<?xml version="1.0"?>
<News hasArchived="true" page="57" pageCount="723" pageSize="10" timestamp="Fri, 15 May 2026 22:34:48 -0400" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts.xml?page=57">
<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142303" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142303">
<Title>Putting UMBC Research on the Map</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Research-FeatureImg-150x150.jpg" alt="UMBC's campus from a bird's eye view, with gold location pegs superimposed the image to indicate research zones" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p>Spring on UMBC’s main campus brings a host of familiar sights and sounds: blooms on the magnolia trees, the chatter of red-winged blackbirds calling from the reeds around Library Pond, greening grass on the campus Quad, and black-and-gold-bedecked Grit Guides leading groups of prospective Retrievers around what may soon become a home away from home.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>The guides cover the usual highlights—Academic Row, the Retriever Activity Center, the AOK Library, eating establishments, and residential halls. UMBC is a place to live, to learn, and to find community. And while some of the functions of campus spaces are obvious, others are often hidden.<br><br>Look more closely, and you’ll see faculty and students turning the everyday infrastructure and green oases of UMBC into out-of-the-ordinary laboratories. Beeswax sculptures, tactile maps, robots helping other robots—read on to discover some of the amazing ways Retrievers are using the campus itself for experiential learning and diverse research.</p>
    
    
    
