Erin Baribeau – Political Science Marissa Spada, Film-Television-Media Judith Daubenmier – History Department Sunhay You, English & Women's Studies, Alena Aniskiewicz, Slavic Languages & Literature Sweetland Fellows Seminar 2020; Writing Prize Winners; Faculty & Staff News. Cameron Gibelyou – Physics Sarah Mass, History Jennifer Solheim Graduate Student, French Language and Literature. Hongling Lu, Material Science & Engineering Ellen Moodie – Anthropology Department Both the Faculty Seminar for Engaged Learning and the training of undergraduate Writing Fellows will be institutionalized at Sweetland, and the ongoing work with Automated Text Analysis will be facilitated by the university’s Digital Innovation Greenhouse. Summer Stipend, National Endowment for the Humanities, Washington, D.C., 2003. John F. Collins – Anthropology Department Rachna Reddy, Anthropology                          Siân Sweetland joined the Cancer Epidemiology Unit as a statistician in 2002, working mainly on individual and collaborative studies of cervical cancer. The Sweetland seminar offers a space for graduate students and faculty who are interested in theories of writing and writing pedagogy to work through both practical and theoretical issues. Charise Harrison – Comparative Literature Program Debra Melican – Communications These compositional structures are ubiquitous at all levels of language. Arran Caza – Psychology 2019 Senior Fellows (Faculty) Michelle Bellino, School of Education Anne Gere, Sweetland Center for … Contact Laura Schuyler at schuyler@umich.edu or 936-3144 with questions. Bonnie Washick – Political Science Helen Ho – Communication Studies Recently, supervised-trained neural network-based methods have achieved impressive denoising performances, significantly surpassing those of the classical approaches, such as prior- or optimization-based denoisers. Keith Pecor – Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department Katy Rossing, English Lang & Lit Academic writing often requires students to use evidence, and learning how to use evidence effectively is an important skill for college writers to master. Will Nediger, Linguistics Dan Jaqua, Economics Academic writing often requires students to use evidence, and learning how to use evidence effectively is an important skill for college writers to master. Ayse Neveser Koker, Political Science The Sweetland Podcast Series: Topics in Writing features interviews with guests at the Sweetland Fellows Seminar about current topics in the teaching of writing. Winter - Fall 2016. Finally, thank you to my parents for their continued support and to J. Carlisle Larsen who This seminar not only made me more aware of the intentions, aims, and possible pitfalls of writing assessment, but it also helped me refine my own writing and revision processes. Dina Guth – Classical Studies Jennipher Rosecrans – History Department. Ben Gunsberg Graduate Student, English and Education, Andrew Bernard, Anthropology Stochastic Circuits for Embedded Signal Processing Applications Mobile electronics are an essential part of our daily lives. Catherine Hammond Mullalond – Communication Studies Each of these guests, an expert in the field, is interviewed by T Hetzel, a member of the faculty at the Sweetland Center for Writing. Annemarie Bichakjian Toebosch – Linguistics Department, Delia Coleman – English Language and Literature Projecting Fellows brings together the 2019-2020 class of fellows from American architecture schools to explore a cross section of emerging interests in the discipline and the vehicle of the fellowship project.Each year, several architecture schools nationwide name fellows to join their programs and develop an intensive research or teaching project during a short-term appointment. Charlotte Pagni – American Culture Program Self[ie] Awareness Digital Exhibition, North Quad Programming Math + Writing = Learning. Benita Jackson – Psychology Department Kharis Templeman – Political Science Elise Frasier – English Language and Literature Listen to our Topics in Writing podcast featuring Fellows Seminar visiting speakers. Christopher Glew – Anthropology Department Jacqueline George – English Language and Literature An apple is an image with many connotative meanings in our culture, and as these images were found on American websites, the context allows the reader to analyze these apples based