Tag Archive | "Campus"

Orozco Murals One of 13 New National Historic Landmarks

Orozco Murals One of 13 New National Historic Landmarks

orozco_mural_editedThe Orozco mural cycle, one of Dartmouth’s greatest treasures, has been designated a national historic landmark, one of 13 new landmarks announced March 11, 2013, by Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis.

Jose Clemente Orozco’s The Epic of American Civilization, created between 1932 and 1934 while Orozco was in-residence at Dartmouth, challenged traditional thinking about the development of Aztec and Anglo-American civilizations in North America. The renowned Mexican muralist conceived the murals—located in Baker-Berry Library—as a representation of a North American continent characterized by the duality of indigenous and European historical experiences.

For the full article go to Dartmouth Now.

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Next ‘Leading Voices’ Speaker Sees New World for Higher Ed

Next ‘Leading Voices’ Speaker Sees New World for Higher Ed

Jeffrey_Selingo This year’s “Leading Voices in Higher Education” lecture series kicks off with Jeffrey Selingo, author, leading authority on higher education, and award-winning journalist, speaking February 19.

“College campuses as we know them today will exist far into the future, but that future is full of risks and opportunities for many traditional institutions,” says Selingo. “I look forward to laying out one vision of the new higher-education ecosystem.”

The talk, free and open to the public, will begin at 4:30 p.m. in Room 003 of the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center.

For the full article go to Dartmouth Now.

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Dean F. Jon Kull’s Letter to Alumni

Dean F. Jon Kull’s Letter to Alumni

Dear Graduate Community,

Greetings from Hanover!

As we approach the end of the calendar year I wanted to take a minute to write to you all about the exciting state of Graduate Studies.

I must say that it has been quite an exciting term. Back in August, I began my tenure as the Dean of Graduate Studies. I have spent much of the fall speaking with students, faculty, staff, and administrators, learning about the important issues that surround graduate education at Dartmouth. I have been afforded the opportunity to witness the incredible diversity of talent and drive in each of our graduate programs. I also cannot emphasize enough how impressive the staff of the Graduate Office is. They do an amazing job taking care of our students and programs!

Looking across the spectrum of Graduate Studies, I’ve been touched by the closeness and sense of community that exists inside of and between our programs. Our resolve was tested this fall, as our community suffered a tragic loss. Mikhail Lomakin, a first year graduate student in physics, died in a devastating accident back in October. Mike, as he liked to be called, came to us from the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He was interested in space plasma physics, and was very excited to embark on his career in research here at Dartmouth. Mike’s passing rocked our small community. But our students found ways to come together, supporting each other during an enormously difficult time. This togetherness has made us all closer, impressing again upon me the value of our small size and our sense of collective strength. These virtues keep us moving forward, together, into the New Year that promises to be transformative.

I am proud to report that graduate programs in Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, and Physics and Astronomy have been awarded more than $2 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Education through the Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need (GAANN) program, which will fund 17 three-year graduate fellowships. Dartmouth has received nearly $8 million in GAANN awards since 2004, an amazing success rate reflecting very highly on our graduate programs. Our students also continue to have success obtaining highly competitive funding, with six students receiving prestigious NSF Graduate Research Fellowships in 2012.

Our Graduate Student Council continues to be a strong student voice on campus, communicating with the administration about issues surrounding Dartmouth’s graduate community. The GSC Executive Board met with President Folt earlier in the fall to discuss a number of issues facing our students. The Council also took part in the 10th annual Ivy Summit, held this year at the University of Pennsylvania. The Summit is a meeting of graduate student leaders from across the Ivies. There the GSC had the chance to share ideas and learn new strategies to advance our student resources and handle issues related to graduate student life.