    <p><em>Written by: Catherine Meyers &amp; Sarah L. Hansen, M.S. ’15</em></p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images.png" alt="Ping-Pong Balls and Gravelometers, The Stream Lab, Northwest of Campus" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <p>Two students wearing knee-high waders stand several meters apart in the middle of a rapidly flowing stream at the north end of UMBC’s campus. One releases a Ping-Pong ball, which bobs along with the current, as the second starts a timer, stopping it when the ball reaches his feet to determine the stream’s flow rate.<br><br>Nearby, another student measures the size of rocks in the streambed using a device called a gravelometer—a rectangular piece of metal with square holes of various sizes. The smallest hole a given rock will fit through becomes its measurement.<br><br>Farther along, other students capture photos that include reference posts on the stream bank. Each small group of students also takes measurements of the water depth at one-foot intervals along strings hung from one bank to the other. The students (with the help of specialized software) will use these measurements and photos to generate 3D models of the streambed.<br><br>“It’s a little DIY, but we get some amazing pictures,” says <strong>Charles Kaylor</strong>, the instructor and director of GIS and cartography labs in the Department of Geography and Environmental Systems (GES).<br><br>This is the “stream lab” in Exploring the Environment: A Geospatial Perspective, a course best known in the UMBC community for its semesterly launch of a dozen or so brightly-colored balloons that dot the campus skyline. Throughout the semester, students train their brains in the ways geographic data can help answer a wide range of research questions.<br><br>For the students, there are a range of perks to the course. “It’s cool to see different applications of computer science, which can sometimes feel pretty theoretical,” says <strong>George Rush</strong> ’24, computer science. <strong>Luke Thomas</strong> ’27, GES, who was partnered with Rush, is grateful for the senior’s support with the programming aspects of the coursework.<br><br><strong>Rhonda Plofkin</strong>, Ph.D. student in GES and the graduate assistant for the class, concurs that having students with different strengths facilitates peer learning. “This is real-life stuff that geomorphologists do in the field,” she adds.<br><br>For some, the benefits are just as real, but simpler: “The cold water wakes me up,” <strong>Anthony Roytenberg</strong> ’24, computer science, says with a smile.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="474" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ResearchFeature1.jpg" alt="Students collect data that measure flow rate, depth, pebble size, and more as part of the “stream lab” in a popular, interdisciplinary GES course" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Students collect data that measure flow rate, depth, pebble size, and more as part of the “stream lab” in a popular, interdisciplinary GES course. Photo by Sarah Hansen, M.S. ’15.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images2.png" alt="FIne Arts in the Garden, MFA Thesis Defense, Joseph Beuys Sculpture Park" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>When <strong>Alieh Rezaei</strong> arrived at UMBC from Iran, she couldn’t take her eyes off the ground. Almost immediately she was mesmerized by the flora and fauna of her new residence, and as an master of fine<br>arts student in the intermedia and digital arts (IMDA) program, she decided to incorporate pieces of UMBC into her artwork. She walked around campus, picking up windfalls of seeds and exploring hidden nooks of nature. A place that would come to be her sanctuary,<br>Rezaei, M.F.A. ’22, says, was Joseph Beuys Sculpture Park.<br><br>“The solidity of the stones alongside the growth of the oaksand the evolving shape of the garden reflect concepts of erosion and growth,” says Rezaei. “As an immigrant, I found solace in my attachment to the settled and solid stones, representing a sense of<br>grounding to me.”<br><br>Rezaei was drawn to UMBC’s M.F.A. program because of its multidisciplinary approach and the freedom she felt to choose an unconventional path. She praised <strong>Kathy O’Dell</strong>, IMDA professor emerita, who was her advisor. “Kathy was someone who—it was like I was floating in the air and Kathy held my hand and grounded me. She was very supportive for the whole journey.”</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="694" height="518" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ResearchFeature2.jpg" alt="A photograph from Rezaei’s three-hour performance “The Tongue in the Landscape” at the Joseph Beuys Sculpture Park featuring the artist laboriously peeling the wax layer off the pieces of bark. Photo courtesy of Rezaei." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">A photograph from Rezaei’s three-hour performance “The Tongue in the Landscape” at the Joseph Beuys Sculpture Park featuring the artist laboriously peeling the wax layer off the pieces of bark. Photo courtesy of Rezaei.
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <p>To create the art for her thesis project, Rezaei used almost exclusively materials collected on or near campus, including fallen tree bark, shattered wood, and seeds. She bought her main material—beeswax— from Baltimore beekeepers. One piece, “The Collective Womb,” featured hundreds of native seeds, called Devil’s Darning Needles, held together by beeswax around orange peels.<br><br>When the pieces were finished, Rezaei immediately knew the stage she wanted to showcase them on—Joseph Beuys Sculpture Park. “I installed my pieces there and had a performance as a way to extend the concept of public sculpture, aiming to reactivate the space and revive the concept of ecological engagement central to Beuys’ 7000 Oaks project.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images3.png" alt="Phage Hunters Lab, Genetics and Bioinformatics, Biological Sciences Building" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="380" height="571" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Phages.jpg" alt="A composite of several microscope images of phages discovered by UMBC students in the Phage Hunters program demonstrates the variety of shapes phages can take. Photo by Tagide deCarvalho." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">A composite of several microscope images of phages discovered by UMBC students in the Phage Hunters program demonstrates the variety of shapes phages can take. Photo by Tagide deCarvalho.
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>IchabodCrane. MindFlayer. Annihilus. TonyStarch. These are viruses previously completely unknown to science discovered by UMBC students in the Phage Hunters program, a two-course undergraduate genetics and bioinformatics sequence. <br><br>Since its launch in 2008, UMBC students have discovered 661 viruses that infect bacteria, called phages. Ninety-seven of them originated in samples collected on campus, with the most popular location being the Library Pond. Seventy-seven phages have been sequenced and 60 have been fully characterized and submitted to GenBank, an international digital repository of genetic and protein sequences. <br><br><strong>Steven Caruso</strong> ’94, Ph.D. ’02, biological sciences, principal lecturer of biological sciences, runs the genetics course where the students collect samples, isolate their phages, image them with help from <strong>Tagide deCarvalho</strong>, “and growth,” says Rezaei. “As an immigrant, I found present their findings. They learn foundational laboratory techniques and get a taste for research. <br><br>Phage Hunters gives students “a first glimpse of what research is, with all that goes with it: determination, grit, inspiration, frustration, and more,” says <strong>Ivan Erill</strong>, professor of biological sciences and co-instructor for the bioinformatics course with Caruso. “Students get to see all the possible outcomes of a research project, from total success culminating in a DNA extraction for sequencing to failure to isolate a phage in the first place.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images4.png" alt='Finding the "Forever Chemicals", Molecular Characterization and Analysis Complex, Meyerhoff Chemistry Building' style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <p>In the basement of the Meyerhoff Chemistry Building, in a tiled expanse called the <a href="https://mcac.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Molecular Characterization and Analysis Complex</a>, sits a sleek, roughly human-sized instrument with the power to measure extremely tiny amounts of chemicals. <strong>Amanda Belunis</strong>, a chemistry Ph.D. student now in her final year, knows the instrument like an old friend, having turned to it to analyze a smorgasbord of UMBC water samples.</p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>Belunis studies a group of chemicals called per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or <a href="https://www.epa.gov/pfas/pfas-explained" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">PFAS</a>. The chemicals are used in products as varied as makeup, clothing, and fire-fighting foam and are found in trace amounts in many water sources as well as in human blood. Dubbed “forever chemicals” because of the way they persist in the environment, they present a growing concern to human health. <br><br>Belunis’s research is part of a growing effort by scientists to understand how PFAS enter and travel through the environment and, ultimately, figure out ways to remove them.<br><br>To validate her procedures for measuring PFAS concentrations, Belunis tested water from drinking fountains, the sink in her chemistry lab, the pool, and the pond and streams around UMBC, all of which contained trace amounts of PFAS, as would be expected. Confident her methods worked on real-life samples, she then turned her attention to analyzing water in aquaculture fish tanks.<br><br>“My lab mates and I sometimes discuss how all of us have these chemicals in our bodies,” says Belunis. “It’s concerning, which is why we need to do more studies.” </p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="554" height="554" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ResearchFeature3.png" alt="Amanda Belunis prepares samples for later  analysis in the Molecular Characterization and Analysis Complex. Photo by Catherine Meyers." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Amanda Belunis prepares samples for later analysis in the Molecular Characterization and Analysis Complex. Photo by Catherine Meyers.
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images5.png" alt="Measuring Up, Math in Action, The Administration Building" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="625" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ReserachFeature4.jpg" alt="In addition to measuring buildings, students in Math in Action discovered other ways that math naturally interacts with their lives and studies. Here they are recording the movements of brine shrimp. Photo by Sarah Hansen, M.S. ’15." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">In addition to measuring buildings, students in Math in Action discovered other ways that math naturally interacts with their lives and studies. Here they are recording the movements of brine shrimp. Photo by Sarah Hansen, M.S. ’15.
    
    
    
