Planning for Summer Research?

The Undergraduate Research Office is hosting two programs next week to help you prepare! EDIT: The Student Panel is a Non-IA Event, while the Research Fair will count as an IA Event.


STUDENT PANEL: SPEAKING OF SUMMER RESEARCH
Tuesday, January 19th at 5:30pm, Research Commons (3rd floor of 18th Ave. Library)
Hear from student panelists in various fields speak about their experiences conducting full-time summer research projects throughout the country, and find out how you can do the same! RSVP; walk-ins welcome! PIZZA will be served!

OSU SUMMER UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH FAIR
Wednesday, January 20th at 4:30pm, Thompson Library 165
This event is for students who are interested in exploring summer research options at Ohio State—both sponsored programs you can apply to or funding for your own research project. Funding and program representatives throughout the university will be present to speak with students. RSVP; walk-ins always welcome!

November Non-IA Events

Make sure to check back periodically, as this post will be updated throughout the month! (Keep in mind that these are only recommendations, and any events outside of IA will fulfill the non-IA Event requirement!)

 

Resources for Non-IA Events

  

How are We to Live in Our Common Home? Reflections on Laudato Si, Pope Francis’ Encyclical on Ecology

Date: Monday, Nov. 2, 2015
Time: 7:00 – 8:00 PM
Location: Mershon Auditorium
Description:

Cardinal Peter Turkson, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace and the first cardinal from Ghana, will visit Ohio State’s Columbus campus for a community discussion on global sustainability. Respected around the world as a Scripture scholar, an advocate for the poor and disenfranchised in the developing world, and as a spokesperson for protecting the environment as a matter of social justice, Turkson has long made news with his comments that link ecology and human life.

Turkson has become the face of climate change at the Vatican, having led the drafting process of Pope Francis’ encyclical on the environment, presented at the Vatican conference on climate change on April 28, and introduced the encyclical during a June 18 news conference. Cardinal Turkson’s visit will deepen the university conversation about sustainability, morality, politics and society, by raising awareness and understanding of this important statement of Catholic environmental teaching that has become a topic of conversations worldwide.

Read more and register at the Office of Energy and Environment.

 

BuckeyeThon’s Fashion Show

Date: Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
Time: 7:30 PM (Doors open at 7:00)
Location: Ohio Union, Archie Griffin Ballroom
Description:

Join BuckeyeThon on Tuesday, November 3, 2015 for our Fashion Show For The Kids! The BuckeyeThon Fashion Show brings together the Ohio State community, BuckeyeThon Kids and the latest fashions from the Greater Columbus area.

At the Fashion Show, student models and BuckeyeThon Kids will style the latest fashion. Special guest performances between style sets will be from Ohio State’s student organizations. Each attendee with be provided a grab bag with various products from sponsors.

Tickets will be on sale for $5 starting October 12, 2015 through BuckeyeThon members, models, team captains, and the BuckeyeThon site.

 

Water Security: Community Adaptation to Climate Change

Date: Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015
Time: 4:00 – 5:30 PM
Location: Mershon Center 120
Description:

Climate change poses major challenges to local communities throughout the world as to how best to adapt and innovate.  This panel draws on a team of experts that have done community-level climate adaptation research in multiple ecological settings in North America, Latin America and Southeast Asia to identify methods that can work in terms of successful adaptation.  Drawing on the community capitals framework for talking about community organization, the panel will address how natural, cultural, human, social, political, financial and built capital are affected by climate change and how different groups can mobilize these different resources to proactively respond.

Read more and register at the Mershon Center.

 

Graduate and Professional School Fair

Date: Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015
Time: 4:30 – 6:00 PM
Location: Ohio Union Great Hall Meeting Rooms 1 & 2
Description:

Admission representatives from more than twenty Ohio State programs, pre-law and pre-health advisors and arts and sciences career counselors will be available to answer questions. This is a great opportunity for students who are new to Ohio State to begin to think about coursework, extracurricular activities and co-curricular opportunities that will help them to prepare for graduate or professional school admissions, as well as for graduating students to learn what they need to do in order to apply to an Ohio State program.

For first years, this Fair is an option for Student Success Series credit. Admission is free and refreshments will be provided.

For more information on this event visit Arts and Sciences (ASC) Career Services.

 

Morning and Noon: Liberals, Lawyers, and American Global Governance in the 20th Century

Date: Friday, Nov. 6, 2015
Time: 12:00 – 1:30 PM
Location: Mershon Auditorium
Description:

The United States had an unusual amount of power at its fingertips in he mid-20th century. How did American leaders wield that power? Ryan Irwin, assistant professor at State University of New York-Albany and whose doctorate is from Ohio State, will explore how American leaders wielded power in four historical moments, covering the period from World War I to the 1990s, how a generation of U.S. elites debated the instruments and purpose of global governance.