on American ideas about the apple. New fellows (30) are recruited each spring and trained in 4-credit, team-taught seminar offered in two sections (each with 15 fellows) the following fall. Brenda Longfellow – IPCAA (Classical Art & Archaeology) Writing workshop is funded only for materials related to courses and academic research. Meet Our New Undergraduate Program Coordinator – Dan Hartlep. I find myself referring back to my notes and readings from the seminar on a regular basis in my teaching and assessment of student writing. Elizabeth Nijdam, German Languages and Literature, Emily Goedde, Comparative Literature Selections will be announced via email in early April. Lindsay Ellis – English and Education Program Brian Dowdle – Asian Languages and Cultures Field Watts, Chemistry, Anna Cornel, Classical Languages and Lit Beth Hahn – Natural Resources Sweetland interns Anna Vanderberg and Briana Johnson spent the summer refining databases and analytical materials for both the Minor in Writing and Peer Writing Consultant Program. Heather Holleman – English Language and Literature Elizabeth Tinsley Johnson, Anthropology, Lindsay Ahalt Champion, Anthropology James Draper – Communication Studies Michael Martin, Slavic Lang & Lit Kenya Mayfield – Anthropology Department Sweetland alumni, let us know what you are up to here. Description: The Sweetland Fellows Seminar is intended for graduate students who have an interest in designing and teaching an undergraduate writing course on a topic related to the graduate students’ disciplines (in our case, mathematics). Donna Scheidt – English and Education Aleksandra Marciniak, Slavic Languages and Literatures Pamela Lee – Comparative Literature Department Benjamin Hollenbach, Anthropology Students with a minimum of a 3.0 grade point average who will be sophomores, juniors, or seniors in the 2021-2022 academic year are eligible to participate in the Humanities Center as Student Fellows. in Educational Leadership at Eastern Michigan University in April 2020. Sayan Bhattacharyya – Comparative Literature Cari Carpenter – Women’s Studies Program Rafe Kinsey – Mathematics Fellows confer with local and national visiting speakers, learn ways of helping students become better writers, discuss concerns about teaching in the age of the internet, learn how to integrate writing in their courses, and examine approaches to incorporating writing across the disciplines. Heidi Phillips, Chemistry Theresa Braunschneider – Women’s Studies Program Michael Hanmer – Political Science Department Sweetland Fellows Seminar, and to the Poetry and Poetics Workshop. Matthew Ides – History Julia Carlson-Federhofer – English Language and Literature Anna M. Smith – History Department Francesca Minonne, Romance Languages This Fall, Sweetland welcomed twenty-four undergraduate students to participate in a new Writing Fellows Program.This effort is part of the larger MWrite Project, which is working to integrate writing-to-learn pedagogies into several U-M Gateway courses. Wilson Merrell, Psychology Natural language has inherent structure. Here’s the most recent alumni news sent in to us in 2020. Tugce Kayaal, Near Eastern Studies teach one section of English 125 (a four-credit writing course on a topic related to their discipline). Each of these guests, an expert in the field, is interviewed by T Hetzel, a member of the Sweetland faculty. Elizabeth Ben-Ishai – Political Science, Alex Bates – Asian Languages Elizabeth McNeill, Germanic Languages and Literatures Evanthia Diakoumakou – Linguistics Department Sweetland Fellows Seminar 2020; Writing Prize Winners; Category: M-Write Alumni Updates. Junior Fellows (Grad Students) Alena Aniskiewicz, Slavic Languages & Literature Christian Greenhill, Materials Science & Engineering Jacqueline Larios, History Lori Smithey, Architecture & Urban Planning Elizabeth Tinsley Johnson, Anthropology. Kirsten Olds – History of Art Rafael Heller – English Language and Literature Ben Gunsberg – English and Education In the spring and summer terms, Junior Fellows: The deadline to apply for Winter - Fall 2022 is March 10, 2021. Presentations "Personalization and Engagement in Dissertation Writing Groups," Computers and Writing, the Universityy of Findlay, 06/02/2017. Rebecca Tutino, Toxicology, Environmental Health Thank you to the Alfred Meyer Family Research Grant, the Sangunett Award, and to the