Category — 1 of Many
REGISTER NOW FOR SCOPE ACADEMY 2011!
Web registration is now open for the NC State University College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences’ annual Scope Academy celebration. We hope that all science fans will join us Saturday, April 9, as we celebrate the latest breakthroughs in our disciplines.
Highlights of Scope Academy 2011 include:
-Special brunch for alumni, friends and faculty of the Department of Chemistry in honor of the International Year of Chemistry: http://www.chemistry2011.org/
-Entertaining and informative “Scope Seminars” led by PAMS’ own world-class faculty (this year’s seminars include two “kid-friendly” offerings:Â Countertop Chemistry and Patterns in Nature)
-Scope/Harrelson Lecture by Dr. Barbara Imperiali, professor of chemistry and biology at MIT and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Royal Society of Chemistry and National Academy of Sciences
Please register today at www.pams.ncsu.edu/weekend or contact the PAMS Office of College Advancement at pams_info@ncsu.edu or 919-515-3462 for more information.
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Passion Rules!
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March 23, 2011 No Comments
Comment on NC State Strategic Plan before Friday, March 25.
A draft of the NC State strategic plan has been posted online for about a month and comments on the plan are requested by Friday, March 25.  The plan will guide university decision-making for the next 10 years so now’s your chance to have a say, so to speak.
The strategic plan establishes our goals and strategies and will provide a roadmap by which we will measure our progress along the journey. It also includes proposed new mission and vision statements.
As noted above, the draft will be online for a final review through March 25, when the strategic plan committee will incorporate feedback into a final version for Board of Trustees review and approval in April.
Speak now or forever hold your peace.
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Passion Rules!
March 22, 2011 No Comments
How to Save the University
On Friday, April 8, at 7 p.m., Cary Nelson, American Association of University Professors President, will give a keynote public speech at Duke University, “How to Save the University.”
If you’re not doing anything that night I’d bet it will be an interesting exchange so plan on attending. It should also be a good opportunity to compare our actions here at NC State to those recommended by the AAUP.
The nationwide recession has exacerbated what was already a long-term trend in public higher education—declining state support has meant shifting the revenue stream from state appropriations to more burdensome student tuition rates.
Seduced by the lure of rapid profits, some institutions have made matters worse by opting for high-risk investments. [Read more →]
March 17, 2011 No Comments
NC State College of Vet Med No. 3 in Nation
When our cat Rufus was sick last year (yes we have cats to entertain the circus dogs:-) I didn’t hesitate to contact the NC State College of Veterinary Medicine for help. A quick visit to the vet, a prescription for his nose and Rufus was better. He has been a sneezer most of his life. Why didn’t we do this sooner? With one of the best Vet schools in the country at our backdoor it was a natural. Now even more people recognize the quality of the college as highlighted in this report from David Green at the college regarding the most recent rankings.
North Carolina State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine is ranked third among the nation’s 28 colleges of veterinary medicine in the new (2012) survey by U.S. News and World Report.
In the magazine’s rankings for “Education: Graduate Schools–Veterinary Medicine,” Cornell University is first with a 4.5 score, the University of California-Davis is second with a 4.2 score, and NC State and Colorado State tie for third with a score of 4.1. NC State had been tied for 5th in previous rankings with Ohio State University, the University of Wisconsin, and Texas A&M.
For U.S. News and World Report’s complete ranking, click here. [Read more →]
March 16, 2011 No Comments
“Master of Disruption” talks higher education
Clay Christensen was in town a few weeks back for the Emerging Issues Forum. During his presentation he talked about how “disrputive innovation” would change the face of the health care industry. Christensen has turned his thinking to higher education and in this post from InsideHigherEd.com, he talks about how disruptive innovation will change higher education. A fascinating read. http://bit.ly/hHiTIt
WASHINGTON — It’s one thing for Clayton M. Christensen to share with a bunch of Washington think tankers his warnings that colleges must change or die, as he did at the American Enterprise Institute last month. But directly to the faces of college presidents themselves, at the annual gathering of their main national association? Yet there was the Harvard Business School professor known for documenting how industries get transformed by “disruptive technologies” on Monday, telling hundreds of college chiefs at the annual meeting of the American Council on Education that he was not at all sure in 20 years if their institutions would still be around.