Read more and register at the Mershon Center.

 

Citizen Uprising: Stories from Baltimore and Ferguson

Date: Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015
Time: 12:10 PM (Pizza will be served!)
Location: Moritz College of Law, Saxbe Auditorium
Description:

Jill Humphries (National Lawyers Guild), King Downing (Human Rights – Racial Justice Center), and Timothy Singratsomboune (#CBUS2Ferguson) will be sharing their experiences in Baltimore, Ferguson, and Columbus through their accounts, photos and videos.

 

Student-Only Screening of The Peanuts Movie

Date: Friday, Nov. 20, 2015
Time: 3:30 PM
Location: Wexner Center for the Arts, Film/Video Theatre
Description:

Join Ohio State alumnus Steve Martino, director, as he introduces a free screening of the recent animated feature The Peanuts Movie, based on Charles Schulz’s long-running beloved comic strip. Martino has directed such past features as Horton Hears a Who! (2008) and Ice Age: Continental Drift (2012) for Blue Sky Studios.

Co-sponsored by Ohio State’s College of Arts & Sciences, Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design (ACCAD), Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum and the Wexner Center for the Arts. Special thanks to 20th Century Fox and Blue Sky Studios.

Admission is free. Tickets available at the Wexner Center Patron Services Desk beginning at 10 a.m. on Nov. 13. Limit one per student.

 

Regimenting Migrants: Post-colonial Nationalism and the South Asian Diaspora

Date: Monday, Nov. 16, 2015
Time: 2:00 – 3:30 PM
Location: Derby Hall 2130
Description:

This talk examines the shifting relations between the Indian nation-state and the South Asian diaspora. Following the liberalization of the Indian economy in 1991, the Indian diaspora began to play a central role in post-colonial nation-building. No longer held at arm’s length from the post-colonial state, the de-facto position of the Indian government since partition and independence in 1947, today the Indian state treats its diaspora as a resource that plays a crucial role in economic reforms, particularly in the search for foreign investment and new consumer markets in India.

Ishan Ashutosh, assistant professor of Geography at Indiana University, will discuss, the Indian diaspora, whose population stands at approximately 25 million people, is not entirely re-integrated into the Indian nation, however. Rather, elite segments, particularly those in the United States, are targeted as reflective of the “Global Indian.” Even for these groups, the government of India has introduced a number of cultural programs and tiers of citizenship that stop short of granting full citizenship to its diaspora. Ashutosh will consider how these relations continue to signal an ambivalence between national belonging and diasporic incorporation. He will also look at how the changing status of the Indian diaspora vis-a-vis the Indian nation-state produces new divisions within the South Asian diaspora.

Read more and register at the Mershon Center

 

October Non-IA Events

Global Glance

Date: Friday, October 16, 2015
Time: 12:00 – 1:30 PM
Location: Younkin Success Center, Room 150
Description:

The Office of International Affairs will host Global Glance, a presentation series providing a glance into other world cultures. The program provides an opportunity for visiting international scholars to share a short presenation about their home countries and cultures.

Visiting scholars from Brazil, Chile, and India will present. All are encouraged to attend the presentation, ask questions, sample food, and learn more about these three countries. For more information, contact Shauna Sergent at sergent.22@osu.edu.

Register at go.osu.edu/GlobalGlance.

Democratic Justice and Environmental Policy

Date: Monday, October 19, 2015
Time: 2:00 – 3:30 PM
Location: Thompson Library, Room 165
Description:

The structure of our political systems predictably generates failure to achieve environmental collective action, and in particular it fails to constrain elite free riding. Restructuring political institutions to reflect the real nature of environmental conflict will mean establishing systems that are more than superficially democratic. The past twenty years of democratic theory and practice have moved us in the wrong direction: away from majoritarianism and toward de facto minority rule. Minority interests in business as usual have nearly always prevailed, while most people continue to have interests instead in things like clean air, fresh water, and secure food. If any structuring principle for collective action can vindicate the interests of nearly everyone over those of the few, democracy can.

Elisabeth Ellis, Professor at the University of Otago (New Zealand), is the author of two books of Kantian political philosophy, Kant’s Politics: Provisional Theory for an Uncertain World and Provisional Politics: Kantian Argument in Policy Context. Her current book project, Extinction and Democracy, takes an interdisciplinary approach to the problem of whether democracy and species conservation policy are compatible, combining normative analysis with in-depth interviews and archival research, and focusing particularly on habitat conservation under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

Click here for more information.

