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Spring 2014 Collegium Seminars lineup

Congratulations, freshmen! You made it to spring quarter! Undoubtedly, you’ve checked off many items on your first-year-at-the-UW-to-do list. But have you taken a Collegium Seminar yet? They are only for freshmen so this quarter is your last chance!

These unique classes are a great way to fill out your schedule. Take a class that’s a little different from what you normally take. If you took one in winter or fall quarter, you can take another in the spring. Collegium Seminars are low-risk (they’re 1 credit, credit/no credit); they’re taught by some of the UW’s best faculty; and they’re limited to 25 students. Help your mind blossom this spring: enroll in a Collegium Seminar!

Seminars offered in spring quarter 2014

Note: For more specific information about a particular seminar, please contact the instructor listed for the course.

Seeing Race in a Color Blind World

Moon-Ho Jung, History

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14334
  • TH 2:30-3:20

For most Americans, particularly after the election of Barack Obama, race tends to be framed and understood as a relic of the past. How might we study and discuss race in our contemporary moment, when any and all talk of race is commonly dismissed as promoting racial divides? From the latest scholarly articles and Supreme Court rulings to media representations and daily social interactions, we will explore the thorny politics of race in the 21st century.

Mathematics in Our World

Andrew Loveless, Mathematics

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14340
  • W 2:30-3:20

Mathematics is in everything we do. Topics in this seminar will be based on students’ interests, but I personally have interests in problems that appear in cryptography, networks and discrete mathematics. Questions like how do we encode our credit card number so that only Amazon.com can read it? Or how can a delivery company minimize its fuel use? We will touch on many such questions and broadly discuss problems that are interesting to mathematicians and have far reaching applications. Throughout this discussion, I hope to convey the beauty and joy of problem solving which is at the heart of my love of mathematics.

The Sustainable Campus

Bruce Balick, Astronomy

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14342
  • W 3:00-4:20

The goal of this hands-on course is to demonstrate how our students can influence and improve the world in which they live. “The Sustainable Campus” is a field-oriented course in which teams of students select, analyze and propose improvements in an area of UW operations of their choosing. Students will work with responsible UW officials to collect data and generate beneficial and practical suggestions for change. Examples of course topics are improvements in UW’s composting and recycling programs, commuter practices, the operations of UW’s sports facilities, electricity and water use in residence halls, and healthy foods on campus.

So You Want to Be a Zen Master

John Manchak, Philosophy

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14336
  • F 12:30-1:20

This seminar will introduce students to Zen Buddhism and investigate the science and practice of mindfulness meditation.

Where and Why Do Wildlife and Humans Collide?

Karen Petersen, Department of Biology

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14335
  • W 12:30-1:50

Learn about wildlife and human interactions by exploring the world of vertebrates, from fish to mammals. We’ll take walking tours through a heron rookery, as well as behind-the-scenes tours of the Burke Museum and the Ƶ’s fish collection. Interspersed with our tours, you’ll discuss how and why researchers study urban wildlife and how humans and wildlife may collide by competing for the same resources, and the multiple ways that wildlife can provide scientists with important research models to address a variety of human needs.

Sustainable Energy Solutions for the 21st Century: Science, Technology, and Policy

Payman Arabshahi, Electrical Engineering

  • GEN ST 197, SLN 14341
  • M 11:30-12:20

Become an informed citizen of a new generation and prepare to contribute meaningfully to the energy debate. We will cover regional and global energy demand, sources, policy, current and future technologies, costs of sustainable energy production and its impacts on climate and the environment, and solutions to our energy problems. The class text will be “Sustainable Energy Without the Hot Air” (download at ). Class will be structured around field trips and group projects.

The Violence of the Small: Looking into Global Complexity

Clarke Speed, University Honors Program

  • GEN ST 197 SLN 14338
  • W 1:30-2:20

I have always been interested in the rest of the world—off the global path but tied to all things global. Here one finds the power of the small—people and societies that resist globalization and in a few cases those that remain un-captured by larger global flows. In some cases, the power of the small upsets the rule of law and the nation-state, as ethnic groups and factions in various regions fight both cultural and technological wars for survival. I want to talk about these small wars at very basic levels to get the big and small pictures of the power of the small.