In looking to further our alumni-student relations, we have developed an Externship Program, which will pair current graduate students with graduate alumni. During December, students will spend a day with an alumni host, discussing professional goals, engaging in career-oriented conversations with staff, receiving feedback on their resumes or CVs, and shadowing their host in their day-to-day activities. Most importantly, they will help to develop sustainable links between graduate alumni and graduate students. These links help to ensure that Dartmouth alumni find themselves still engaged with the College, and that students have the opportunity to benefit from our alums’ expertise. I’m delighted that so many graduate alumni have signed up for this experience.

Finally, I wanted to thank the graduate alumni for donating to the Dartmouth Graduate Studies Alumni Fund. Each year, contributions from our Graduate Alumni allow us to fund research grants. This year, the fund has allowed a number of talented students to do all kinds of great work, which you can read about on our online news-blog, The Graduate Forum. Your continued support is greatly appreciated, and I am really excited to see what our students will achieve during the coming year.

Have a wonderful Holiday Season, and all the best for 2013!

Sincerely,

 

F. Jon Kull

Dean of Graduate Studies at Dartmouth

 

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Symposium Commemorates Wilder Laboratory’s Designation as Historic Site

Symposium Commemorates Wilder Laboratory’s Designation as Historic Site

Dartmouth will host the “Pressure of Light Symposium” October 5 and 6, celebrating the designation of Wilder Physical Laboratory, where the first accurate measurements of the radiation pressure of light took place, as an American Physical Society Historic Site.

The structure of Wilder Laboratory remains largely unchanged since Dartmouth professors Ernest Fox Nichols and Gordon Ferrie Hull conducted their groundbreaking research there. (photo by Joseph Mehling ’69)

“The Nichols-Hull pressure of light experiment of 1900 to 1903 is regarded as one of the most significant experiments of American physics of all time,” says Sam Werner ’59, Thayer ’61, a member of the physics and astronomy Alumni Advisory Board.

From 1900 to 1903, Dartmouth professors Ernest Fox Nichols and Gordon Ferrie Hull conducted the first precise measurements of the radiation pressure of light on a macroscopic body at Wilder Laboratory. While scientists had theorized that light might create a pressure, this was the first time that pressure had been accurately measured. The Nichols-Hull experiment is seen as a landmark discovery in radiative forces research, and continues to be influential.

For the full article go to Dartmouth Now

 

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Exit Interview: Brian Pogue, Dean of Graduate Studies

Exit Interview: Brian Pogue, Dean of Graduate Studies

Brian Pogue (left) and Wesley Whitaker (right)

On Wednesday August 15, 2012, a new faculty member will begin serving as Dartmouth’s Dean of Graduate Studies. The editors of The Graduate Forum would like to take a moment to welcome the new Dean, and also to thank outgoing Dean Brian Pogue  for his four years of service.

“The Deanship at Dartmouth has been an incredibly high honor,” says Brian Pogue. “Now, looking back on the past four years, I know that we have made the right decisions on a number of key issues and have achieved a few important initiatives for the campus. I’ve taken an opportunistic approach to affecting change at Dartmouth in areas that would be receptive to it, and in the end I am happy with that.”

Originally from Ontario, Brian Pogue received his Honors Bachelors and Masters degrees in Physics from York University in Toronto, and was then accepted as a PhD candidate in Medical/Nuclear Physics at McMaster University in Hamilton. While at McMaster, Brian researched the use of optical spectroscopy—a method for examining the properties of a physical object by measuring how it emits and interacts with light—to image breast cancer under the guidance of his doctoral advisor, Michael Patterson, Head of Medical Physics at the regional Cancer Center. To test the optical machines developed in the Patterson lab, Brian examined both the tissue of mice and the properties of “tissue phantoms”— mimicking the physical properties of living tissue and cancerous tumors. In his doctoral dissertation, Frequency-Domain Optical Spectroscopy and Imaging of Tissue and Tissue-Simulating Media, Brian developed a system for imaging living tissue using high-speed optical measurements, to quantify the molecular features of tissues and cancer tumors.

