The Cognitive Developmental Lab at the University of Towson is looking for participants to complete a two hour experiment about how we process emotion from speech. Eligible participants will be compensated a total of $40 for your time. To participate you must be at least 30 years of age, and English must be your native language. […]
Tag Archives | College of Liberal Arts
Lester K. Spence – Stare in The Darkness: The Limits of Hip-Hop and Black Politics
The Gissendanner Memorial Lecture would like to present Dr. Lester K. Spence author of Stare in The Darkness for our 2014 Speaker. Dr. Spence is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Africana Studies at Johns Hopkins University. His specialities include black politics, racial politics, urban politics, public opinion and American political thought. In 2009 […]
Ian Moore Memorial Lecture – The Art of Living: Can It Be Taught?
The Sixteenth Annual Ian Moore Memorial Lecture invites Dr. Alexander Nehamas to Towson University. Dr. Alexander Nehamas joined the Princeton University faculty in 1990. He is also Professor of the Humanities and of Comparative Literature. His interests include Greek philosophy, pilosophy of art, European philosophy and literary theory. For more information contact the Philosophy Department […]
Why MASS INCARCERATION Matters to Postwar American History
The Herbert Andrews Lecture series would like to present Dr. Heather Ann Thompson from Temple University as their 2014 speaker. Dr. Thompson is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Temple University. Dr. Heather Ann Thompson is writing the first comprehensive history of the Attica Prison Rebellion of 1971 and its legacy for […]
Volunteer Clients Needed!
Undergraduate students needed to help graduate students practice their counseling skills. Please consider volunteering 30 minutes of your time to help someone become a counselor or psychologist. Arrive prepared with a problem to discuss; however, please recognize that this is a practice session. Students are in training and are not licensed to provide therapy. Sessions […]
Volunteer Clients Needed!
Undergraduate students needed to help graduate students practice their counseling skills. Please consider volunteering 30 minutes of your time to help someone become a counselor or psychologist. Arrive prepared with a problem to discuss; however, please recognize that this is a practice session. Students are in training and are not licensed to provide therapy. Sessions […]
TODAY – Conversations on Teaching and Writing – I-Search or Re-Search
The CLA Writing Center invites you to join us for the next of this term’s series of conversations about teaching and writing. These conversations are open to faculty across the university who would like to develop more effective teaching strategies in innovative pedagogy, in teaching writing and in using of writing as a pedagogical tool […]
Finding the Right Employer (Sometimes It’s Okay to be Picky)
Summer is a great time to gain valuable work skills and habits, but looking for employers and jobs can be somewhat like looking for a significant other. You need to know as much as possible about the other person (the employer in this case) to know if you are likely to be happy and successful! The Career Center’s […]
TODAY – The Exit Zero Project
Martha A Mitten Speaker Series Presents The Exit Zero Project Monday, April 7 Liberal Arts Room 3310 Starting at 6:00 p.m. A book and documentary by Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty Christine Walley and Chris Boebel
The Exit Zero Project – Family, Deindustrialization and Social Class in Chicago
Martha A Mitten Speaker Series Presents The Exit Zero Project Monday, April 7th Liberal Arts Room 3310 starting at 6:00 pm A book and documentary by Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty Christine Walley and Chris Boebel
Conversations on Teaching and Writing – I-Search or Re-Search
The CLA Writing Center invites you to join us for the next of this semester’s series of conversations about teaching and writing. These conversations are open to faculty across the university who would like to develop more effective teaching strategies in innovative pedagogy, in teaching writing and in using of writing as a pedagogical tool […]
The Exit Zero Project – Family, Deindustrialization and Social Class in Chicago
Martha A Mitten Speaker Series Presents The Exit Zero Project Monday, April 7th Liberal Arts Room 3310 starting at 6:00 pm A book and documentary by Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty Christine Walley and Chris Boebel
TODAY – “The Square,” a Documentary on Egypt’s Recent Unrest
Thursday, April 3, 2014 Liberal Arts Building Room 2310 starting at 6:00 pm “The Square,” a documentary on Egypt’s recent unrest, is featured as the CLA International Film Festival explores how films express and critique cultural mythologies and social structures within their national settings, as well as why the genre has such popularity and persistence […]
The Exit Zero Project – Family, Deindustrialization and Social Class in Chicago
Martha A Mitten Speaker Series Presents The Exit Zero Project Monday, April 7 Liberal Arts Room 3310 Starting at 6:00 pm A book and documentary by Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty Christine Walley and Chris Boebel
“The Square” – 11th Annual CLA International Film Festival
Thursday, April 3, 2014 Liberal Arts Building Room 2310 starting 6:00 p.m. “The Square,” a documentary on Egypt’s recent unrest, is featured as the CLA International Film Festival explores how films express and critique cultural mythologies and social structures within their national settings, as well as why the genre has such popularity and persistence across […]
Conversations on Teaching and Writing – I-Search or Re-Search
The CLA Writing Center invites you to join us for the next of this semester’s series of conversations about teaching and writing. These conversations are open to faculty across the university who would like to develop more effective teaching strategies in innovative pedagogy, in teaching writing and in using of writing as a pedagogical tool […]
TODAY – “Normalizing Atypical Sex Anatomies in Children: A Question of Ethics or Culture?”
Ellen Feder is Associate Professor at American University in Washington, DC. She is the author of Family Bonds: Genealogies of Race and Gender (2007), and coeditor of The Subject of Care: Feminist Ethics and Dependency. Making Sense of Intersex: Changing Ethical Perspectives in Biomedicine will be published in April 2014. Tuesday, April 1, 2014, 5:00 […]
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