Monday Minutes
Graduate Edition
Here are your Monday Minutes for February 15-19, 2021.
From the Department Head
Dear Colleagues and Students,
February is Black History Month, and I’d like to share some resources on Buffalo Soldiers. According to the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, “The heroism of the soldiers has been celebrated by filmmakers, musicians, military reenactors, and descendants who want to preserve their legacy. Yet that legacy is a complex one and raises challenging questions about the relationship of the soldiers to the government they served as well as to the Native peoples they fought.” Additionally, the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian has an online exhibition about African-Indigenous lives in the Americas, which further illustrates the complex shared history of Indigenous and Black peoples. Finally, you may be interested in this PBS documentary about the 25th Infantry's bicycle trip from Missoula, Montana, to St. Louis, Missouri in 1897. This Black infantry took the trip to test a theory that the bicycle would replace the horse in transporting men for the army.
I hope that these resources help you learn more about Black and Indigenous histories during February.
Take good care,
Dr. Ann Ewbank
News and Announcements
- We at the MSU Department of Education send our condolences to the Kitto family and the Whittier Elementary School community following Principal Craig Kitto’s death on Sunday. Along with EHHD Assistant Dean Kayte Kaminski and MSU Counseling and Psychological Services, we have a plan in place to support students who worked with Mr. Kitto. Students can also contact CPS for a same-day or walk-in appointment. Also, attached is a document prepared by HHD Department Head Dr. Rebecca Koltz which provides evidence-based methods for talking about tragedy with children.
- MSU employees needing support can access the Employee Assistance Program.
- The Bozeman HELP Center is available 24/7/365 for any community member.
Professional Development & Engagement Opportunities
- Please see the attached flyer for upcoming online workshops on R statistical software. These are excellent opportunities to learn more about R. Next workshop: Tomorrow, February 17th 3:10 to 5:00 pm
- Writing Science Workshop: First workshop date is Feb 18th 4:00-5:00 pm - Flyer Information attached By now you’ve probably realized that your success in the sciences rests not just your work in the field or lab, but on how you communicate that information. Career advancement requires publishing journal articles, writing conference papers, and giving presentations to experts in your field. You will also need to communicate through reports, articles, and tweets for the public. Communicating your science matters. In this workshop, we will discuss ways to use story structure to make your writing more compelling and how sentence-level choices can affect clarity.
- Citizen Science Event Recording. In case you missed it: The Citizen Science for Graduate Students webinar was presented on Jan 21 by SciStarter.org and MSU Science Math Resource Center. Watch the recording and learn how citizen science can be a valuable component of your academic and professional career!
- The Center for Bilingual and Multicultural Education is pleased to provide a spring webinar series on Preserving Indigenous Languages. All webinars will take place on Wednesdays, from 2:00-3:30 (Mountain time). Please see the attached flyers and the additional information on the book presentations by Dr. Crawley and Dottie Susag. Zoom links are provided below.
- February 24, 2021: Dr. Jason Cummins, Protecting Indigenous Languages in Public Schools
- March 10, 2021: Dr. Cheryl Crawley, Education Leadership in Multilingual Settings
- March 24, 2021: Dorothea (Dottie) Susag, The Night Watchman and Native Poetry — Part 1
- April 7, 2021: Dorothea (Dottie) Susag, The Night Watchman and Native Poetry — Part 2
Extra! Extra! Read all about it!
- Congratulations to those involved in last week’s MSU Giving Day! Thanks to your generosity, our department-sponsored projects collectively raised over $12,000! These funds will support kids with and without additional needs in a summer camp setting, opportunities for middle and high school students to participate in Science Olympiad, and a resource library for folks to learn about the gifts and strengths that individuals with dyslexia have.
- Our department’s success is determined by our collective accomplishments. Share your own accomplishments with pride! Or if you hear of a colleague or student’s accomplishment, please share. Please send accomplishments and kudos to ann.ewbank@montana.edu.