Department of Political Science and Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies for supporting my project. Overview. Sweetland offers the Minor in Writing, teaches and supports new media and multimodal forms of writing, and runs the invitational Dissertation Writing Institute and Fellows Seminar. The Sweetland Center for Writing Junior Fellows Seminar: $5,000 : 03/01/2021 : The Jack H. Wagner Scholarship: $5,000 : 03/01/2021 : LACS Tinker Field Research Grants: $2,500 : 03/01/2021 : Dale and Lynn Bentley Memorial Scholarship: $2,500 : 03/01/2021 This semester, Sweetland supported 63 Writing Fellows in 8 different courses, including high enrollment courses such as Stats 250 (Introduction to Statistics) and Math 216 (Differential Equations). Fabian Guy Neuner, Political Science Joshua Shipper – Political Science Heather Thomson – English and Education, Amit Ahuja – Political Science Department First-Year Seminar Arts and Cultural Funding Grant, University of Michigan, Fall 2003 (grant to foster first-year seminar faculty-student interaction, awarded to fund a class trip to a student theater performance on campus). Niku Tarhechu Tarhesi, Anthropology, Katherine Beydler, Classical Studies The Fellows Seminar offered during the winter term is designed to bring together faculty (Senior Fellows) and graduate student instructors (Junior Fellows) who share a commitment to integrating writing in their courses.. Seminar participants meet on Fridays from 1-3pm. Eric Stein – Anthropology Department, Victoria Allison – Biology Department Matt Beckmann – Political Science Department She completed a DPhil on risk factors for pulmonary embolism in 2008, and is now a statistical epidemiologist working on various research projects within the Million Women Study. Despite the recent, enormous success of deep neural … The Sweetland Seminar was one of the most rewarding experiences I've had as a graduate student. Colleen O’Brien – Women’s Studies Program Humans can learn to solve an endless range of problems, from graphic design to writing software, and need relatively modest amounts of experience to acquire any one new individual skill. receive a $1,000 stipend during the winter term for participating in the Seminar. Both figure 1 and 2 feature an apple. Vincent Longo, Screen Arts and Cultures Elizabeth Mann, Political Science Olivier Delers – Romance Languages Department Lori Smithey, Architecture & Urban Planning Meet the 2020-2021 Digital Rhetoric Collaborative Graduate Fellows and Learn about our New Books in the DRC Series. Joel Selway – Political Science, Tyler Cornelius – American Culture The Fellows Seminar brings together graduate student instructors (Junior Fellows) and faculty (Senior Fellows) from multiple disciplines who share a commitment to integrating writing in their courses. Seth Button – Classical Art and Archaeology (IPCAA) Kyra Pazan, Anthropology Melanie Boyd – Women’s Studies and English Language and Literature, Bridget Anderson – Linguistics Department For more information visit the Senior Fellows or Junior Fellows pages on our website. The goal of the First-Year Writing Requirement is to prepare students to write in diverse academic contexts. Domenic DeSocio, Germanic Lang & Lit Sheila Coursey, English Language & Literature meet with Sweetland’s Director to refine their syllabus and discuss other course materials and approaches for teaching in Fall term; receive up to $5,000 stipend during the Spring/Summer term for this work, determined by each student's spring/summer funding from Rackham. Jason Herlands – Asian Languages and Cultures A letter (maximum two pages) describing your previous teaching experience and interest in teaching, Statement of candidacy status, number of years in program, and expected date of degree completion, One teaching recommendation letter from a faculty member, Teaching evaluation summaries (where available), Interest in and commitment to integrating writing into courses, GSI experience (teaching in a course meeting the Upper-Level Writing Requirement is highly desired). Katherine Hummel, English Language and Literature An apple is an image with many connotative meanings in our culture, and as these images were found on American websites, the context allows the reader to analyze these apples based on American ideas about the apple. Listen to our Topics in Writing podcast featuring Fellows