    <p>When asked how to measure the height of a building, most students in Math in Action, a new laboratory course for non-STEM majors, “came up with various ways to measure the height directly—for example, by dropping down a string and then measuring the string or stacking up various objects,” says <strong>Alexis O’Malley</strong> ’18, mathematics and psychology, who teaches the lab. <br><br>But today, students are peering along the edges of homemade clinometers—plastic protractors with drinking straws attached—taking measurements from safely on the ground with a meter stick, and running simple calculations based on the properties of triangles to measure the height of UMBC’s Administration Building (123 feet, 2 inches). <br><br>Throughout the course, “I want students to see how math can be used to solve problems creatively,” O’Malley says.<br><br>Math in Action covers different math concepts each week through hands-on activities. The purpose of the clinometer activity is to remind students that “science is based on measurement, and you can build a tool to measure almost anything,” shares <strong>William R. LaCourse</strong>, dean of the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences, who originally generated the idea for the course to help a wider range of students develop math skills relevant to their everyday lives. The course, he adds, “is a doorway to a lot of different math concepts.” </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images6.png" alt="Improving Campus Accessibility for All, Office of Student Disability Services, Math/Psychology Building" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p><strong>Shawn Abraham</strong> ’24, political science, has gotten lost on the UMBC campus more times than he can remember. As a blind student, he finds his way using a white cane, auditory cues, mental maps, and by asking people for directions. “People are surprised when I tell them, but big cities are much easier to navigate,” Abraham says. “College campuses are hard to get around.”<br><br>Tactile maps are one tool that could help. <strong>Erin Higgins</strong> and <strong>Kirk Crawford</strong>, Ph.D. students in human-centered computing, have recently been working with blind students at UMBC to create and test 3D-printed maps of campus. <br><br>The researchers launched the project after being approached by <strong>Michael Canale</strong>, assistant director of the <a href="https://sds.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Office of Student Disability Services</a>. He says UMBC currently has four completely blind students enrolled and his office wants to provide personalized maps that each student can carry with them as they navigate campus. He’d also like to see a large 3D-printed map mounted somewhere on campus.<br><br>“A beautiful tactile map could be used by visitors of all kinds,” Canale said. “It’s the principle of universal design.”<br><br>Meanwhile, <strong>Md Osman Gani</strong>, an assistant professor of information systems, is spearheading a new project, named <a href="https://mypathar.github.io/home/index.html" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">MyPath</a>, to develop a Google Maps–style app to help wheelchair users navigate campus. <br><br>“Uneven surfaces, discontinuous sidewalks, and steep slopes can make wheelchair travel challenging, and even impossible” Gani says. The MyPath app would help by providing users with personalized turn-by-turn navigation with real-time updates. The app will rely on a machine learning model that recognizes path accessibility conditions based on crowd-sourced data, and Gani is currently recruiting wheelchair users to contribute data using their smartphones.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="546" height="749" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ResearchFeature5.jpg" alt="Shawn Abraham (left) tests prototype tactile maps made with 3-D printers with Michael Canale (right)." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Shawn Abraham (left) tests prototype tactile maps made with 3-D printers with Michael Canale (right).
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images7.png" alt="Tree Hugger, Ecological Research, Southwest Campus" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <p>It’s 7 a.m. in July, and <strong>Megan Curtiss</strong> ’23, GES, is standing next to a tree just outside The Loop on UMBC’s southeast corner. It’s wrapped in a thin metal band at about chest height. Curtiss carefully measures the small gap between the two ends of the band with digital calipers three times, takes the average, and then moves on to the next tree. Only 98 to go.<br><br>This scene played out weekly from March to October 2023 as Curtiss collected data for a study led by <strong>Matthew Baker</strong>, GES professor, and <strong>Nancy Sonti</strong>, a research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service. “It became like a morning meditation,” Curtiss shares.</p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div><div class="embed-container"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/forWdyTZhn4?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="webkitAllowFullScreen" mozallowfullscreen="mozallowfullscreen" allowfullscreen="allowFullScreen">[Video]</iframe></div></div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p><br>The metal bands, call dendrobands, “are a cheap and easy way to get pretty detailed information,” Curtiss says. By measuring the trees’ growth over time, the goal is to look at how trees of different species and in different immediate environments (such as a parking lot versus a forest) handle conditions like fluctuating temperatures and water availability. <br><br>After attending Anne Arundel Community College in her 30s, Curtiss then found a home at UMBC. She began working with Baker in fall 2022 and will enter the GES master’s program at UMBC this fall. A graduate degree was not something Curtiss originally planned on, but now she’s excited about the further experiences it will bring. “I’m looking forward to the unexpected,” Curtiss says. </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images8.png" alt="Robot Proving Ground, Center for Real-Time Distributed Sensing and Autonomy, Former Walker Avenue Courthouse " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <p>Take a left off Hilltop Circle, just past the greenhouse on the right and toward the Walker Avenue apartments, and you’ll find yourself outside a traditional brick building that used to house trial rooms and detention cells. In 2021, UMBC turned this former courthouse into the main hub for the <a href="https://cards.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Center for Real-time Distributed Sensing and Autonomy</a> (CARDS). Researchers here develop artificial intelligence-enabled smart robots for military and search-and-rescue operations.<br><br>On a sunny day in spring, you will likely see students gathered in the courthouse’s “backyard,” huddled around dog-like Spot robots and wheeled vehicles called Jackals and Huskies.<br><br>The researchers outfit the robots with a host of custom devices, such as cameras and radar to sense their surroundings and microprocessors to run on-board algorithms. While the robots can be commanded via voice and gesture, the ultimate goal is for them to operate mostly autonomously. </p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="625" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/DogRobots.jpg" alt="On the back lawn of the courthouse building, student researcher Kevin Rippy, left, controls three Spot robots with gestures. Another student stands by in a ghillie suit, a type of camouflage clothing." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">On the back lawn of the courthouse building, student researcher Kevin Rippy, left, controls three Spot robots with gestures. Another student stands by in a ghillie suit, a type of camouflage clothing.
    
    
    