Some of Christensen’s ideas (drawn from a paper he co-wrote with Henry Eyring of Brigham Young University-Idaho called “The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education”) and comments may have stung, notably his prediction that distance education, done well, can subject existing higher education to disruption that could render many existing institutions irrelevant in two decades. “There is good reason for many of us to think that we might be okay in 20 years. But I think we might be wrong,” he said. [Read more →]
March 8, 2011 No Comments
We are not enemies, but friends . . .
From my cousin, Deane Broome: Today is the the 150th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s first inauguration. The last words of his inaugural address:
“We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”
I’m almost embarrassed to say it with Abe’s presence so close by, and his passion for America still so palpable today, but . . .
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Passion Rules!
March 4, 2011 No Comments
Students say the darndest things, right Charlie.
Many college students want commencement speakers who are famous and some new student groups and Facebook pages suggest any kind of fame will do. George Washington University already has a commencement speaker for this year (New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg). But students at the university have started a campaign to get Charlie Sheen as the 2012 commencement speaker, attracting considerable support on Facebook and Twitter (typical comment: “I don’t want some stiff-ass politician boring me to death as I graduate”).
The GW Hatchet, the student newspaper, has declared the movement “a satirical ploy.”
But the idea may be spreading. Other Facebook pages want Sheen to speak at commencement at the University of Georgia, the University of Missouri at Columbia and West Chester University in Pennsylvania.
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Passion Rules!
March 3, 2011 No Comments
I should have gone to law school
Leading attorneys in the U.S. now charge as much as $1,250 an hour. See a ranking of the top billers: http://on.wsj.com/gEmvYj
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Dollars Rule! Not.
Passion Rules!
February 23, 2011 No Comments
Invented at NC State, The Honey-Roasted Peanut!
Thank the Wolfpack for the snack most of us enjoy on airlines, the honey-roasted peanut. Yep, the sweet legume was invented by NC State researcher Bill Hoover. Read more at the News & Observer.com.
RALEIGH — Bill Hoover played with food.
For most of his 94 years, he lorded over bubbling beakers in his basement lab, dabbling in cocktail sauce, fiddling with cheese spread, burrowing to the essence of sweet potatoes. Over his long career, most of it at N.C. State University, you could taste Hoover’s work in Carolina Treet barbecue sauce or any number of three-bean salads.
But Hoover, who died in Georgia this month, deserves a golden-brown monument on the National Mall for his greatest invention, a treat nibbled by many a coach-seated air traveler: the honey-roasted peanut.
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Passion Rules
February 21, 2011 No Comments
ScienceOnline2012 convention coming to NC State! Lets roll out the red carpet next January
By Anton Zuiker
We’re delighted to announce that ScienceOnline2012, the sixth annual NC science blogging (and more) conference, will take place Jan. 19-21, 2012 at the McKimmon Conference & Training Center of North Carolina State University. The countdown is on at ScienceOnline2012.com.
Special thanks to Matt Shipman and Keith Nichols at NC State for helping to arrange this new venue for the conference, which will give us plenty of space to grow and allow more scientists, educators, students, bloggers and journalists to attend.
No matter how big we grow, though, know that we’ll keep true to the character of this conference, finding creative ways to facilitate connections that lead to conversations, conversations that lead to networks, networks that support communities, all in the name of promoting science and our understanding of the worlds around us.
In the coming weeks, we’ll put out a call for volunteers to help us plan ScienceOnline2012. Get your creative juices flowing, add them to the wiki, write your own blog entries about what would make ScienceOnline2012 the best conference ever, and tell your friends that Raleigh, NC in January is the place to be for a darn good time.
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Passion Rules!
February 18, 2011 No Comments