“In a lot of ways, I still feel like a graduate student. I don’t think that I ever really grew up,” says Brian. “As a Director of Dartmouth’s Optics in Medicine Lab, I work with graduate students on a daily basis, and am conducting research on medical optics with professionals at Dartmouth and a number of other research institutions. I agreed to serve as Dean of Graduate Education because I genuinely care about graduate students and believe that graduate research is an integral part of our academic community. I think that the research being conducted by Dartmouth’s graduate students allows the school to advance the creation of new knowledge and leads to innovations in techniques and technologies.  This is the key part of what makes Dartmouth a world-class educational institution.”

Inspired to teach by his parents—Brian’s father was a professor and his mother a teacher—Brian Pogue led an active lifestyle and focused on his research throughout his doctoral career. In fact, it was during his graduate studies that Brian first played team sports.

“At McMaster, I was captain of the department baseball team for a year. I played outfield as a graduate student and had a great time serving as the team’s captain. I think in a lot of ways the exercise and socialization that playing baseball provided helped keep me sane while I did my laboratory studies,” says Brian. “Our team wasn’t particularly good—as long as you could catch a ball, you were in—but it was a great group of people, and we all had a lot of fun. I was responsible for things like collecting equipment and organizing social events.  As a graduate student, you need to have a plan to keep yourself socially involved, and for me, baseball was one of the ways that I stayed active and met new people.”

During his tenure as Dean, he led a number of projects which strengthened the cohesion of Dartmouth’s graduate student body, improved graduate student life, and increased the academic profile of Dartmouth Arts & Science Graduate Programs. A chair of the Graduate Education for the Future Working Group, Dean Pogue compared Dartmouth against a number of its peer institutions—like Yale, Harvard, Stanford, the University of Chicago, and Princeton—reviewed each of Dartmouth’s doctoral and masters programs, and authored a vision statement for Graduate Education at Dartmouth with the 27 members of the working group. As part of the review effort, Dean Pogue invited a consortium of Dean’s and former Dean’s from peer institutions to review the school’s graduate programs. The work done by the Working Group was compiled into a document, and submitted as part of the Dartmouth-wide Strategic Planning process, led by interim president Carol Folt, and the Provosts Office, for review. To ensure that the voices of students from all of Dartmouth’s graduate programs were included in the final version of this document, Dean Pogue hosted 2011’s Strategic Planning Open Forum with the Graduate Student Council (GSC).

“For me, Dartmouth Strategic Planning has been an exciting challenge. It’s has been a long time since Dartmouth has compared itself to its peer institutions, I think that Carol Folt has done an outstanding job managing the institution-wide project,” said Dean Pogue. “The nature of academia makes strategic planning difficult for virtually every educational institution, and I really admire the manner in which the Provost’s Office has choreographed the effort. From the feedback solicited through the campus-wide committee work that Carol has orchestrated, Dartmouth’s administration has decided to place a greater emphasis on academics at the school. In the coming years, this will manifest itself in new faculty hires and a modest growth in graduate research.”

In addition to his commitment to Dartmouth Strategic Planning, Dean Pogue has improved the graduate student experience at Dartmouth through increasing stipends, advocating for a permanent graduate student social space, creating the PhD/MBA program with Tuck, and by leading a campaign to improve the web visibility of the school’s graduate programs. With the Graduate Student Council (GSC) and the members of the Graduate Studies Office, Brian has strengthened the connections between current graduate students and alumni from each of its Arts & Sciences Graduate Programs.

“Graduate student life has always been an important issue for me. I think this is because I place so much value on the role of personnel commitment and education in people,” says Brian. “At McMaster, I remember really growing as an individual even outside of my research. One year, I read Kurt Vonnegut’s entire catalogue—from his first book, Player Piano, and ending with his final work, Hocus Pocus. Later, I also read the catalogs of my favorite Canadian authors, Robertson Davies and Margaret Laurence. This had nothing to do with my research, but I was enamored with understanding people who are driven in long term creative work, and to see how their work evolves over time.”

