Engaging Research/Engaging Cornell:
Graduate Students, Public Engagement,
and the Land Grant Mission of Cornell University
January 27, 2015
12:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Mann 102
Please join us for the release of a new research report on graduate student efforts to undertake publicly engaged research at Cornell. This report, over two years in the making, is brought to you by four graduate student members of the Cornell Participatory Action Research Network (cPARN).
Over the past few years, Cornell has joined a long list of higher education institutions across the United States and the world in taking up the call of publicly engaged scholarship. Following on Engaged Learning + Research’s 2012 “Graduate Student Engagement Survey,” the report explores the experience of students who are active in or exploring their interest in “engaged scholarship.” Additionally, the report investigates claims made by the University regarding its strategic goal of “Excellence in Public Engagement.” The bulk of the presentation will focus on graduate student recommendations regarding funds, formal networks, and university support of graduate student publicly engaged research.
As the Engaged Cornell initiative unfolds, please join us for this important conversation regarding public engagement and graduate education and research at Cornell.
Light lunch will be provided. If you are interested in attending, please RSVP to elr-cornell@cornell.edu.
John Armstrong, a Ph.D. candidate in Adult and Extension Education works with the Whole Community Project led by Jemila Sequeira, part of the national Food Dignity Grant. His dissertation considers engagement through a narrative lens using methods of institutional ethnography, discourse analysis, narrative interviewing, and first-person voice. You can follow, and contribute to, his dissertation-in-progress at http://www.pokesalad.info/engagingstories/.
Todd Dickey is a Ph.D. candidate in Industrial and Labor Relations. His research focuses on public sector labor and employment relations and workplace conflict management. His dissertation examines the influence of an integrated conflict management system on dispute resolution outcomes, employee engagement, and organizational change at the U.S. Department of the Interior.
Justine Lindemann is a Ph.D. student in Development Sociology, focusing domestically on the political ecology of race and cities, using food as a lens to better understand social relations and urban metabolisms in the postindustrial rustbelt. Through an exploration of various iterations of the urban food movement, she hopes to contribute to a better understanding of how everyday practices might contribute to radical democratic change in urban space and beyond.
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Melissa Rosario, Ph.D., Anthropology, 2013, co-authored this report, but is not able to attend. A cultural anthropologist interested in the politics of autonomy for Caribbean peoples and marginalized U.S. groups, she currently holds a postdoctoral fellowship position at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine.
Co-Sponsored by:
cPARN
Engaged Learning + Research
20160707meiqing
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