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News: February - March, 1996
Featured Link:  • Campus News • 
(Please click on images for enlarged versions. Place mouse over images for captions.)
 

Wells College Receives Grant from TRW

A $5,100 grant from TRW Transportation Electronics Division in Auburn will help Wells College improve science education for young women.

Wells, in conjunction with a consortium of small colleges, has developed a chemistry curriculum that is more "friendly" to women than traditional teaching methods. The grant will help the college share these ideas with area schools.

According to Wells Professor of Chemistry Linda Schwab, "We believe that if the approach to teaching chemistry is more discovery-oriented, if you pose a question or have a question posed to you, and you go out and attempt to answer it yourself - then the process of learning becomes much more exciting." She believes this approach to teaching science is particularly beneficial to young women.

Wells is one of 15 hub colleges where area high school teachers can work on developing and adapting experiments to their own schools. With access to the colleges, the teachers receive the support of scientists and find tools and experience to create curricular activities that will ignite the enthusiasm of their students.

The sciences have been dominated by males, and Professor Schwab says that it is vitally important to snare the interest of potential women scientists early in their high school studies. "The number of occupations in the sciences will continue to increase in the coming decades. At the same time, there is a projected shortfall of people who are qualified for these jobs. If women self-select themselves out of the field, the future will be grim."

March 29, 1996 


Wells Adds Elementary Education Certification

Last summer, Wells received approval from the State of New York to offer certification in elementary education. The college now has an elementary education program rooted in the liberal arts and community service.

Students pursuing provisional elementary teaching certification at Wells select a major from the college's liberal arts curriculum and minor in elementary education. They are candidates for a bachelor of arts degree. The college also continues to offer certification in secondary education.

While very much a part of the college's liberal arts tradition, the program is field based and requires students to spend much of their time in a school setting with children, says Dr. Bird Stasz, Wells' director of elementary education.

"From the beginning, students spend time in the college classroom learning methods and time in the elementary classroom practicing these methods, enabling them to connect theory and practice almost immediately," she says.

An emphasis on social responsibility and community service is a strong component of the Wells program. "Community service is no longer just volunteerism - it's volunteerism on top of career, family, and many other responsibilities. Students in our program learn that it is their responsibility to give back to the community," says Stasz.

The program allows students to work in a variety of area schools including public, private, urban, and rural settings. The Peachtown School, a private elementary school located on the Wells campus, is a popular site for Wells students. Additionally, there are many opportunities to participate in internships for academic credit in schools across the nation and in other countries.

For more information about the teaching certification programs at Wells College, call 1-800/952-9355.

February 29, 1996


Teams Compete in New Women's College Conference

Wells College has joined the Atlantic Women's Colleges Conference (NCAA Division III) for the 1996-97 academic year. Beginning in fall 1996, Wells will compete against other member schools in field hockey, soccer, swimming, and lacrosse.

Other women's colleges that are members of AWCC are Hood College, Frederick, Md.; Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, Va.; College of Notre Dame, Baltimore, Md.; Trinity College, Washington, D.C.; and Wilson College, Chambersburg, Penn.

The AWCC is committed to promoting the highest level of excellence for women in academics and athletics through organized regular and post-season competition among its members.

In addition to competing against teams in the AWCC, Wells teams will continue to compete against schools in New York State and will remain a member of the New York State Women's College Athletic Association.

February 29, 1996


Two Trustees Named

Ronald A. LeGrand, director of Minority Affairs and Business Development for Nabisco, Inc., recently became a member of the Wells College Board of Trustees.

LeGrand earned his law degree at Boston College and has done extensive work for the U.S. government as counsel for the Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse. He has also served as counsel for the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Government Operations.

He is a member of many organizations including the American Bar Association, the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, the Board of Directors and Board of Advisors for the Homeless Children's Tutorial Project, and is co-founder of the Boston College Law School's Third World Law Journal.

He says his most meaningful experience on Capitol Hill was as Chief Investigator and Counsel to the Judiciary Committee; LeGrand headed up the investigation into the background and credentials of Judge Robert Bork during his proposed nomination for the Supreme Court.

Continuing a tradition of family participation since Wells College's inception, Stephen L. Zabriskie has accepted the position of college trustee.

He holds a degree in English from Ithaca College. A writer by vocation, he brings a wealth of professional and community involvement to his new responsibilities at Wells.

He served as town supervisor for the Town of Ledyard, New York from 1981 to 1993. He has also been a member of the board of the Cayuga Lake National Bank, a director of Cornell Cooperative Extension in Cayuga County, and a trustee of Auburn Memorial Hospital.

Zabriskie says he is interested in the college properties and how Wells relates to the village in a historical context.

February 29, 1996


Young Women of Color Invited to Participate In Wells College Program

Aurora, New York... Wells College is seeking 10th and 11th grade high school women for participation in the spring session of 21st & Wells - a pre-college planning program for African-American, Latina, Asian, and Native American young women to be held on Thursday, April 11 and Friday, April 12.

Twenty-first & Wells participants will stay overnight on the Wells campus and experience academic life firsthand. Workshops offering valuable information on college planning and life as a college student will be presented to the high school guests by Wells students, faculty and staff.

High school students from Cayuga, Onondaga, Ontario, Seneca, Tompkins, and Wayne counties and the cities of Auburn, Corning, Elmira, Ithaca, Rochester, and Syracuse are encouraged to apply. Young women who meet the outlined criteria will be accepted into this free program.

Applications are available at area high schools or from Cynthia Oliver, Project Coordinator, Macmillan Hall, Wells College, Aurora, New York 13026. Telephone: 1-800-952-9355, or e-mail admissions@wells.edu. The application deadline is Friday, March 22.

The 21st & Wells program is funded by a grant from the Christian A. Johnson Foundation of New York City.

February 18, 1996


New Book Explores Formation of Identity in Latina and Latino Youth

Aurora, New York... A book by Wells College Professor Victoria I. Muñoz, Where "Something Catches": Work, Love, and Identity in Youth, was recently published by the State University of New York Press in their Identities in the Classroom series.

The book explores the formation of identity in Latina and Latino youth. Using an innovative framework for her study, Muñoz interviewed youths from different regions of Puerto Rico about work, love, community, alternatives, and the support that they have been given.

According to Deborah P. Britzman of York University, "In a language that is at once Muñoz's own - even as she acknowledges and extends the languages of others (notably women theorists of color, artists, poets, and photographers) - this study maps that most difficult and vulnerable terrain: identity as cultural, social, historical, and unique."

Victoria I. Muñoz is assistant professor of psychology at Wells College. She earned her B.A. and M.Ed. from the University of Massachusetts and her C.A.S. and Ed.D. from Harvard Univeristy. Also a photographer, the text includes documentary photographs by Muñoz.

Professor Muñoz is available for interviews.

February 12, 1996


Other Articles in Wells College News:
September, 2002 September, 2000. - May.,2001 May,1998 May - June,1997
August, 2002 September, 1999 - August, 2000 April,1998 March - April,1997
September, 2001. - May.,2002 August,1999 March,1998 February,1997
May,1999 February,1998 November - December,1996
April,1999 January,1998 October,1996
February -March, 1999 December,1997 September,1996
January,1999 November,1997 June - Aug.,1996
Fall,1998 October,1997 May,1996
August,1998 September,1997 April,1996
June -July, 1998 July - August, 1997 February - March, 1996



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