Over the past four years, Brian has also “re branded” Dartmouth’s research-based Graduate Programs. Two years ago, Dean Pogue approved a new Dartmouth Graduate Studies shield, which was created through an online design contest, coordinated by members of the GSC’s Executive Board. Since the launch of the new shield, Brian commissioned the design of a mobile application for Dartmouth’s graduate programs available for use on iPhone or Google Android phones.  He oversaw the creation of The Graduate Forum, and increased the use of social media streams including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Pinterest by the Graduate Studies Office. The use of these media channels has not only improved communication between current graduate students, but has also facilitated electronic conversations between the school’s graduate community and other pan-Dartmouth entities. “I think these changes will have the most important long-term impact of anything that I have been involved with, on our Graduate Studies programs at Dartmouth,” said Pogue.

“While a number of important changes are currently happening here at Dartmouth, the elements that define the school’s identity will never change. These elements are Dartmouth’s rural Upper Valley location, and its relatively small size in the world of research institutions. These factors dictate the types of people that are drawn to the school, and always will.  I believe that it is the research conducted by these people that make Dartmouth a world-class educational institution,” explains Pogue. “Though I think Dartmouth will be substantially similar in 20 years, a higher metric for academic success will be in place.  Moderate increases in the size and strength of the school’s graduate programs will likely mirror the ongoing growth in research-active faculty on this campus.  This is the pathway needed to reinforce the world class status of this institution. I hope that I will live to see the day that the institution is named a University, which would simply recognize the institution for what it already is.  This is easily done, and can be done while retaining all its lovable characteristics which make it unique in the world of higher education.”

by Wesley Whitaker

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Meet the GSC Executive Board: Justin Richardson

Meet the GSC Executive Board: Justin Richardson

The Graduate Forum will be running a series of articles profiling the new Graduate Student Council. The GSC elections were held back on May 1st. As the new board members get underway in their positions, we’d like to take an opportunity to congratulate them on their elections and to highlight their hopes for the year ahead. The second article in the series features the new Vice President of the GSC, Justin Richardson.

Justin is a first year Earth Sciences PhD student with an interest in interdisciplinary studies. Justin’s research focuses on soils—specifically, the transport of toxic metals (primarily mercury and lead) upland in forest soils. This research topic has followed Justin since his undergraduate degree in Soil Science at the University of California, Riverside.

Justin explained the importance of monitoring soils, saying, “soil tells a story of landscape history, and the interactions between living and non-living things.” Studying soil is a way of understanding levels of toxicity in the environment and learning to maintain ecosystems that are crucial to the sustainability of life. One might, for instance, study how logging affects the nutrient and mineral levels in the soil, or the concentration of mercury and lead in human water sources.

Prior to being elected Vice President, he served as a department representative for Earth Sciences in the GSC. Now that he’s working with the GSC in a higher capacity, Justin has a number of new aims. First, he’d like to promote interdisciplinary gatherings of the different programs in Graduate Studies. He believes this will bring students together and avoid the social bubbles that tend to form at research institutions. Second, he’d like to bring more sustainable events to the graduate community, such as films with talks or sustainable dinners, and he hopes to highlight the many green options on and off campus. Finally, he intends to make Dartmouth a place for unrestrained graduate studies, making sure that students have every opportunity to present their research and access the resources that can help them make the very most of their time here.

Outside of his studies, Justin enjoys outdoor pursuits, including fishing and hiking. His favorite trails are in the White Mountain National Forest and Franconia Notch. Ever the scientist, he uses these trips to learn about indigenous plant and fish species and, of course, the soils of the region. He even carries a shovel, dubbed “Rusty,” so he can dig soil pits whenever curiosity strikes.

 

Article by Dan Durcan

Photo curtsey of Justin Richardson

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“Put Your Science to Work: Practical Career Advice for Early Career Scientists”

“Put Your Science to Work: Practical Career Advice for Early Career Scientists”

 For many PhD students, there is often a tension between the development of their skills as scientists alongside skills that can serve them outside of academia.  Peter Fiske, Chief Technology Officer of PAX Mixer Inc. and PAX Water Technologies, recently visited Dartmouth to speak with graduate students about career development options for PhDs.