A Little More Dictatorship: Balancing Anti-Communism and Human Rights in South Korea

Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Time: 12:00 – 1:30 PM
Location: Mershon Center, Room 120
Description:

Sarah Snyder will explore the extent to which American concerns about human rights violations in South Korea influenced U.S. policy toward that country. Not unusually for the era and the region, the U.S. relied on authoritarian leaders to preserve stability in South Korea. Despite congressional pressure that increased steadily into the 1970s, successive administrations did not press their ally to improve its human rights practices.

U.S. officials intervened only in extreme instances, such as in March 1963 when Park Chung Hee announced an extension of military rule for two more years and in August 1973 when they believed Kim Dae Jung, a dissident South Korean politician who had been kidnapped in Tokyo, would be murdered. Within the United States, there was minimal nongovernmental attention to human rights abuses in South Korea, meaning that pressure to shift U.S. policy came largely from members of Congress and lower level diplomats.

Throughout the years, the United States remained largely reticent about human rights abuses in South Korea, content with a politically stable, anticommunist ally and distracted by more pressing problems such as the war in Vietnam. Top U.S. leaders only directed their attention at Park’s regression when the instability it produced seemed to threaten U.S. interests in the region. Debate over U.S.-South Korean relations also highlight how salient Cold War concerns remained throughout the long 1960s even as the United States ostensibly sought detente with the Soviet Union and rapprochement with the Chinese.

Click here for more information.

Global Engagement

Date: Every Tuesday this semester
Time: 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Location: Oxley Hall, Room 122
Description:

Hosted by the Office of International Affairs, Global Engagement provides opportunities for international and domestic students to experience the diverse culture at Ohio State. Global Engagement has implemented a variety of programs and activities to better promote cross-cultural relationships on campus. Each weekly Global Engagement Night invites international and domestic students to interact and have cross-cultural discussions about different regions of the world and general topics affecting all college students.

Click here for more information.

Resources for Non-IA Events

2016 Critical Language Scholarship Programs

The application is now open for the 2016 Critical Language Scholarships.  Sponsored by the US State Department, 575 scholarships are awarded annually for students to participate in intensive summer language institutes abroad.   Institutes are available in varying levels of the following languages: Arabic, Persian, Azerbaijani, Bangla, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Indonesian, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Turkish, Russian, and Swahili. 

 

Eligible students will be freshmen-seniors, have competitive GPAs (3.5+), and plan to continue language study and apply their critical language skills in their future careers.  The application, due November 23rd, can be accessed on the CLS website: http://clscholarship.org.

 

Information Sessions

The Undergraduate Fellowship Office will be holding information sessions at the Kuhn Honors house, 220 W. 12th Ave.:

Monday, October 12th, 4:00pm

Tuesday, October 13th, 4:00pm

At these sessions, we will discuss the CLS language programs, application process, and resources to help undergraduate students.  For more information, please contact the Undergraduate Fellowship Office, fellowships@osu.edu.

September Non-IA Events

Pachaysana Study Abroad Info Session

Date: Thursday, September 17, 2015
Time: 12:45 PM – 2:00 PM (Lunch provided!)
Location: Kuhn Honors and Scholars House
Description:

Daniel Bryan, Director of the Pachaysana Institute in Ecuador, will be coming for an information session on the Pachaysana Institute Study Abroad Program in Amazonian Ecuador. The Pachaysana Institute’s “Rehearsing Change” is a semester-long, community-based study abroad program in Ecuador (fall semesters in Quito, spring semesters in the Amazon).  It offers Fair Trade Study Abroad and the simultaneous, equitable education of local counterparts, meaning students work and study on a daily basis with community members. Facilitated by leading scholars and teaching artists, the program combines challenging academics, Arts for Conflict Transformation methodology, participatory action research and engaged learning/scholarship. Visit pachaysana.org for more information, and RSVP for the information session to Brian Orefice at orefice.1@osu.edu.

Rehearsing Social Change Theater Workshop

Date: Thursday, September 17, 2015
Time: 3:00 PM – 4:30 PM
Location: Pomerene Hall, Room 205
Description:

“Make a Difference.” “Change the World.” “Save the Planet.” More than ever before, college students are participating in service learning, community engagement and study abroad. We look for ways to affect global change, but in such a complex world, what does “making a difference” actually mean?

This interactive theater workshop asks participants to consider the importance of “rehearsing change” before we try to enact change, delving into issues of diversity, identity, and intercultural communication. Setting the stage in the Ecuadorian Amazon, we explore the conflict between local and global interests. Then, using Participatory Theatre exercises, we will engage a creative dialogue, exploring Development as story.

