Category Archives: For Faculty Archive

Apply for Cowles Library OER Grant

Cowles Library is still accepting applications to their next grant opportunity for full-time Drake faculty interested in using open educational resources (OER) in their courses. OER can benefit students in many ways, including saving money and expediting access. The Drake Faculty OER 2023 Grant Program is offering stipends between $500 and $1,500 to participants who complete the program, which involves adopting, adapting, or creating an OER to use in one or more of your courses. Application deadline is Feb. 28, 2023Learn more.

— Andrew Welch, Cowles Library

Provost’s Drake Social tomorrow

Drake faculty and staff who exemplify the Core Value “All in This Together” will be recognized at the Provost’s Drake Social Wednesday, Feb. 22, in the Cline Hall Atrium beginning at 4 p.m.

All those nominated will be recognized on a rolling display at the event. Several nominees will be chosen at random for prizes.

Refreshments will include wine, beer, soft drinks, and an assortment of light snacks. This is a family friendly event. Please feel free to bring your children and partner.

— Madison Bemus, Provost’s Office

Deputy Provost 2:10: More AI, upheavals, and music

We talk a lot, in higher education, about the massive changes we are currently undergoing.  But what does it mean for us when we say that enrollments are shifting, that knowledge production is being radically altered, that the classrooms we teach in are quite different from the ones we were learners in?  CPHS faculty member Shankar Munusamy will be leading us in a four-part conversation on the book The Great Upheaval: Higher Education’s Past, Present, and Uncertain Future. We’ll meet to discuss on Thursdays ,March 2, 9, 23, and 30, from 3:30–4:30 p.m. in Howard Hall, Room 210.  Please register so we can plan to see you and get you a copy of the book.

Of course, one of the upheavals we’ve been talking most about, lately, comes from the disruptive technologies related to Artificial Intelligence. A good group of faculty and staff are working to develop some April and May opportunities—workshops on AI in the classroom and in assessment practices, as well as conversations about more existential aspects of the technology and what it’s proliferation means for our students and ourselves. On the way to those workshops, there are some terrific opportunities to engage.  

Drake’s Comparison Project is hosting Luther College Professor of Religion Gereon Kopf, who will be presenting a talk titled “Trans-humanism, AI, and Memory: Zen Buddhist Ruminations on Digital Immortalities.” You needn’t register; the event is free and open to the public, Thursday, Feb. 23, 7–8:30 p.m., Cowles Library Reading Room.  The next week, at The Varsity Cinema, Drake faculty member Chris Porter (associate professor of mathematics and director of our Artificial Intelligence program) will be presenting a pre-film talk “The Role of Artificial Intelligence in Our Lives,” just prior to a viewing of After Yang.  You can purchase tickets for this event on the cinema’s website, the talk and film will be Feb. 28, starting at 6:30 p.m.  It is exciting to share that this talk part of a series supported by an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant for “Science on Screen,” which was awarded as a result of work done by Cowles library faculty member Dan Chibnall, and community member Bed Godar. The program, according to Dan, pairs science and sci-fi films with notable local experts—and I’m excited that later this spring Professor Jerrid Kruse (SOE) will present a talk prior to a screening of the classic movie Wall-E.

Drake faculty members Chris Porter and Martin Roth (Philosophy) have been collaborating to bring two exciting panel discussions on AI to campus. Save the dates now for March 7, 4–5:30 p.m. and April 20, 4–5:30.  These will be held in Sussman Theater; the first will examine the impact of AI large language models; the second will consider text to image generation.

Finally, if you’ve read this far, you deserve some music. I was listening to Sleigh Bells the other day, heard Riot Rhythm and had the impulse to check out the video—it’s an oldie—and it has fears of AI woven through it.  We might all have differing views on the impact of AI on our lives and careers—but tell me, who doesn’t love mid-2000s noise pop?

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Deputy Provost 2:10 (two articles with a read time of 10 minutes) is a communication series by Deputy Provost Renée Cramer sharing important scholarship, teaching, and development opportunities.

Deputy Provost 2:10: Drake Honors Program, new director and appreciation

Drake University’s Honors Program is marking significant transitions this semester.

Professor of Philosophy Jennifer McCrickerd is enjoying a sabbatical and preparing to step away from her role as Director of Honors after more than a decade of leadership and service. Under Professor MicCrickerd’s guidance as director, Drake’s Honors Program served an expanding group of students, developed tremendous opportunities for faculty, and innovated its curriculum and co-curricular offerings. In short: her commitment to teaching and learning has left Drake Honor’s in a strong place, and we are tremendously grateful for Jennifer’s work.

Professor Matthew Hayden (SOE) is serving as Interim Director of Honors this spring and has also been appointed to serve, without the “interim” moniker, for a three-year renewable term, starting Fall 2023.  Professor Hayden earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy & Education at Teachers College, Columbia University and joined Drake University’s School of Education in 2012 after being awarded the Association for Moral Education’s Kuhmerker Dissertation Award. He also has a M.A. in International Educational Development with a concentration in Human Rights Education, which included a stint as an intern at Human Rights Watch, writing docent educational materials for a global traveling exhibit of Darfurian children’s art. Professor Hayden’s research and teaching are rooted in Philosophy but are highly interdisciplinary—this makes him an excellent choice to lead Honors at Drake.