In his column at ScienceCareers.org, entitled “Opportunities,” Fiske regularly provides practical career advice for young scientists, as well as tips on how to navigate relationships both in the academic and private sectors. After describing his own career trajectory after earning his PhD from Stanford in the mid-1990s, Fiske explained that while his career path has been “unusual” for a geophysicist, it has nevertheless been “highly stimulating and enjoyable.”

“There’s a great tradition of cooperation in the scientific community,” Fiske noted, adding that he benefitted from numerous mentors and received lots of sage advice that he relishes passing on.

While a life in science can be very exciting, Fiske said that most academic institutions unfortunately still tend to enforce many of the “older” characteristics of an academic lifestyle (passivity versus entrepreneurship; age over experience, etc.) instead of the valuable traits that appeal to the private sector.  Transferable skills such as the ability to function in a variety of environments and roles, the ability to teach skills and counsel others, independently conceive and design complex projects, and problem-solve are all qualities that PhDs possess that are highly attractive to potential employers, said Fiske.

As scientists, “we don’t get very good career advice,” explained Fiske, who added that nearly 80% of PhDs don’t stay in academia.

“[It’s] important to unpack the social and cultural stereotypes that exist for PhDs,” Fiske explained, so that graduate students can accurately address their perceived weaknesses from the ‘outside’ world.  In what he termed, “The Curse of Being Smart,” Fiske outlined certain challenges that PhDs face in a career transition from academia, such as the failure to appreciate other forms of intelligence apart from a high-level academic skill set.

“We tend to immediate discount people from different pedagogical backgrounds,” explained Fiske, noting the penchant for PhDs to overemphasize their skills sets over their interpersonal relationships or emotional intelligence.  According to Fiske, this “curse” of being smart comes from academics who are used to being exceptional and don’t like to be unsuccessful, and thus often fail to ask very basic questions.

“You spend your time being technical people,” Fiske told the graduate students.  “Learn how to be effective.”

Fiske’s “80:10:10” rule illustrates his insistence on graduate students taking the reigns over their own career.  For Fiske, the rule exemplifies the importance of learning “the art of selectively blowing stuff off,” and represents a way in which graduate students can prioritize their own professional development.  The rule advises devoting eighty percent of your work time to all of academic “stuff you need to do.” According to Fiske, the daily tasks of research should be accomplished during this majority portion.  Ten percent of your time should be focused solely on your own professional development, and on strengthening yourself as an executive and as a professional. The remaining ten percent of working hours should be spent attending conferences and building a professional circle through networking.  If this networking isn’t automatically built into your schedule, Fiske insists, “it won’t happen otherwise.”

While many PhD students are uncomfortable with the concept of networking, Fiske pointed out that informational interviewing is an extremely useful tool to learn more about a specific industry and typical career path. According to Fiske, PhD students can use these interviews to ask “sticky questions” about future trends on hiring, salaries, workload, etc. that might be inappropriate to ask during a typical job interview.  An additional bonus of a successful informational interview is that the person being interviewed becomes a part of your professional network—and could be a valuable contact when you do start your job search.

For Fiske, virtually every job search should start with an honest and frank self-assessment.  Asking yourself what your interests are, what skills you have, what type of work style you prefer, etc., can help you determine not only what you are good at, but what you actually enjoy doing on a daily basis.  To get started on this self-assessment, Fiske recommends that students make a two-column list of everything that they like and dislike about their academic career, and then assign priorities of what they value the most and the least.  According to Fiske, the exercise helps students tangibly see their own values, as well as how their interests and skill affect their work and the workplace.

“In general, we share the same positives and negatives, but our ranked lists are very individualized,” said Fiske, who notes that this distinction is important because it shows that academia’s tendency to try to make the same model of science fit for everyone is not realistic. In fact, said Fiske, the acknowledgement of these differences is critical to one’s personal happiness.