An educator, activist and artist, Daniel Bryan specializes in the use of participatory theatre as a means of education, empowerment and development. Originally from the United States, he has lived for the last 15 years in Ecuador, where he serves as Executive Director of the Pachaysana Institute, working with indigenous and marginalized communities in the Amazon Rainforest. He is also Instructor of Theatre at the Universidad San Francisco de Quito and coordinates the community-based study abroad program, Rehearsing Change: Empowering Locally, Educating Globally.

Global Engagement

Date: Every Tuesday this semester
Time: 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Location: Oxley Hall, Room 122
Description:

Hosted by the Office of International Affairs, Global Engagement provides opportunities for international and domestic students to experience the diverse culture at Ohio State. Global Engagement has implemented a variety of programs and activities to better promote cross-cultural relationships on campus. Each weekly Global Engagement Night invites international and domestic students to interact and have cross-cultural discussions about different regions of the world and general topics affecting all college students. Click here for more information.

Hydropolitics: Water Scarcity & Security Seminar

Date: Monday, September 21, 2015
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:00 PM (Lunch conversation from 1:00 PM – 2:30 PM)
Location: Mershon Center, Room 120
Description:

The Mershon Center for International Security Studies has invited Ingrid Hehmeyer to speak on “Hydraulic Engineering and Water Management Under Harsh Conditions: Ancient and Modern Lessons from Yemen.” Hehmeyer is an agricultural engineer, pharmacist, and archaeologist specializing in human-environmental relationships in the arid regions of ancient and medieval Arabia. Click here for more information, or RSVP here.

Non-IA Event: Tecumseh, Tonight! (RSVP required)

A Great Opportunity tonight!

Tecumseh! – The Outdoor Drama

Tecumseh! is an outdoor dramatic performance that tells the story of the legendary Shawnee leader as he struggles to defend his sacred homelands in the Ohio country during the late 1700’s.  Join the Arts and Humanities Scholars for a performance this Friday, August 28.  We will depart campus at 6pm and travel by bus 45 minutes to Chillicothe, Ohio.  The show begins at 8pm and we will return to campus around midnight.  We will meet at the Ohio Union bus turnaround at 6pm (12th Ave across from the Law School).  Feel free to bring your dinner with you to eat on the bus.  The performance is outdoors, so be prepared for weather (light jacket, rain jacket, bug spray).  Tickets are $10 per student (due before boarding the bus) and please RSPV here.  View a short trailer here.

Here is a description of the show:

Witness the epic life story of the legendary Shawnee leader as he struggles to defend his sacred homelands in the Ohio country during the late 1700’s. “Tecumseh!” has been labeled as one of the most mesmerizing dramas in the nation.
The huge, outdoor stages of the Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre afford the audience a unique viewing experience. You will sit beneath the stars in the beautiful Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre as sheer spectacle surrounds you with a herd of galloping horses, live military cannon in action, and the most dazzling battle sequences offered on the American stage.

This professionally produced outdoor drama was written by seven-time Pulitzer Prize nominee and Emmy recipient, Allan W. Eckert, nationally known for his buckskin bestsellers…The Winning of America Series. The script has been acclaimed as the best of its kind within the outdoor drama industry and continues to fascinate thousands each summer as the story unfolds in the 1,800 seat Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre near Chillicothe, Ohio.
Since the premiere performance of “Tecumseh!” in 1973, over 2.5 million visitors have witnessed this great outdoor play, making it the most popular of its kind in the State of Ohio and entire Mid-Western United States.

IA Scholars STEP Pilot Program

The IA Scholars Program is working with STEP (Second-year transformational  on an all-Scholars pilot program that connects second-year on-campus students to faculty specializing in internationally themed topics. With roughly fifty students and three separate cohorts (one faculty per cohort), we have one of the largest pilot groups among all of the Scholars program. Moving forward, we are looking to expand this program and make it an integral part of the second-year experience for IA Scholars!

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Interested in the Fulbright Program?

Fulbright U.S. Student Program
Date: Wednesday, April 22, 4:00 p.m.; 53 W. 11th Avenue
Date: Thursday, May 14, 12:30 p.m.; 201 Kuhn Honors House

The Fulbright U.S. Student Program provides funding for recent graduates to spend 8-12 months abroad conducting research, undertaking graduate study, or teaching English. Join us for a discussion on the basics of the Fulbright Program – both academic grants and English Teaching Assistantships – including eligibility and selection criteria, the application process, and available resources to assist students. Current juniors and seniors are eligible to apply this year for grants beginning in fall 2016.
– Campus Deadline: September 1, 2015
– OSU Fulbright page: http://honors-scholars.osu.edu/fellowship-office/fulbright
– National Fulbright site: http://us.fulbrightonline.org

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