    <p>Recently, the team has demonstrated this capability by verbally assigning the robots the task of jointly surveying a given area. The robots must translate the instructions from plain English into machine-level commands, divide up duties, detect and avoid obstacles, come to a fellow robot’s aid in the case of unexpected problems, and identify and keep track of the objects and people within their assigned perimeter.<br><br>“People from around campus will see us testing and will stop to watch,” says <strong>Aryya Gangopadhyay</strong>, a professor in information systems who directs CARDS. “The robots are an attention getter.” </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <img width="850" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/MAG-spring24-campus-on-the-map-images9.png" alt="Getting Your Feet Wet, Applied Research in the Environment, Herbert Run Greenway" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="546" height="570" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ErinHamner.jpg" alt="Erin Hamner collected weekly water quality  data from this stream for six months, using the battery-powered digital probe she’s holding. (Image by Sarah L. Hansen, M.S. ’15)" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Erin Hamner collected weekly water quality  data from this stream for six months, using the battery-powered digital probe she’s holding. (Image by Sarah L. Hansen, M.S. ’15)
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>After traipsing across a swampy field between research sites, <strong>Erin Hamner</strong> ’22, GES, and a current master’s student in the Interdisciplinary Consortium for Applied Research in the Environment program, scampers down a streambank in thigh-high waders and plunges a battery-powered probe into the water. It reports concentrations of ammonia and nitrates—key water quality measures. The probe also measures the water’s conductivity, which indicates the level of ions, such as salts used to melt snow. <br><br>It’s beautiful out today, but Hamner completed the trek to a dozen campus sites weekly from September 2023 to February 2024, sometimes dealing with mud, snow, or rain. The goal of her master’s thesis is to confirm that stormwater management features UMBC has installed to reduce flooding, filter storm runoff, and otherwise improve water quality are working as intended—or if they aren’t, to suggest improvements.<br><br>Hamner and her collaborators in Facilities Management and the Office of Sustainability want to see the data collection effort continue after she graduates. So she is working with faculty in GES to incorporate crowd-sourced stormwater monitoring into the undergraduate curriculum, including generating a public dashboard.</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“Erin has done incredible groundwork collecting water quality data across our campus, generating useful data that can tell us about the health of UMBC’s waterways,” says <strong>Taylor Smith</strong>, assistant director of sustainability. <br><br>Long-term data will help the university “see how our development affects our watershed so we can continue to be good stewards,” Smith adds, noting that, “data like Erin’s can help us advocate for more greenspace and stream buffers around campus.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Spring on UMBC’s main campus brings a host of familiar sights and sounds: blooms on the magnolia trees, the chatter of red-winged blackbirds calling from the reeds around Library Pond, greening...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/putting-umbc-research-on-the-map/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142303/guest@my.umbc.edu/93196282138c9d99f3c2930689edf3cd/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>biological-sciences</Tag>
<Tag>cahss</Tag>
<Tag>campus-life</Tag>
<Tag>cards</Tag>
<Tag>chemistry</Tag>
<Tag>cnms</Tag>
<Tag>coeit</Tag>
<Tag>computer-science</Tag>
<Tag>feature</Tag>
<Tag>ges</Tag>
<Tag>humancentered-computing</Tag>
<Tag>icare</Tag>
<Tag>imda</Tag>
<Tag>information-systems</Tag>
<Tag>joseph-beuys</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>mathematics</Tag>
<Tag>political-science</Tag>
<Tag>psychology</Tag>
<Tag>science-and-tech</Tag>
<Tag>sds</Tag>
<Tag>spring-2024</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>1</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Thu, 30 May 2024 10:42:29 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Thu, 30 May 2024 10:42:29 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142250" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142250">
<Title>UMBC&#8217;s College of Engineering and Information Technology aligns with UBalt&#8217;s Merrick School of Business to deliver enhanced degrees</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/UMBC-Campus-drone2020-0499-150x150.jpg" alt="Aerial view of UMBC campus and Baltimore skyline." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p>An agreement between the College of Engineering and Information Technology at UMBC and The University of Baltimore’s Merrick School of Business will offer students from both institutions enhanced opportunities for their graduate-level degrees and future careers. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>UMBC students may apply credits from UMBC’s M.S. in Engineering Management, Post-Baccalaureate Graduate Certificate in Project Management, or the Post-Baccalaureate Graduate Certificate in Engineering Management to UBalt’s MBA. UBalt students may apply credits from the MBA program or the Post-Baccalaureate Graduate Certificate in Business Fundamentals to UMBC’s M.S. in Engineering Management. This collaborative effort to satisfy certain requirements for these programs is intended to increase the marketability of students at both institutions, as they build out their career paths in a growing number of fields that require multiple areas of focus.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>A candidate for an engineering job, for example, may benefit from having educational experience in business. The MBA degree, a stalwart of business professionals across a wide range of fields, is made even more attractive when combined with graduate-level learning in a vital area such as project management.  </p>
    
    
    
    <p>Both UMBC and UBalt are members of the <a href="https://www.usmd.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">University System of Maryland</a>, the state’s longtime organization of 12 colleges and universities, three regional centers for higher education, and the system office, all working together to improve the quality of life in Maryland. The partnership maximizes the strengths at each of the USM sister institutions so those seeking managerial education at UMBC will have access to programs offered by an AACSB-accredited School of Business and those in the UBalt MBA may continue to evolve their professional goals with technical skill sets offered by the UMBC School of Engineering.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="600" height="336" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/BCdaytonightmobile.png" alt="A view of city building at night. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">The Thumel Business Center, home of the Merrick School of Business, at The University of Baltimore. (Photo courtesy of UBalt.)
    
    
    
    <p>“This agreement leverages the strengths of UMBC’s engineering program and UBalt’s business program to provide students with accelerated pathways to earn graduate degrees or certificates from both institutions,” says Dr. <strong>Raju Balakrishnan</strong>, dean of the Merrick School of Business. “This is another excellent example of how USM institutions collaborate to provide students with even more enhanced educational opportunities.”</p>
    
    
    
    <p>UMBCs acting dean of the College of Engineering and Information Technology <strong>Anupam Joshi</strong> adds, “We are excited to provide students from both institutions additional options to grow and acquire valuable knowledge and skills. We also look forward to exploring new ways to expand this partnership.”</p>
    
    
    
    <p>Admission into these collaborative courses is straightforward:</p>
    
    
    
    <ul>
    <li>UMBC students must be enrolled in or have completed an M.S. in Engineering Management or Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Engineering Management or Project Management at UMBC. These UMBC students may apply to either or both of the UBalt programs in the final semester of their respective programs and will be subject to standard application procedures. <br>
    </li>
    
    
    
    <li>Similarly, UBalt students will have to be enrolled in the MBA or the Graduate Certificate in Business Fundamentals and may apply to any of the UMBC programs in the final semester of their respective programs and will be subject to standard application procedures.<br>
    </li>
    