Seminar visiting speakers. Karen Miller – History Department Krista Homicz – English and Education Program Julica Hermann – Sociology Department, Mark Arehart – Linguistics Department Christian Greenhill, Materials Science & Engineering Andrea McDonnell – Communications and Museum Studies Anne Ruggles Gere, Department of English/School of Education Jill Constantino – Anthropology Department Bruce Fields – Mathematics Department Trever Kilgore – History Nöel Schiller – History of Art Department, Bill Hogan – English Language and Literature Not only did I learn a great deal about the teaching of writing but, because of of the Seminar's interdisciplinary constitution, I became familiar with those epistemological concerns that sometimes unite and sometimes divide writing across disciplines. Christopher Becker – Slavic/Linguistics Jessica Wiederspan, Sociology and Social Work, Abigail Celis – Romance Languages Sweetland Fellows Seminar 2020; Writing Prize Winners; Summer Interns. C. Michael Sampson – Classical Studies Jim Johnson – Lloyd Hall Scholars Program Jessica Thurlow – History Department Both figure 1 and 2 feature an apple. All seminar participants share an interest in helping students become better writers; integrating writing in their courses; and discussing critical issues in the teaching of writing with colleagues. Geoffrey Maturen – Classical Studies Department, Erica Lehrer – Anthropology Department With advances in the semiconductor and… Margarita Nafpaktitis – Slavic Languages and Literatures All of our alumni updates can be found in the Alumni & Friends section of our website. Each of these guests, an expert in the field, is interviewed by T Hetzel, a member of the Sweetland faculty. Jessica Robbins – Anthropology Jennifer Solheim – Romance Languages and Literature Sweetland interns Anna Vanderberg and Briana Johnson spent the summer refining databases and analytical materials for both the Minor in Writing and Peer Writing Consultant Program. Sweetland Fellows Seminar. Katy Goldey – Biopsychology Vanessa Carbonell – Philosophy Department As a broad preparation for the range of writing tasks students will encounter at the University of Michigan and beyond, FYWR courses emphasize … Words compose with one another to form hierarchical structures to convey meaning. Jana Wilbricht, Communication Studies          Lucy Peterson, Political Science Sweetland Podcast Series: Topics in Writing, 2021 Regents of the University of Michigan, discuss approaches to incorporating writing across the disciplines; and. Michelle Bellino, School of Education Anne Gere, Sweetland Center for Writing Despina Margomenou, Classical Studies Raymond McDaniel, Sweetland Center for Writing George Tyler, Political Science, Katherine Beydler, Classical StudiesKatherine Hummel, English Language and LiteratureVincent Longo, Screen Arts and CulturesAleksandra Marciniak, Slavic Languages and LiteraturesElizabeth McNeill, Germanic Languages and LiteraturesKamaria Porter, School of EducationEmily Saidel, Communication Studies, Resilient Teaching, Creative Adaptations: Sweetland Faculty and Students Learn and Write Together in Remote Environments, Dissertation Writing Institute Goes Remote, A Technical Communication Project during COVID-19, MWrite Goes Remote: In Praise of the Fellows, Meet our New Program Assistants: Reflections on Being an Online Writing Consultant, Assessing the Assessment: Directed Self-Placement for Writing. Scott Heath – English Language and Literature Rebecca Brannon – History Department Mika Kennedy, English Language & Literature Amanda Hendrix-Komoto, History The program is supported by the College of Literature, Science & the Arts, the Rackham Graduate School, and the Sweetland Center for Writing. begin preparing a First-Year Seminar (English 125) that meets the First-Year Writing Requirement. Incentive Auctions and Spectrum Repacking: A Case Study for "Deep Optimization" The Humanities Center is accepting applications for Student Fellows for next year’s honors seminar. Philip Cheng – Psychology, Daniel Birchok – Anthropology and History Senior Fellows (Faculty) Anne Gere, Sweetland Lori Randall, Sweetland in Psychology at the University of Michigan in 2016, and recently earned his M.A. Writing Workshop consultants can help with any writing or multimedia project that directly pertains to your academic and/or research pursuits as a