Professor Hayden has taught in the Honors program and has been a member of the Honors Advisory Council since 2014, consistently teaching Paths courses and multiple Honors cross-listed J-Term Travel Seminars. His favorite type of teaching and learning is when it is unexpected, unintentional, and driven by student curiosity that forces the instructor to throw away the “rule book,” adapt to emerging conditions, and learn himself in order to meet the new demands of the students. Matt tells me that he is looking forward to working with students, professors, and academic departments at Drake—and is especially interested in increasing the diversity of departmental, major, and faculty representation in the Honors program.

Please take a moment to congratulate Matt on his appointment, and offer your gratitude to Jennifer for her work leading Drake University Honors.

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Deputy Provost 2:10 (two articles with a read time of 10 minutes) is a communication series by Deputy Provost Renée Cramer sharing important scholarship, teaching, and development opportunities.

All In 24-Hour Giving Challenge March 2–3

The All In 24-Hour Giving Challenge is our opportunity to support, share, and celebrate everything that makes this University and our students exceptional. For the past nine years, the Drake community has come together in inspirational ways to go All In for this University. This year, as we mark our 10th All In, we are excited to announce an overall matching challenge: if we reach our goal of 1,250 gifts, we will unlock $110,000 for Drake!   

In addition to the overall match, there are also tens of thousands of incentives available with specific challenges for each college and school, athletics, fine arts, students, first-time donors, and more. A gift of any amount, to any area, will be doubled or even tripled through these generous matching opportunities. When you support Drake during All In, you are embracing and empowering the innovations, connections, achievements, and opportunities that happen here each day. 

For Drake faculty and staff: In celebration of your support to All In, Griff II wants to honor faculty and staff. Departments at Drake University with a participation rate of 75% or higher will be entered into a drawing for one of two prizes:

1) Professional headshots with Griff II
2) Treats delivered by Griff II to your department

Join your fellow faculty and staff and go All In for our Bulldog community March 2–3. Learn more at drake.edu/allin and follow all the fun and excitement on the Drake University and Drake Alumni social media channels.

Reach out with questions to Laura Roling, director of annual giving, at laura.roling@drake.edu.

— Laura Roling, University Advancement

Deputy Provost 2:10: Honors, awards, and due dates for nominations

The Office of the Deputy Provost has restricted and endowed funds available to help support faculty research, faculty enrichment, and project-based hiring of undergraduate assistants.  The deputy provost’s office also administers the process by which university-wide professorships are named – such as the Troyer Research Professorship, as well as the Madeline Levitt Mentor and Teacher of the Year awards.

Drake Research Grants are intended to support research and creative activity that is not already funded by other sources, to jumpstart proposals for external grant seeking and to provide supplemental funds to ongoing projects, as necessary.  Drake Research Grants offer up to $3,000 per project to underwrite the direct cost of faculty conducting advanced research or creative activity, including expenses like: travel, materials, services, and student research assistants.  Applications for these grants are accepted on a rolling basis; an interdisciplinary group of Drake faculty, in consultation with the deputy provost, make determinations on these proposals.

Faculty Development and Enrichment grant proposals are also accepted on a rolling basis; determinations are made at the discretion of the deputy provost.  These grants are available to support a variety of development and enrichment activities related to teaching, professional development, leadership development and collaboration.  We prioritize funding that benefits teaching and pedagogy, involves community partners, or engages faculty in developing skills and capacities.

Drake Undergraduate Student Assistantships facilitate departmental and faculty-led hiring of undergraduate student assistants.  These paid student assistants receive mentorship from faculty, while contributing in significant ways to departmental and faculty projects.  These assistantships are funded through matching funds – half comes from your department or college/school, the other half is provided by Student Financial Aid.  Applications for these assistantships are due to your college/school Dean by March 18; the deans will rank these applications and forward them to the deputy provost for collaborative determination (with Student Financial Aid) of funding.

Finally, please begin thinking of nominating your colleagues for our distinguished university-wide research, teaching and mentoring awards: the Troyer Research Fellowship, the Madelyn M. Levitt Teacher of the Year Award, and the Madelyn M. Levitt Mentor of the Year Award.  The deadline for nominations for the Teacher and Mentor Award, as well as for applications for the Troyer Award is Friday, February 17.

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Deputy Provost 2:10 (two articles with a read time of 10 minutes) is a communication series by Deputy Provost Renée Cramer sharing important scholarship, teaching, and development opportunities.

Deputy Provost 2:10: Have we re-engaged?