    
    
    <li>Both UBalt and UMBC will accept up to 12 transfer credits of the other institution’s courses.</li>
    </ul>
    
    
    
    <p>The introduction of the new collaboration is expected to be available to applicants in Fall 2024.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>For further details, visit UBalt’s <a href="https://www.ubalt.edu/merrick/graduate-programs/mba/special-programs/ubalt_umbc.cfm" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">page</a>.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>Learn more about the <a href="https://www.ubalt.edu/merrick/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Merrick School of Business</a> at The University of Baltimore.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>Learn more about the <a href="https://coeit.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">College of Engineering and Information Technology</a> at UMBC.</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>An agreement between the College of Engineering and Information Technology at UMBC and The University of Baltimore’s Merrick School of Business will offer students from both institutions enhanced...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/quick-posts/umbc-ubalt-enhanced-degree-options/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142250/guest@my.umbc.edu/a15c6427e429e269f682df3dbcec6081/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>coeit</Tag>
<Tag>news</Tag>
<Tag>quick-post</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>0</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Thu, 30 May 2024 09:56:26 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Thu, 30 May 2024 09:56:26 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142344" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142344">
<Title>The Senior Class</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/JB-Erickson-feature-CoverSpread-UMBC-at-Erickson-Charlestown24-7385-1-150x150.jpg" alt="Seniors sitting together in a circle, clapping hands while listening to a saxophone player" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p><strong>Retrievers for life, that’s UMBC’s promise, and a  group of residents at Charlestown’s senior living community are keeping their end of the bargain. Located two miles away from UMBC’s Catonsville campus, 60 or so retired and current faculty, staff, alumni, and friends at Charlestown are enjoying the ongoing cultural and educational perks of the two institutions. Several of these “Friends of UMBC” are laying the groundwork for continued exchange and connection—jazz concerts, classes about gender and sexuality, high-profile speakers—leaving a legacy for future generations to follow.</strong></p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="622" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/RetrieversForLifeFlag.png" alt='Gold flag graphic reading "retrievers for life"' style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="662" height="680" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/SeniorClass1.png" alt="Art Johnson, professor emeritus, enjoys a jazz concert at Charlestown." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><em>Art Johnson, professor emeritus, enjoys a jazz concert at Charlestown.</em>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>Around the café tables, heads are bobbing in rhythm tonight.<br><br>A duo of UMBC jazz students—<strong>Henry Smith</strong> ’24, on alto saxophone, and <strong>Leo Hickman</strong> ’27, on electric mandolin—are deep into their own takes on jazz standards. “Caravan,” “Misty,” and “There is No Greater Love” pour jauntily from their instruments.<br> <br>The seniors here at <a href="https://www.google.com/aclk?sa=l&amp;ai=DChcSEwiHm5-2u8eGAxWKXUcBHaRdAewYABAAGgJxdQ&amp;ase=2&amp;gclid=CjwKCAjwvIWzBhAlEiwAHHWgvSRw6HCcxIFUHmQSQujVjooEokoeu1blXenViRjfHyA8jA0RsAoT3RoC9SgQAvD_BwE&amp;sig=AOD64_0bcxuzi2Z6X-YDFLgST6ifpRg_zA&amp;q&amp;nis=4&amp;adurl&amp;ved=2ahUKEwiY95e2u8eGAxUwF1kFHdE4DZQQ0Qx6BAgMEAM" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Charlestown Senior Living</a> know those tunes. Every song the UMBC jazz duo played was composed long before the student musicians were born, but just in the sweet spot for the audience. In the café where many have just eaten their crab soup and burgers for dinner, more than 100 Charlestown residents, including at least six who have tight connections to UMBC, clapped for the efforts of the young jazz players. <br><br>After the two finished playing “All of Me,” the crowd erupted in applause. <br><br>“That was ‘All of Me,’” Smith said into the microphone. “I feel like lots of you know that one. We’re having a great time playing for you. This is super fun!”<br><br>By 8 p.m. the crowd was stuffing dollar bills and fivers into the musicians’ tip jar by the mic and in paper bags held by volunteers at each exit. Then the seniors headed back to their apartments at the end of long corridors and in different buildings, very much like college dorms for older folks. </p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Strengthening Connections</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>A dedicated group of nearly 60 retired and current faculty and staff, alumni, or relatives have formed to promote connections between UMBC and Charlestown, a sprawling senior community with 2,000 residents. Thanks to their efforts, UMBC professors are teaching classes at the senior living community, Charlestown residents are traveling to UMBC for events, and  helping the senior community’s restaurant staff with scholarship applications, funded by Charlestown residents, to UMBC and other Maryland colleges. <br><br>“That’s what I’m trying to do here, make connections,” said <strong>Art Johnson</strong>, provost emeritus who retired in 2019 from his position as political science professor and director of the Sondheim Scholars program. He moved to Charlestown in 2022 and since then, like a first-year student in search of college social groups, he has been indefatigably recruiting residents to join the Friends of UMBC at Charlestown.<br><br>“It helps maintain my connection to UMBC and lets me brag a little bit about UMBC,” Johnson said, laughing. “I meet people I wouldn’t have met otherwise. As provost, I used to promote UMBC all over. This is just an extension of that.”<br><br>Johnson met Lucy McKean on the bocce court, learned one of her kids went to UMBC, and reeled her into the group. <br><br>“Any connection will do,” Johnson said. “That’s how you build a long mailing list.”</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="600" height="600" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/ArtJohnsonQuote.png" alt="Quote reading, “It helps maintain my connection and lets me brag a little bit about UMBC. I meet people I wouldn’t have met otherwise. As provost, I used to promote UMBC all over. This is just an extension of that.” - Art Johnson" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>Sitting at a dinner table on the Charlestown campus, McKean and Johnson laughed together. Thanks to the Friends of UMBC group, she’s now attending jazz concerts, which she never thought she would do.<br><br>The idea for a formal-ish group sprang from a walk that Johnson and <strong>Sam Lomonaco</strong>, computer science and electrical engineering professor, took around Charlestown in the fall of 2022. They wanted to create a web of connections between UMBC and Charlestown. <br><br>Lomonaco, who has lived at Charlestown for three years, still teaches at UMBC. His commute is nicely short, he said, and having a partnership between UMBC and Charlestown offers “a good chance to do things together. I meet a lot of interesting people I would not have met otherwise. And,” he said with a grin, “I’ve gotten interested in jazz.”<br><br>Johnson and Lomonaco started small, with a social for UMBC-connected folks at Charlestown. They’ve grown to arrange trips to programs by UMBC’s arts and culture departments, as well as the Wisdom Institute (the association for retired UMBC faculty and staff), and those monthly jazz concerts. As well, Johnson and others publish a newsletter and are recruiting UMBC faculty to teach courses at Charlestown through ELLIC (Elderhostel’s Lifelong Learning Institute at Charlestown), including classes on galaxies, genes, and gender. <br><br>“Art has been a binder, keeping us together,” said <strong>Bernice De Bels</strong> ’76, English, the first Black honors graduate at UMBC, who later worked in the foreign language department and now lives at Charlestown. “With UMBC we should explore what we have to offer them and what they have to offer us.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Keeping Memory Alive</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="663" height="680" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/SeniorClass2.png" alt="Diane Lee hugs Pamela Morgan, the former director of the Office of Field Experiences and Clinical Practice in UMBC’s education department and a Wisdom Institute Board Member." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><em>Diane Lee hugs Pamela Morgan, the former director of the Office of Field Experiences and Clinical Practice in UMBC’s education department and a Wisdom Institute Board Member.</em>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>Of the many courses offered at Charlestown’s ELLIC program, nine are taught by UMBC faculty. That’s not a coincidence. Though the connections between Charlestown and UMBC have been sporadic, the institutions do have history. <br><br><strong>John Erickson</strong>, who founded Erickson Living, which owns Charlestown, has long worked with UMBC to promote the study of getting older. Through joint efforts of Erickson and then-president <strong>Freeman Hrabowski</strong>, in 2004 the state funded the <a href="https://erickson.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Erickson School of Aging Studies</a> at UMBC, and Erickson Living donated $5 million for the school’s development.<br><br><strong>Jeff Watson</strong>, who is on the faculty for the Erickson School of Aging Studies and serves as Erickson’s director of operations, also researches geriatric cognition.<br><br>“The literature and growing academic consensus is that whatever is good for the heart is good for the lungs is good for the brain,” Watson said. “Thus a healthy lifestyle, reducing inflammation and injury, while increasing physical and cognitive strength, and engaging in life, builds better brain health.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>Erickson researchers have published a study in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry testing UCLA Longevity Center researchers’ findings about memory fitness on two of Erickson’s campuses, Riderwood and Oak Crest. Watson said they found that “eating wisely, exercising daily, learning consistently, relaxing meaningfully, and connecting socially” is optimal for a healthy lifestyle for seniors.  <br><br>The Friends of UMBC are all about learning and socializing while they’re matchmaking between UMBC and Charlestown. For years, Johnson said, UMBC talked about collaborating with Charlestown, but it never really manifested to the extent they envisioned.<br><br>“One of our long-term goals is to try to bring the two institutions closer together,” Johnson said. “We could cooperate on issues: sustainability, local transportation, good health care…. We talked about it years ago when I was at UMBC, but it never happened.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Same Goals, From Different Directions</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>UMBC’s <a href="https://wisdom.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Wisdom Institute</a> is trying to accomplish the same community-building as the UMBC group at the senior village. But now, they’re working together.<br><br>Johnson, who serves on the Wisdom Institute’s board, is the hub, said <strong>Diane Lee</strong>, director of the UMBC organization for retirees. <br><br>“He brilliantly brought people together,” Lee said. “What a wonderful way to reconnect with these folks.” <br><br>The Wisdom Institute is printing extra copies of its newsletters for distribution at Charlestown, and for a recent event, the institute rented out the Charlestown bus to bring UMBC-curious residents to a lunch and keynote by WJZ-TV anchor Denise Koch. The institute plans to invite Charlestown residents to other events, including observatory tours in UMBC’s Physics Building, monthly lunches, discussions, and concerts. <br><br>“We really want to forge this tie,” Lee said. “We like the idea of reciprocity.”</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="600" height="600" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/DianeLeeQuote.png" alt='Quote reading, "We’re trying to capture the spirit, to continue that sense of self and community and the kind of work we did together. UMBC was not just a campus. We talked about one another as family." — Diane Lee' style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>For 30 years, Lee taught at UMBC in the education department and worked in the administration. “I came as a visiting assistant professor with no intention of staying. But it was an exciting place and an exciting time to be there.”<br><br>She, like many of the longtime UMBC staff and faculty who now live at Charlestown, helped build UMBC from the ground up into the institution it is today. <br><br>“It’s a wonderful place to be,” Lee said. The work was demanding but energizing, she said. “And people cared. We’re trying to capture the spirit, to continue that sense of self and community and the kind of work we did together. UMBC was not just a campus. We talked about one another as family.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Dream Students</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="662" height="680" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/SeniorClass3.png" alt="Donna Martin, Kate Drabinski, and students Marcus Ross, Sage Zoz, and August Wichman
    pose together after a class about gender and sexuality through the Enjoy Lifelong Learning in
    Charlestown program. Photo courtesy of Drabinski." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><em>Donna Martin, Kate Drabinski, and students Marcus Ross, Sage Zoz, and August Wichman pose together after a class about gender and sexuality through the Enjoy Lifelong Learning in Charlestown program. Photo courtesy of Drabinski.</em>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p><strong>Kate Drabinski</strong>, principal lecturer in gender and women’s and sexuality studies, has visited Charlestown eight times to teach over three years. She jokes that if she teaches two more classes, she’ll earn a punch card for a free meal at Charlestown’s restaurant.<br><br>“It’s been some of the most valuable teaching I’ve done,” Drabinski said of the senior students learning through the ELLIC program, Enjoy Lifelong Learning in Charlestown. “They are rapt, they take notes, they ask questions. It’s a dream setup.”<br><br>On a spring Tuesday, Drabinski brought UMBC students who identify as gay, transgender, and nonbinary to the senior living community to tell their coming out stories, along with their struggles and joys around gender and sexuality. <br><br>“It’s been really moving for us, and also for the residents, to make these connections,” Drabinski said.<br><br>One student, who performs in drag shows, grew up on the same block as one of the residents, Drabinski said. The resident stood up and said she was proud of the student, Drabinski said, “for being brave and sharing her story.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>At least one of the Charlestown residents has a nonbinary grandchild, Drabinski said. “They probably feel uncomfortable asking their grandchild these questions,” she continued, but were curious and asked many questions of the students without the fear of rejection from a family member.<br><br>And she asked the students a question in front of the residents: “What do you wish your grandparents had said to you when you told them your coming out story? They said, ‘I want you to be part of my life—I trust you and this is a gift I’m giving.’”<br><br>They also discussed the generational misunderstandings, Drabinski said, “hot-button issues.” One resident asked why drag queens were reading stories at libraries. Students were worried about the question, but Drabinski said she maneuvered the fear in the room and, ultimately, they had a “fantastic discussion, the kind of discussion you only have when you have dedicated intergenerational space.”<br><br>Drabinski said her students came away from the interaction enriched. “Just because people are old doesn’t mean they are hostile. It was a huge benefit to students to get to practice telling their stories, to build confidence, and to learn from the questions the seniors are asking. It was a really positive experience.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Familiar Tunes in a New Way</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>Now that he’s retired, Johnson has time to fulfill the goal of bringing UMBC and Charlestown closer. <br><br>One evening before the jazz concert, Johnson pulled together members of his group of UMBC folks to chat in the atrium of one of Charlestown’s buildings. <br><br><strong>Pat Bettridge</strong>, who came to UMBC in 1966 and did graduate work in English, was married to English professor <strong>William Bettridge</strong>, and remembers UMBC in the 1960s as “a hole in the ground.” Bettridge, who has lived at Charlestown for 11 years, helped bring UMBC artists, dancers and theater productions to the senior living community over the years. <br><br>“It’s a good idea to get us together, to continue what we started 10 years ago,” Bettridge said.