Category Archives: For Faculty Archive

Provost’s Drake Social to recognize service anniversaries, retirees

You are invited to the next Provost’s Drake Social Tuesday, May 3, in Shivers Hospitality Suite, adjacent to the Knapp Center, beginning at 4 p.m.

During this event, faculty and staff who celebrated (or will be celebrating) a milestone anniversary or retirement between July 1, 2021, and June 30, 2022, will be highlighted. Their names will be scrolled on video screens around the room.

Those who celebrated a milestone service anniversary between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2021, are also encouraged to attend. We were unable to hold this event in May 2020 or 2021 due to COVID restrictions.

There will be soft drinks, wine, beer, and light snacks.  President Martin will speak at 4:30 p.m.

Take a moment to stop by and congratulate your co-workers!

— Linda Feiden, Human Resources

Reminder: Change to email encryption starting May 1

Starting May 1, all emails that include any of the types of confidential information listed below must be encrypted to send to any non-drake.edu email addresses.

  • Social Security numbers
  • Tax Identification numbers
  • Driver’s License numbers
  • US Passport numbers
  • Credit card information

Emails that include this confidential information will be flagged by the system and you will receive an automated notification letting you know your email was not sent. You must then either add encryption or remove the confidential information to send your email.

See instructions below on how to send and open encrypted emails:

Sending and Receiving Encrypted Email Messages (How-to)

Further questions about this upcoming change? Or about Drake’s Information Security policy? Please contact informationsecurity@drake.edu.

— Chris Mielke, ITS

Deputy Provost 2:10: An appreciation

As we head toward May 1, I want to simply send a public note of appreciation to Dean of Admissions Annie Kremer and her entire team, as well as to the faculty and staff across the University who have worked so hard this spring to help families imagine their students here.

I’ve had the good luck of being present at several of our admitted student days and have seen the lovely mix of excitement and trepidation that families bring to the decision process. And, I’ve seen the high energy and thorough preparation that Admissions brings to these events, from the snappy welcome video to the heartfelt speeches from students, to the information-packed sessions on J-Term, global engagement, pre-professional programs, co-curricular activities, and more.

We wouldn’t be a university if we didn’t have students—and we wouldn’t have students without the tremendous work of Admissions and those of us who partner with that office.  So: thanks, Annie and all, for the work you’re doing!

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Deputy Provost 2:10: Questlove and higher ed?

I’ve just reviewed the slide deck for Prof. Cathy Davidson’s upcoming address to the campus community, and slide six features a quote from DJ Questlove, inviting us to reimagine ourselves and our institutions, post-COVID-19. Since I love Tribe Called Quest, I got excited—and since I love thinking about innovation in higher education as a great way to serve our students and keep ourselves engaged, the rest of the slides made my day!

Please consider joining us for what promises to be an interactive, illuminating, and invigorating virtual event on Wednesday, May 4, at 7 p.m. Sign up to receive the link to this event. If you’d like to join us for a catered watch party and after-presentation discussion, please let us know. We will also have the opportunity to gather together on Monday, May 9, from 3:30–5 p.m. in Howard Hall, Room 210, to discuss Dr. Davidson’s book, after her visit. Please register here, so we know how many books to buy and can provide an appropriate amount of refreshments.

Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Faculty/staff golf league

Drake University Recreational Services offers a faculty/staff golf league in the summer for all faculty/staff. The league is 10 weeks (8 regular season, 2 weeks of playoffs) on Wednesday afternoons. The first week of matchups will begin at Grandview Golf Course on Wednesday, May 18.

This league will be administered on a handicap basis, with 80% of the difference between a person’s average and scratch used as the handicap. Spouse/significant others are welcome to play in the league.

Registration deadline is Wednesday, May 11, at 4 p.m. View the entry form for more information.

For questions, email ryan.parriott@drake.edu.

Emily Madsen, Rec Services

Des Moines Consortium annual reception Sept. 21

Drake, DMACC, and Grand View University have transfer agreements among institutions. As part of this consortium, we hold an annual event to bring together faculty and staff. This event has resulted in introductions of individuals holding similar faculty and staff positions, scholarly collaborations, and sharing effective practices, as well as a chance for social interactions.

