What’s Happening around Rutgers? January 2018

The closing reception for the Opposition book arts exhibition is slated for January 17.

The closing reception for the Opposition book arts exhibition is slated for January 17.

The Opposition Lives On

Wednesday, January 17
5:00–7:00 p.m.
Alexander Library, Rutgers–New Brunswick

Rutgers University’s Special Collections and University Archives will hold an exhibition closing reception for Opposition, an exhibition of artists’ books, installations, and related textually based or inspired artwork on Wednesday, January 17 from 5 to 7 p.m. Following a panel discussion moderated by Karen Guancione with other Opposition artists including Asha Ganpat, Susan Happersett, China Marks, and Dikko Faust and Esther Smith of the Purgatory Pie Press, and a premiere of Karen Guancione: Book Arts, Installations & Assemblages, a digital archive of photographs and texts conceived by Grace Agnew, we will serve light refreshments in a room adjoining the gallery. The Closing discussion will be held in the Pane Room on the main floor of the Alexander Library, at 169 College Avenue, New Brunswick. The resistance will continue, but come say goodbye to Opposition. RSVP to Michael Joseph (mjoseph@rutgers.edu). For a peek at our digital archive visit https://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rul/projects/guancione/.

Lenoard Cassuto will discuss 21st century graduate education on January 31.

Lenoard Cassuto will discuss 21st century graduate education on January 31.

The Future of Graduate Education

Wednesday, January 31
5:00–6:30 p.m.
Alexander Library, Rutgers–New Brunswick

This semester, the School of Graduate Studies is inaugurating a new lecture series titled Provocations: The Future of Graduate Education to promote universitywide discussions about key issues, challenges, and innovations to generate ideas for advancing graduate education at Rutgers. Leonard Cassuto, professor of English and American studies at Fordham University, will present a talk titled “Graduate School 2.0: Rethinking Graduate Education for the 21st Century.” This will be an interdisciplinary discussion open to all students, faculty, and staff at Rutgers.

On Campus over Break? So Is the Zimmerli!

Tuesdays through Fridays: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays: Noon to 5 p.m.
First Tuesday of each moth: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers–New Brunswick

Visit the exhibitions Subjective Objective: A Century of Social Photography, On the Prowl: Cats and Dogs in French Prints, and Absence and Trace: The Dematerialized Image in Contemporary Art before they close on January 7.

Looking for a preview? Place on Stone: Nineteenth-Century Landscape Lithographs is set to open on January 13. For more information, visit the Zimmerli Art Museum website.

Rutgers–Camden's Julianne Baird will lead a special performance of "The Music Hamilton Heard" at Kirkpatrick Chapel on January 12.

Rutgers–Camden’s Julianne Baird will lead a special performance of “The Music Hamilton Heard” at Kirkpatrick Chapel on January 12.

The Music Hamilton Heard

Friday, January 12
7:00 p.m.
Kirkpatrick Chapel, Rutgers–New Brunswick

Join Rutgers’ Division of Continuing Studies at Kirkpatrick Chapel for a special concert with internationally renowned soprano and Rutgers–Camden Distinguished Professor of Music Julianne Baird and the Lord Camden Chamber Players as they perform the pieces enjoyed by the Founding Fathers of the United States.

Led by Dr. Baird, the Lord Camden Chamber Players will perform the music that our great founder actually enjoyed. As the United States embarked on its first steps into the world of nations, its composers and artists began to express what Ben Franklin called, “the American Muse.”

Tickets are $10 for Rutgers students, $15 for Rutgers faculty and staff, and $20 for the public. Visit the Division of Continuing Studies website for more information.

Lemony Snicket’s Bewildering Circumstances: An Evening with Daniel Handler
Daniel Handler aka Lemony Snicket comes to Rutgers–New Brunswick on Saturday, January 13.

Daniel Handler aka Lemony Snicket comes to Rutgers–New Brunswick on Saturday, January 13.

Saturday, January 13
6:00 p.m.
College Avenue Student Center, Rutgers–New Brunswick

Novelist Daniel Handler, known to despairing readers everywhere as Lemony Snicket, attempts to chart a course from the troubling questions of his childhood to the literary success of his adult life, with the sinking feeling that these are actually the same thing. How do the questions that haunt us as children lead us into our supposed adulthood? Mr. Handler will either answer this question or explain why he can’t.

Tickets are $10 for Rutgers students and come with a free book! $15 for Rutgers faculty or staff; $20 for general public. For more information, visit the Division of Continuing Studies website.

The Big Read Lecture Series: School of Nursing Faculty

Wednesday, January 31
5–7 p.m.
Location TBD, Rutgers–Camden

A cross-section of School of Nursing faculty researchers will discuss health equity through the lens of Citizen: An American Lyric. Panelists include: Patricia Supplee, PhD, RNC-OB studies maternal health in low-income urban communities and the healthcare needs of African-American women and families; Rashida Atkins, PhD, APNc studies depression in black single mothers, healthcare disparities, and develops evidence-based interventions; and Bonnie Jerome-D’Emilia PhD, MPH, RN studies health disparities associated with breast cancer screening, diagnoses and treatment. For the latest information, visit the Rutgers–Camden Center for the Arts website.

Join the Graduate School of Education for the DeMarzo Lecture on Teaching Excellence on February 15.

Join the Graduate School of Education for the DeMarzo Lecture on Teaching Excellence on February 15.

Building a Coherent and Equitable System of Assessments in Science in a District: A Partnership Approach

Thursday, February 15
3:30–5:30 p.m.
Bloustein School, Rutgers–New Brunswick

The Graduate School of Education cordially invites you to the fifth annual DeMarzo Lecture Series on Teaching Excellence. This lecture series features outstanding scholars addressing a broad range of issues around teaching. Dr. William Penuel, professor of Learning Sciences and Human Development in the School of Education at the University of Colorado Boulder, will give this year’s lecture.

In this talk, Professor Penuel will describe the ongoing efforts of a research-practice partnership between Denver Public Schools and the University of Colorado Boulder to create a more coherent and equitable system of classroom and district-based assessments of students in science.

Seats are limited, so if you plan to attend, please visit the Graduate School of Education’s website to RSVP.

Matt Badessa