 

Microbial World: Friend and Foe

Roger Bumgarner, Microbiology

  • GEN ST 197 SLN 20975
  • M 3:00-3:50

This freshman seminar course is focused on introducing students to a wide range of research and research topics in microbiology with an emphasis on how the research relates to their daily lives. Speakers are chosen specifically to cover topics that might be of interest to students such as bacterial biofuel production, HIV vaccines, food safety and bacterial and viral pathogens involved in aquaculture and the health of wild fish populations. Speakers will provide a brief discussion of how they became interested in science and how they wound up in their current position followed by a discussion of their current research. Prior to each seminar, students will be provided with one or more links to news articles related to the research topic. The seminars are, for the most part, informal and students are encouraged to ask questions of the speakers both during and after the presentation.

UW to send students to Citizen University 2014

Looking for a day of inspiration, civic skill-building, and connection with others committed to addressing the pressing social issues of our time? Undergraduate Academic Affairs and the Foster School of Business are partnering with the Husky Leadership Initiative and the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center to help students attend Citizen University 2014 on Friday, March 21.

UW Students:

Apply for an exciting opportunity to attend Citizen University 2014 taking place in Seattle on Friday, March 21, 2014 – for FREE!

Attend Citizen University 2014 for free

Application deadline
Friday, Feb. 21 | 5 p.m.

Citizen University’s annual national conference is a creative and vibrant gathering on the art of powerful citizenship. Hundreds of activists, innovators and educators from across the United States meet for a day of skill-building and inspiration. As Citizen University states, “Learn the elements of civic power. Practice social and political action. Connect with people from left and right so we can solve problems together. America today is in the midst of a revival of citizen spirit. Be part of it.” For more information about Citizen University and to see their agenda and list of 2014 speakers and presenters, please

Citizen University 2014, is taking place onFriday, March 21, from 12 p.m.-9:30 p.m. at Seattle Center. The Ƶ* is sponsoring and covering the costfor 25 UW undergraduates to attend this exciting conference. These 25 students willplay an active and involved role at the conference as participants and potentially as facilitators of table conversations during sessions.

What is required of the 25 UW students selected to attend Citizen University 2014?

  • Attend a pre-conference orientation on either Monday, 3/3, 12:30-1:30 p.m. or Wednesday, 3/5, 4-5:00 p.m. in Mary Gates Hall 258.
  • Attend andparticipate in the entire conference on Friday, 3/21, 12 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.
  • Share learning and insight at the UW’s Spring Celebration of Service and Leadership on Tuesday, 5/20, 3-5:00 p.m. in the Husky Union Building.

If you are interested in applying for one of these 25 spots, please answer the questions in our

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Rachel Vaughn atrvaughn@uw.eduor Fran Lo atfranlo@uw.edu.

*Student sponsorships have been made possible by UW’s Undergraduate Academic Affairs and the Foster School of Business. Other contributing departments include the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center and the Husky Leadership Initiative.

Goalkeeper, photographer and skateboarder awarded president’s medals

Ƶ president’s medalists were recently selected for their high scholastic standing and difficulty of coursework. They represent undergraduate scholarship of the highest caliber. The students’ academic pursuits show interdisciplinary interests and their co-curricular and extracurricular activities demonstrate their classroom energy and commitment to a host of other interests. They are truly interesting individuals.

Thousands from UW community and Seattle to volunteer for MLK Day of Service

On January 20, 2014, the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, thousands of volunteers will honor the civil rights leader’s legacy of service by volunteering in the community at more than 80 projects identified by local nonprofit organizations. The MLK Day of Service is an annual, national tradition. The Ƶ-coordinated event brings together Ƶ students, faculty, staff, alumni, friends and neighbors to volunteer alongside others in the Seattle and King County community. The is partnering with the to make the event happen.

In 2013, more than 1,800 people volunteered on campus and throughout the Puget Sound region for the MLK Day of Service. This year, organizers anticipate 2,000 volunteers donating their day to their community, the majority coming from the UW community. Volunteers can lead or participate in such wide-ranging projects as restoring habitat, greenspace and parks; painting a daycare; promoting tax help for low-income people; organizing a foodbank; and more.

To lead or volunteer for a service project, .

Kick-Off Rally

Portrait of Will Berkovitz
Will Berkovitz, CEO of Jewish Family Service, will give the keynote address at the MLK Kick-Off

A rousing Kick-Off rally at 8 a.m. at the Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center will fortify volunteers’ spirits and stomachs for their day’s work. Will Berkovitz, CEO of Jewish Family Service, will inspire volunteers with his thoughts on service and social justice; Ed Taylor, vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs, Marisa Herrera, director of the Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center, and Blair Taylor, chief community officer from Starbucks and United Way of King County board member will also provide brief remarks. Pastries and coffee, provided by Starbucks, and commemorative t-shirts will be available for volunteers as well.