Please save the date: Wednesday, Sept. 21, from 3–4 p.m. on the DMACC Ankeny campus.

Drinda Williams, Office of the Provost

Save the date: Sapphire Awards May 12

Entertainment, snacks, and the change to recognize amazing colleagues!  That’s what you can expect at the Sapphire Awards on Thursday, May 12, from 1–1:45 p.m. in Levitt Hall. We will recognize True Blue individual and group nominees and announce the Sapphire Award winners. The Madelyn M. Levitt Employee Excellence Award and Distinguished Community Service Award winners will also be presented. Dance without Borders will be our entertainment as they share their Mexican cultural dance with us. Please save the date. We look forward to seeing you there!

— Teresa Downs, Human Resources

Deputy Provost 2:10: Being energized by learning and connection

Every Tuesday in OnCampus the Deputy Provost shares two articles with a read time of 10 minutes.

Do you know that rare, rare feeling, as a faculty member or part of university staff, when you’re talking with someone from outside of your institution, but within the profession, and they absolutely get it? It’s that feeling when you connect with someone who understands deeply the context you’re working within, sees the potentials and the roadblocks, and has actual ideas for moving forward. It’s the sometimes too frequently rare feeling of being energized through work—motivated to plan a bit, think a bit, act a bit, even though you’re tired and overwhelmed.

I had the opportunity to experience that feeling yesterday, for the brief twenty seven minutes I spent on the telephone with Cathy Davidson, the author of The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World in Flux. That energetic conversation carried me through the entire rest of an email-and-meeting-filled day. To be honest, that conversation carried me through an intense evening of parenting, painting my bathroom, and avoiding doing dishes-laundry-tidying.

I am so happy to be able to provide an invitation for you to spend a virtual hour with Cathy on Wednesday May 4, at 7 p.m. because I know it will energize you, focus you, and provide you with concrete examples of how to shift your pedagogy and practices in ways that will benefit our students. Dr. Davidson is the winner of the 2021 Annual Advocacy Award from the Council of Colleges of Arts and Sciences, the Founding Director of the Futures Initiative at CUNY, and a founding member of HASTAC: Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Alliance and Collaboratory.  Her keynote address to the campus community will kick off an entire month of programming that I’m designing, meant to help our faculty and staff address the ethical imperative of meeting our students where they are—emotionally, intellectually, and socially—in a post-pandemic but always-disrupted world.

Sign up to receive the link to this event. If you’d like to join us for a catered Watch Party and after-presentation discussion, please let us know, here. We will also have the opportunity to gather together on Monday, May 9, from 3:30–5 p.m. in Howard Hall, Room 210, to discuss Dr. Davidson’s book, after her visit. Please register here, so we know how many books to buy and can provide an appropriate amount of refreshments.

If you are teaching an FYS in the fall (or have always wanted to spend a day or two learning more about FYS), or a writing intensive course, or a course that you want to make certain is accessible to all learners, extend the energy you’ll get from Cathy’s talk, by attending a newly imagined All Faculty Development Workshop: Meeting Our Students As We Find Them Post-COVID. You can plan now for an intensive two-and-a-half day workshop; we will meet as a whole group, and in cohorts, on May 18 and 19 from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day, and from 8:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Friday, May 20.  Faculty who attend and participate will receive $375 stipends, access to some terrific guest speakers, all materials, ample time in shared conversation and directed learning, and meals – as well as an invitation to be part of compensated faculty learning communities meeting through fall and summer. To assist in our planning, please register at this link, as soon as you are able to commit.

— Renée Cramer, Deputy Provost

Join the University Book Club

Do you like to read, or want an outlet to meet co-workers from across the University? Join the University Book Club.

The University Book Club reads several books each academic year and meets for a casual discussion on each book. The next book is Rose Code by Kate Quinn. A discussion will be held Tuesday, May 10, at 3 p.m. at Louie’s Wine Dive (yes, the group is back in person!).

Our final book of the year will be “Carry On: Reflections for a New Generation” by John Lewis. We’ll meet to discuss the book in July.

Please feel free to reach out to sara.heijerman@drake.edu or dan.chibnall@drake.edu if you would like to participate in this discussion or would like to join the TEAM’s chat or email notification list.

Sara Heijerman, Student Services Center