Last spring, nearly everywhere I turned in higher education journalism, I saw articles about The Great Faculty Disengagement. Spurred by this piece from The Chronicle of Higher Education, scholars from a wide range of disciplines and university-types chimed in, openly sharing about high levels of burnout, stress, frustration and uncertainty.  Coming so close on the heels of the radical transitions necessitated by the height of the global pandemic, these testimonies made sense to me – and they confirmed what I was seeing in my friends and colleagues (and feeling for myself, even though I was not in the classroom last year): high levels of exhaustion, feelings of hopelessness, and a reluctance to engage.

This year, I’ve seen fewer of these types of pieces.  Even Chronicle coverage with headlines about how junior faculty are “leaning out,” is really about the ways that faculty are taking care of themselves, in order to continue to provide an excellent education for their students; and I appreciate that, a year out from the earlier reporting, we have pieces that look at structural inequality around workload and burnout.  This shift in reporting, coupled with increased participation in development opportunities my office is sponsoring, and the kinds of hallway and Painted Street conversations I’m having – makes me think that attitudes about our work seem to have leveled out.  They are, perhaps, even improving.  From my office in Howard Hall, I see a renewed energy and vibrancy around student learning, and heightened collegiality.

Have we, indeed, begun to ‘re-engage?’

If we have – if things related to work are returning to manageable – how can faculty and staff continue to adjust, and to adjust in ways that foster our well-being and thriving?

I rather stridently do not believe in work-life balance. In fact, I think work-life balance is a myth that only makes those of us who are juggling multiple responsibilities (Caregiving! Teaching! Needs of self! Research and Creative Activity! Committee work! What else?!) feel worse about our inability to juggle them all well.  So I almost hesitate to share this set of resources from THE Campus, because they do talk about how to strike and hold this balance – they also, usefully, discuss the various ways we can approach our work and non-work life wholeheartedly, integrally, and intentionally.  I especially appreciate the ideas around sequencing and prioritizing in the piece by Professor Lucas Lixinski from University of New South Whales, and the one by Prof. Stephen Harmon (Georgia Tech) about how his hobbies make him a better scholar – even though they’re unrelated to his academic work.

It’s in this spirit – the spirit of giving us time to talk about our teaching, breathe a little bit, think about our work, and share about our lives – that I host much of the faculty development that I do.  So, please start to plan ahead and endeavor to join us – in March and April we’ll be discussing The Great Upheaval on Thursday afternoons, and Air and Light and Time and Space on Friday mornings.  We can use that time to problem solve and brainstorm, share and celebrate.  And, if we haven’t re-engaged, if things don’t feel any more manageable – we can talk about that, too!

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Deputy Provost 2:10 (two articles with a read time of 10 minutes) is a communication series by Deputy Provost Renée Cramer sharing important scholarship, teaching, and development opportunities.

All Staff Council Bulldog Connect networking lunch

All Staff Council is holding a Bulldog Connect networking lunch on Wednesday, Feb. 15, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Special Events and Community Service Committee is hosting this month. Enjoy learning what staff on this committee focus on throughout the year. Anyone is welcome to come for a $5 lunch at Hubbell. Look for the table with the Drake swag and a special Bulldogs Connect table tent in Hubbell.

Also a reminder that All Staff Council invites you to share any suggestions, concerns, or other feedback you’d like us to look into using this form. (If you’d like us to respond to your feedback directly, please include your name and contact information, otherwise let us know your thoughts anonymously.)

— Megan Franklin, On behalf of All Staff Council

Announcing Drake semester study abroad program, DU England at Harlaxton College

Drake is excited to announce DU England: Harlaxton as our second cohort-model semester study abroad program. The program will be offered each fall, starting Fall 2023, with Professor of Psychology Maria Clapham as the inaugural Drake Faculty-in-Residence teaching on the program.

Harlaxton College is one of the most unique study abroad locations in the UK based at a Victorian Manor and has been operating for over 50 years.  Set in 300 acres of beautiful countryside in the heart of England, Harlaxton allows our student cohort to enjoy the British Midlands with the ability to be in London in about an hour.  The Drake cohort-model program will include the Harlaxton semester experience, with students taking classes taught by British and visiting faculty members, as well as additional specialized activities and excursions exclusive to Drake courses.

Campus visit from Harlaxton representative on Feb. 20 & 21

A representative for Harlaxton College, Jordan Hall, will be visiting Drake University on Monday, Feb. 20, and Tuesday, Feb. 21. She is available morning through the evening.  If you are interested in learning more about Harlaxton, we would love to set up a meeting with you and Jordan to get more in-depth information on this exciting new program.  We can schedule:

  • Classroom presentations where Jordan can visit your classes to speak to students for 5-10 minutes about the program.
  • A meeting to learn more about the program so you are able to advise students on this Drake experience abroad.  This can be one-on-one or with others in your department.
  • A meeting to learn more about teaching on the Harlaxton program.  We will have a Drake Faculty-in-Residence position available every fall semester.

In addition, you are invited to attend a Faculty-In-Residence information session on Monday, Feb. 20, at 4 p.m. in Olmsted TMR132 to learn about teaching at Harlaxton.

If you have questions about DU England: Harlaxton, please reach out to Maria Rohach, director of education abroad at maria.rohach@drake.edu.

— Maria Rohach, Global Engagement