“If you don’t like what you do for a living, you probably wont be very good at it!” he noted.

But what about those graduate students who aren’t graduating any time soon?  Fiske advises that every student, regardless of what point they are at in their graduate career, construct a brief professional biography.

“Careers only look good in the review mirror,” said Fiske, noting that the process of thinking about your professional and academic highlights can enable you to hone in on and highlight your personal strengths. Students should also consider investing in quality business cards that can be distributed at professional conferences, talks and events, an undertaking that Fiske calls an “act of professional courtesy.”

According to Fiske, the purpose of a resume is to get an interview as opposed to a job, and stressed that it is more of a screening device than anything else.

As a description of those past experiences that are most relevant to the position being sought, a resume is as much about where you are going as where you have been. When applying to jobs, PhD applicants should post a resume and cover letter specifically tailored to each job opening.  Fiske advises applicants to use the actual words in the job description as often as possible in your own application materials, and to try to highlight your own experiences that best match with the stated qualities and background of the desired candidate.

When that coveted job offer finally does roll in, Fiske notes that it is important to consider a variety of options and factors beyond the salary. Factors such as health care, schedule of raises, bonus and commission plan, stock options, paid parking, amount of vacation days, relocation allowances, and employee education/tuition reimbursement, etc., are all ‘off-value’ terms that are often more easily negotiated than a base salary, which is generally more inflexible.

According to Fiske, the mere process of exploration itself is extremely empowering as a scientist, regardless of whether they stay in academia or not.

“I believe that technically trained individuals have enormous opportunity to improve the world,” said Fiske.

by Erin O’Flaherty

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GSC Execs discuss presidential search with Bill Helman

GSC Execs discuss presidential search with Bill Helman

On Tuesday, May 8th, members of both the outgoing and incoming Executive Board of the Graduate Student Council (GSC) met with Bill Helman, chair of the Presidential Search Committee, to discuss the upcoming search process for the 18th president of Dartmouth College. At the meeting, attendees explained that they felt a presidential candidate should be approachable, knowledgeable and supportive of the pan-Dartmouth community, and have a strong leadership background, preferably in either academia or research work.

The meeting was one of several student engagement events that the Presidential Search Committee is hosting to solicit community feedback on the selection process. On Thursday, May 17th, the Presidential Search Committee is hosting an open forum in Dartmouth Hall 105. Dartmouth students, faculty, and staff are invited to attend and discuss the qualities the committee should seek in the next president.

The schedule for the May 17th forum is as follows:

-10:00 – 11:00 AM, staff forum
-4:30 – 5:30 PM, faculty forum (all faculty in the Arts and Sciences and professional schools)
-8:30 – 9:30 PM, student forum (all students in undergraduate, graduate, and professional school programs)

In addition, all Dartmouth community members are invited to submit feedback to the committee using the input form on the Presidential Search Website.

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Tobias Wolff, Montgomery Luncheon

Tobias Wolff, Montgomery Luncheon

About twenty graduate students from various disciplines gathered for an intimate lunch at the cozy Montgomery House last Wednesday with author Tobias Wolff who, until recently, was in residence at Dartmouth as a Montgomery Fellow. Wolff is the well-known writer of the memoirs This Boy’s Life and In Pharaoh’s Army, as well as several novels and short stories. After a childhood of traveling around the United States with his single mother, Mr. Wolff earned his bachelor’s degree at Oxford University and his master’s from Stanford University, where he is currently the Ward W. and Priscilla B. Woods Professor of English. He spoke with students about everything from writing to politics to his childhood, and his penchant for storytelling was evident throughout the afternoon.

Students asked Wolff questions about his success as a writer and about his thoughts on the craft in general. “Writing is hard for me,” he admitted, adding that to avoid distraction he wrote for years in an empty cellar room with no windows.  He also pointed out that in a world filling up with diversions like Twitter, Facebook, and cell phones, achieving full concentration is one of the biggest challenges facing writers today.

