Don’t wait to reserve your place to run the Grand Blue Mile for FREE with Griff using DUGRIFF16! If a longer distance is your preference, run the Drake Relays presented by Hy-Vee Road Races Half Marathon or 5K using discount code ROADRACEDRAKE for $10 off. Get ready now to run in April!
Tag Archives: faculty
Nominate a student for a leadership award today
Nominations for outstanding student leaders and organizations are being solicited. The awards will be given at the Adams Leadership Convocation on Friday, April 22.
The awards are:
Top First-Year Students
Top Sophomores
Top Juniors (P1)
Top Seniors (P2)
Outstanding President/Chairperson
Outstanding Residence Hall Leader
Wanda Everage Peer Mentor Award
Drake Service Awards – individuals and student organizations
Outstanding Student Organization
Outstanding Educational Program
Outstanding Social Program
Outstanding Weekend Alcohol Alternative Program
Outstanding Diversity Program
New this year:
Outstanding Student Organization Officer
Outstanding Student Organization Adviser
Outstanding Collaboration
Criteria and nomination forms for the various awards may be found here.
—Meghan Blancas, Director of Student Leadership Programs
Oreon E. Scott Award nominations request
Nominations are being accepted from the University community for the prestigious Oreon E. Scott Award. Given annually since 1949, the Oreon E. Scott Award recipient is considered to be the outstanding senior student at Drake. The Oreon E. Scott Award winner will speak at Commencement.
Scholarship, leadership, service, and involvement are the criteria used by the selection committee. All letters of nomination should discuss in detail the reasons you believe the student, when judged by these criteria, should receive the award. To help in the selection process, please include the student’s résumé with your nomination letter.
The nominated student must receive a baccalaureate degree this spring or summer and have attended Drake for at least four semesters. Pharmacy students with the academic classification of P2 are also eligible for this award.
Visit www.drake.edu/leadershipinstitute/adamsleadershipconvocation/oreonescottaward/ for more information.
Letters of nomination are to be sent to Meghan Blancas, director of student leadership programs, in the Student Life Center by Wednesday, March 30.
—Meghan Blancas
Free financial consultations
Avoid the tax season blues! As part of your Employee Assistance Program (EAP), Employee and Family Resources offers financial counseling. Drake’s EAP provides you and your family members with one 30-minute financial consultation per issue at no cost. Just call 800-327-4692 to schedule a consultation at locations around the metro. Click here for more information on this service. Questions? Contact Marlene Huertz, assistant director benefits, at x1901.
—Marlene Huertz
Call for proposals
Faculty and staff are invited to submit session proposals for the 4th Annual Learning Symposium, which will focus on “inclusive excellence.” Click here for more details.
Sign up for the Grand Blue Mile today!
The first 1,000 Drake faculty, staff, students, alumni, and family members who sign up for the Grand Blue Mile (GBM) are eligible for a free entry using the discount code DUGRIFF16. Recognized as one of the top road miles in the country, the GBM is a local favorite for walkers, joggers, and competitive runners alike. The 2016 GBM is Tuesday, April 26, at 6 p.m. Sign up NOW at www.grandbluemile.com
—Carolyn Hill, Assistant Director, Drake Relays Operations
From the Provost: Week of Feb. 15
Beginning to Build the Professoriate for the Future
Two years ago Drake University proposed our Quality Initiative, a project undertaken “to alter the University culture to ensure that people of all races and ethnicities find a welcoming and supportive environment at Drake University, and concomitantly to increase racial and ethnic diversity among Drake students, faculty and staff.” The climate survey conducted last spring, the report on that survey delivered in September, and the forums that followed to discuss and identify immediate action steps we can take (soon to be announced) are, of course, part of that initiative, as was the creation of the Crew Scholars program, now in its third successful year.
Another piece of the QI, one on which there has been less apparent movement, is the “professoriate of the future,” a commitment to “recruit, hire, mentor, and retain faculty of color, across the disciplines represented in the University.” I want to take a moment to make our efforts in this area more visible.
This year we are conducting 22 searches to recruit faculty to Drake University, most to fill positions opened by retirement or resignation, some for the new programs. Along with the deans and Catalyst—a group of faculty devoted to improving diversity recruitment—I wanted to make a more deliberate and concerted effort to attract and hire diverse applicants and thus increase racial and ethnic diversity on campus. Toward that end we have taken several small, but needed steps:
- In cooperation with Human Resources, we revised the Faculty Search Manual in two important ways. First, we updated the language in the EEO statements to ensure that advertisements are more welcoming and present Drake in a manner that will be attractive to diverse candidates. Second, we allowed the addition of a third finalist for campus visits (searches are currently restricted to two) if a compelling case can be made that an additional candidate will forward our goal of Drake becoming a more inclusive community. (In the 15 visits we have had so far, 5 were permitted to include a third candidate.)
- I purchased a three-part self-paced training webinar on recruiting, hiring, and retaining diverse faculty and mandated that at least one member of each search committee complete the webinar.
- Representatives from Catalyst have met with the deans and with search committees prior to campus visits to discuss best practices.
These may seem small things, but they appear to be having an impact. Of the nine completed searches, three have resulted in diversity hires. In addition, since June I have approved converting two faculty of color in contingent positions to tenure-track lines. Of course, we have much more and serious work to do: improving our website to feature a page focused on the needs of a diverse prospective employee; develop a University-wide mentoring program for faculty; build better connections between the University and the community to provide a more welcoming and supportive environment; update and revise promotion and tenure policies; and, as the climate survey told us loud and clear, provide better training to all Drake students, faculty, and staff. For this very reason, the 2016 Learning Symposium will be devoted to the theme of “Inclusive Excellence” and will include an afternoon workshop on inclusivity training. An invitation to submit session proposals will be sent soon. This is an opportunity to join with others and make a real contribution to improving our working and learning environment.
Provost Mobile Office Hour
You can find me this week on Thursday, Feb. 18, 10–11:30 a.m., in the Cowles Library coffee shop. No appointments needed.
—Joe Lenz, Interim Provost
Japanese language conversation hours
Keep up your language fluency! Japanese Language Table offers the opportunity for students, faculty, and administrators to practice speaking Japanese on Fridays in Lower Olmsted starting at 3 p.m. Drop-in attendance and all levels of speakers are welcome. For further information, contact Samantha Dao at samantha.dao@drake.edu.
—Drake International
Engaged Citizen Conference
Registration is now open for the Engaged Citizen Conference focused on “Issues Facing the New President,” Friday, Feb. 26, 1:30–8 p.m. The conference is free and open to the public. For more information and to register, click here.
Visiting documentary filmmaker
Hosted by the E.T. Meredith Center for Magazine Studies, Ibarra will showcase his documentary series “Run Carlos Run” on Tuesday, Feb. 16, at 7 p.m. in Cowles Reading Room. The event is free and open to the public. “Run Carlos Run” follows Ibarra’s cross-country run from Brooklyn to California and the stories of the people he meets along the way, seeking to understand the modern American Dream.
—Kathleen Richardson, Dean, SJMC