<br><br>Sebastian Petix, organizer of Charlestown’s jazz club and a friend of the Friends of UMBC, has worked with <strong>Matt Belzer</strong>, senior lecturer in jazz studies at UMBC, to bring the jazz groups to Charlestown. Petix, who played piano and trumpet and organized concert series before retirement, formed the Charlestown Jazz Club, and quickly signed onto the idea of bringing Retriever musicians onto Charlestown’s campus. </p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="662" height="662" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/SeniorClass4.png" alt="Art Johnson, Diane Lee, and Denise Koch chat with community members at the Wisdom Institute’s Signature Event in April 2024" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"><em>Art Johnson, Diane Lee, and Denise Koch chat with community members at the Wisdom Institute’s Signature Event in April 2024</em>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“The audiences have really loved them,” Petix said. His jazz club, including some UMBC members, are planning a trip to see the UMBC semester’s final jazz recitals.<br><br>Valerie Woolston, whose husband Charles started as UMBC’s admissions director in 1968, helps edit the Friends of UMBC newsletter. She’s attended every jazz concert.<br><br>“They’re terrific,” Woolston said, nodding at the duo warming up in front of the crowd. “It’s really great to see how young people develop. They write their own music,” she said, almost as proud as a grandparent.<br><br>“I’m really pulled to UMBC,” said Woolston. “I’m really proud of it.”<br>Then she settled down with friends to watch the students play old, familiar tunes in a new way. <br><br>“I’m really pulled to UMBC,” said Woolston. “I’m really proud of it.”<br><br>Then she settled down with friends to watch the students play old, familiar tunes in a new way.</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Retrievers for life, that’s UMBC’s promise, and a  group of residents at Charlestown’s senior living community are keeping their end of the bargain. Located two miles away from UMBC’s Catonsville...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/the-senior-class-charlestown-cultural-exchange/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142344/guest@my.umbc.edu/355422fcb02e43ca3b6d40c2be3c039e/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>aging-studies</Tag>
<Tag>campus-life</Tag>
<Tag>erickson</Tag>
<Tag>feature</Tag>
<Tag>gwss</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>music</Tag>
<Tag>spring-2024</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Tag>wisdom-institute</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>0</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 16:34:41 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 16:34:41 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142391" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142391">
<Title>A Journey of Growth</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/opening-image-fulbright-feature-150x150.jpg" alt="A collage of images showing students traveling with mentors and teaching with children" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p><strong>International travel offers ample opportunities to stretch yourself—one minute you may be the expert and the next, completely clueless about how something works. Retrievers currently in the Fulbright U.S. Student Program—teaching English or researching around the globe—find themselves oscillating between their teaching and student roles on a daily or hourly basis. By engaging their host communities through openness and cultural humility (and many shared cups of tea or coffee), these Fulbrighters are finding their balance along the way.</strong></p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="500" height="629" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-2-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Milan Richardson at Taroko National Park, one of many stops while traveling around Taiwan on a scooter with new friends." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>All eyes are on <strong>Milan Richardson</strong> ’23 as she helps her co-teacher keep score in a Jeopardy-like game her students are playing. Richardson teaches English to several classes of first through sixth-grade students at Jinsha Elementary School in Kinmen County, Taiwan. As she completes the Mandarin character for the numeral 5, a wave of giggles and chatter flows through the room. <br><br>Similar to a U.S. tally—four strokes and a strike though, the Mandarin character has 5 strokes total and needs to be written a certain way to represent 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5. “The students were so confused because I wrote the character strokes in the wrong order,” says Richardson, who is used to solving complex math as a Meyerhoff Scholar having earned a bachelor’s degree in bioinformatics and computational biology and minors in computer science and modern, languages, linguistics, and intercultural communication. <br><br>“I wanted to write the character correctly. I asked, and they showed me the proper order to write the strokes,” says Richardson, a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant (ETA). “They started clapping once I got it right. This was one of the many cool moments where my students were able to teach me.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>While she may be new to teaching in Taiwan, Richardson brings with her four years as an English and math tutor and a minor in Mandarin. “Taiwan was so different from any place I’ve ever been to. I was overwhelmed at first,” says Richardson. “I like it a lot, now. In my second month, I applied for a scooter license. Now I ride around the island and have taken my scooter other places on trips.”<br><br>Diplomas earned. Visas in hand. Vaccines completed. Luggage packed. Destination confirmed. Last summer, UMBC’s eight participants in the 2023 – 2024 Fulbright U.S. Student Program checked off all the important items on their to-do lists. The only thing left was to get to their placements on islands and in landlocked countries, cities, and countrysides across East Asia and Eastern Europe. It’s easier written than done. To adapt well to a new community, job, language, and culture, they must practice the art of humility and flexibility as their roles shift regularly from teacher to student.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="454" height="626" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/image-3-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Milan at the local lantern festival celebration in Taiwan." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Leading the Fulbright charge</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="832" height="665" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/3-Milan.png" alt="English Teaching Assistants and others from Kimmen and Penghu (two of Taiwan's islands) at a Thanksgiving event. Photo courtesy of Kara Gavin." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>All technicalities aside, the Fulbright experience is the beginning of building an international network of teachers and researchers who share the diversity and possibility of the U.S. with the world. In return, across the globe, communities welcome the next generation of leaders into their cities, neighborhoods, schools, and homes to share their country’s history, innovations, and culture. Since Fulbright’s inception in 1946, these reciprocal acts of kindness have created multiple paths forward to lifelong worldwide collaboration and understanding based on the simple act of giving someone different than yourself a chance.</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“The Fulbright Program truly demonstrates public diplomacy in action,” says <strong>Brian Souders</strong>, M.A.’19, TESOL, and Ph.D. ’09, language, literacy, and culture, the associate director of global learning at UMBC’s Center for Global Engagement. In this role, Souders, who received a 2023 Fulbright International Education Administrator award to Germany, has led hundreds of Retrievers through the Fulbright application process as UMBC’s Fulbright Program advisor. “Whether in the classroom as teachers, students, or researchers, recipients learn about the world as much as they share what it means to be from the U.S. and UMBC alumni,” says Souders. <br><br>Thanks to Souders’ guidance, UMBC is one of 57 doctoral universities nationwide and three in Maryland to receive a Fulbright Top Producing Institution designation for 2023 – 2024, for the third time in the last five years. In the last decade, more than 80 UMBC alumni have received  Fulbright awards. Out of the 10 Retrievers who received a 2023 – 2024 Fulbright, eight are currently placed internationally, seven are ETAs and one is on a research grant.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <h2>The hard work of play</h2>
    