When asked how he was able to succeed in such a competitive field, Wolff replied that the key is to not worry about others. “Someone always did it better, younger,” he mused. “Just strive to be better than you were the last time, every time you write.” He spoke also on the value of writing workshops, but warned that while we should learn to use criticisms to improve what we are trying to do, it is equally important to learn to ignore certain voices. If a writer tries to make each and every reader happy, Wolff said, his or her job becomes impossible; the real competition and most important readers are writers themselves. He went on to say that many of the decisions writers make—how to begin or end a story, which characters to include, etc.—are determined by instinct. Most often, Wolff said, writers actually discover their stories in the process of writing them. “We can only explain the decisions afterward,” he added.

Mr. Wolff not only gave advice, but he also regaled his audience with the true stories behind some of his works—including a bank robbery, a car wreck, a hunting trip gone wrong, and scenes from his tour in Vietnam. The fact that so many of his pieces are drawn from real-life experience highlights what creative writing students at Dartmouth and everywhere hear again and again: start with what you know. Students can only hope to have as rich a store of authentic adventures as Tobias Wolff.

by Chris Abell
photo by Erin E. O’Flaherty

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Scientists, the Media, and Politicians in the Climate Change Debate

Scientists, the Media, and Politicians in the Climate Change Debate

In a recent editorial, the journal Nature stated that, when it comes to climate change research,“Scientists must acknowledge that they are in a street fight.” Is this true? Has public discourse about climate change become so heated that even a respected scientific journal calls it “a street fight”? As graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology program here at Dartmouth, we have been fascinated by the disregard for science in shaping public policy in our federal government. We have often asked ourselves why this is the case, and quickly realized the complexities of this question. A few months ago we decided to formally address this question by organizing a multi-day series centered on the theme of how politics and rhetoric subvert science in shaping public policy, with climate change being the major case study.

The Communication Street Fight: Scientists, the Media, and Politicians in the Climate Change Debate

-Talk: Shawn Otto, April 30, 4 pm, Oopik Auditorium, Life Sciences Center
Free and open to the public

Otto is an Oscar-nominated screenwriter and filmmaker who advocates for “smarter politics” in our national discourse on scientific topics. Along with other advocates, he helped organize an online discussion on scientific questions between candidates Obama and McCain in the 2008 election. He has also written a book Fool Me Twice: Fighting the Assault on Science in America about how the American discourse on science has changed, and the impact that has on policymaking.

-Talk: Dr. Peter Frumhoff, May 10, 4 pm, Oopik Auditorium, Life Sciences Center
Free and open to the public

Dr. Frumhoff is the Director of Science and Policy, Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). This spring, the UCS will launch a national project on “Science and Democracy,” placing them in an ideal position to address this topic. Dr. Frumhoff is a global change ecologist, who has served diverse roles in the scientific and policy arenas. He was also a lead author in the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessment.

-Film Screening: “Bidder 70”, May 14, time and location tbd
Free and open to the public

This event addresses the role of activism in the public discourse on climate change. Acclaimed author Terry Tempest Williams will lead a discussion following the film. On December 19, 2008, Tim DeChristopher, as Bidder #70, derailed a federal oil and gas lease auction, by bidding on and winning 22,000 acres of land with no intention to pay or drill, effectively safeguarding thousands of acres of federal land. DeChristopher’s disruption of the auction enabled the Obama Administration and Interior Secretary Salazar to invalidate the auction, citing inadequate analysis of the environmental effects on surrounding areas and failure to assess contributions to global climate change. For his disruption of the auction, DeChristopher was indicted and convicted on two federal charges.

Co-sponsored by Environmental Studies, the Department of Biological Sciences, and the Graduate Student Council

Contacts: Carissa Aoki — Carissa.F.Aoki.GR@dartmouth.edu, Jeff Lombardo –Jeffrey.A.Lombardo.GR@dartmouth.edu, Chelsea Vario -Chelsea.L.Vario.GR@dartmouth.edu

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