major/degree. On behalf of the University, the School of Nursing nominated Emma for demonstrating academic success as a student, consistently participating in University and School of Nursing activities and exhibiting a commitment to inspiring change in nursing, specifically gerontological nursing.
You can read more about Emma in The Daily Record's program. The Leading Women of Maryland’s Future awards were created in 2010 to celebrate successful women who are 40 years of age or younger. The Leading Woman scholarship in partnership with Keswick, was established two years ago.
Three students in the Master of Science in Nursing Program were supported by the School of Nursing to present their work as posters at the 2018 Sigma Leadership Conference in Indianapolis, IN.
- Michelle Atherton presented Pursuing Pathway to Excellence and Approaches to Nursing Education
- Natasha Maith presented Competence in Caring for Patients with Opioid Addiction: A Phenomenological Approach
- Carrie Ann Roberts presented compassion Fatigue in the Presence of Employee Engagement
On November 18th, 2018, the Mu Eta Chapter of Sigma inducted 36 new members. Sigma is the international honor society of nursing and the Mu Eta Chapter is located here at NDMU. Inductees included 18 BSN students, 16 MSN students and 1 Nurse Leader.