Will Berkovitz is chief executive officer of Jewish Family Service. The 122-year-old agency delivers essential human services—from refugee resettlement to a food bank. Berkovitz’s prior service work includes roles as senior vice president & rabbi in residence at Repair the World, as well as rabbi and executive director of Hillel at the Ƶ/Jconnect Seattle.

The Day of Service is nationwide tradition spanning more than 20 years. The UW and United Way have partnered on local Day of Service opportunities for more than ten years. The organizations’ efforts have culminated into the largest Day of Service in Washington state.

Event Details

Who: You + 1,800 UW family, friends, and community members

What: MLK Day of Service Kick-Off Event and Service Projects

When: Monday, January 20, 2014. Kick-Off Event 8:00 a.m. sharp! Projects happen throughout the day

Where: Kick-Off at the Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center, 3931 Brooklyn Avenue NE. Service projects at various locations

How: Sign up to lead or participate in a project here:

Share: Participants are encouraged to share their experiences via social media using the hashtags #ƵServe and #MLKsea.

 

The MLK Day of Service is coordinated and supported by the UW Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center and the United Way of King County. Event sponsors include Union Bank, Starbucks, Titan 360, UW’s First Year Programs, and the UW Alumni Association.

There’s no one way to be a Husky

Nearly 30,000 undergraduates at the UW means 30,000 individual ways to be a Husky. The UW offers students countless opportunities to bring their academics beyond the classroom, grow as leaders, contribute to research, become global citizens, and serve our communities near and far. Learn about some particularly meaningful student experiences.

Novel gift inspired by books

Roman Camarda

Lists of the year’s best books are prolific this time of year and go from very general to very specific. Best books of 2013. The year’s most notable books. Best novels for the year. Best history books. Young adult, cookbooks, science, humor, art, and more all have a list. NPR alone has 26 different subject areas into which it’s compiled for 2013. Readers can derive satisfaction simply by reading the lists, remembering their favorites of the year and adding to their own “must read” lists. And Seattle has no shortage of readers. In the rankings of , Seattle has placed in one of the top three spots since 2005, including landing at number one several times.

So, if you were a college student with a love of reading and some unexpected cash in your pocket, what would you buy?

Roman Camarda, ’13, had $75 to put toward whatever books he wanted. As he considered what he wanted to read, he realized that never before had he been able to spend money on multiple books that weren’t textbooks for a class. This $75 enabled him to simply buy books through which he could intellectually wander. The Honors Program grad bought “two books by [Jean Baudrillard] a French philosopher I’m currently digging who has interesting things to say about nothingness, disappearance, and photography, a book by Roland Barthes that’s a classical critical consideration of photography, and a book by Jean-Luc Nancy about drawing as a concept.”

Camarda graduated with degrees in the seemingly disparate fields of biochemistry and photomedia. The interdisciplinary nature of the Honors Program facilitated Camarda’s ability to connect the dots of his majors and inspired an unusual donation to support other Honors students and encourage broad reading.

After his book-buying experience, Camarda devised a novel scholarship—novel as in new, not fiction. Camarda started a scholarship program for students pursuing the College Honors track to buy books that further inspire their interdisciplinary interests. He has committed to giving $250 to one student each year to buy books that are not textbooks. To apply for the funding, students create a thoughtful wish list of interdisciplinary reading and a short statement describing how their book choices reflect their interdisciplinary interests.

Now a graduate student in biomedical science at UC San Francisco, Camarda hopes to grow the gift amount over the years. He started at $250 because “that’s an amount I can happily provide as a grad student, and then in a couple years when I hopefully become a post-doc and get a raise we can re-evaluate the amount.”

That sounds like a “happily ever after” ending for a lot of Honors students in the coming years!

 

Helping the home team from the dugout

Four hours in and the Seattle Mariners and Los Angeles Angels remain tied at 2-2, a full 18 innings into the game. The Mariners are at bat with the bases loaded and two outs. They send their hitter to the plate, the batter surely feeling the fate of the game push down on his knuckles as he prepares for a swing. Everybody, including Mariners batboy and Ƶ alumnus Oscar Castro, is anxious.