graduate student, including course assignments, dissertation chapters, conference papers, articles, grant proposals, and fellowship applications. Anne Berg – History Anne Kreps – Near Eastern Studies Katie Brion – History of Art Rachel Webb, Mathematics                            Christina Perry Sampson, Anthropology, Zac Garlets, Organic Chemistry Sweetland offers the Minor in Writing, teaches and supports new media and multimodal forms of writing, and runs the invitational Dissertation Writing Institute and Sweetland Fellows Seminar 2020; Writing Prize Winners; Summer Interns. The Fellows Seminar brings together graduate student instructors (Junior Fellows) and faculty (Senior Fellows) from multiple disciplines who share a commitment to integrating writing in their courses. Richard Pierre – Comparative Literature Khristina Haddad – Political Science Department The Fellows Seminar brings together Faculty (Senior Fellows) and graduate student instructors (Junior Fellows) from multiple disciplines who share a commitment to integrating writing into their courses. Carolyn Dekker – English This is the premise of Sweetland’s current offering in the large-enrollment course Math 216 and is part of M-Write’s ongoing process of fostering writing-to-learn across disciplines and departments at U-M. . For more information visit the Senior Fellows or Junior Fellows pages on our website. John Kang – Political Science Department Lauren Pratt Caldwell – Classical Studies Department Shawn Kimmel - American Culture Program, Carol Burki – Linguistics Department The program is supported by the College of Literature, Science & the Arts, the Rackham Graduate School, and the Sweetland Center for Writing. Marisol Fila, Romance Languages J. Henrike Florusbosch – Anthropology Although machines which can similarly master a diverse span of … Emily Saidel, Communication Studies, Sahin Acikgoz, Comparative Literature Dan Hartlep completed his B.A. Kamaria Porter, School of Education Zak Lancaster – English and Education Project Team. Sweetland Fellows Seminar Description: The Sweetland Fellows Seminar is intended for graduate students who have an interest in designing and teaching an undergraduate writing course on a topic related to the graduate students’ disciplines (in our case, mathematics). The Sweetland Podcast Series: Topics in Writing features interviews with guests at the Sweetland Fellows Seminar about current topics in the teaching of writing. Irfan Nooruddin – Political Science Department Shawn Christian – English Language and Literature Marti Lybeck – History Adriana Ponce, Sociology                                From Gioia Sweetland on September 17th, 2019 | 14 14 plays | 0 "Actively Manipulating Chemical Information for Electronic Noses, Molecular Data Storage, and Chemical Computing" Jessica Getman – Musicology Each semester, 80-85 fellows work with over 1,000 students (both undergraduate and graduate) in courses across all three colleges (Arts and Sciences, Business, Engineering). Jacqueline Larios, History Jane Kitaevich, Political Science Dagfinnur Sveinbjornsson – Political Science Department, Suzanne Spring – English and Education Program Denoising is a classical problem in signal processing and computer vision, and various different methods have been applied to tackle the problem for several decades. Kim Hess, Sociology Jillian Myers, Biology Sweetland offers consultations and workshops for instructors and students across the … Graham Denham – Mathematics Department Senior Fellow, Sweetland Fellows Writing Seminar, the University of Michigan, Winter 2014. Dan Blim – Musicology Elizabeth Bridges – Anthropology Department Jason Zurawski – Near Eastern Studies, Sarah Conrad Gothie – American Culture enroll in English 993, which schedules a series of meetings in which they discuss their teaching with other instructors. From Gioia Sweetland on November 18th, 2019 | 122 122 plays | 0 "Wireless across Boundaries for Human and Planet Health" Marco Garrido – Sociology Debra Horner – Political Science Department The Sweetland Podcast Series: Topics in Writing features interviews with guests at the Sweetland Fellows Seminar about current topics in the teaching of writing. Joel Vaughan – Statistics, James Beitler – English and Education Overview. David Medeiros – Linguistics, Ross Bowling – History
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