    
    
    <p>There are U.S. Fulbright student scholars in more than 100 countries worldwide. Three Retrievers were placed in Taiwan—they keep in touch regularly, see each other at ETA trainings, and are planning to travel together during their Fulbright year. But they all arrived in Taiwan separately and faced different challenges settling in. <br><br>“I arrived in Taiwan and immediately changed my plans because the airline lost my luggage,” says Humanities Scholar <strong>Kara Gavin</strong> ’20, English. She was grateful to have a carry-on. “It was chaotic. I was taking it all in,” says Gavin. A day and a 50-minute plane ride later, she arrived in Penghu County, Taiwan, an archipelago of about 90 islands between China and the main island of Taiwan. “The little beach town is in its own little world,” says Gavin. “The smell of the sand gave me comfort.”<br><br>Gavin teaches beginner English at two local junior high schools. New to Asia and Mandarin, Gavin’s thinking cap is on 24 – 7, including learning Mandarin in between teaching classes. “Living independently for the first time is hard on its own, but doing it in a foreign country is a whole other ball game,” says Gavin. “I’m acquiring many new life skills that will last me a lifetime.” </p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="453" height="606" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-5-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Kara Gavin at the Fulbright Taiwan English Language Teaching Program for first-year grantees in April 2024" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>One of those is sympathizing with her students and anyone learning a new language and culture. “I teach the English pronunciation and spelling of a word,” says Gavin. “Then, they like to share the Mandarin equivalent with me. It’s all about patience, balance, and trust.” She also models intercultural teamwork by developing and teaching lessons with her bilingual (Mandarin/English) Taiwanese co-teacher to foster student engagement and enrichment.<br><br>For Fulbright Scholars, it is equally important to engage with communities beyond the classroom. When they apply for the grant, the Fulbright Program asks them to develop ideas to share their passions and skills in a community project. For Gavin, this meant adding a little drama to have a lot of fun. As a performing artist, Gavin knows the theatre can be a powerful community-building outlet. “I wanted to encourage students and other community members to express themselves and share their culture with me and others,” says Gavin. <br><br>She found a kindred spirit in a professor at a local university. They formed a drama club at the university for English language learners at all levels to explore American play formats with Taiwanese traditions and histories.“Writing original bilingual plays, in English and Mandarin, based on folktales about island traditions is creating an artistic and fun cultural exchange and understanding outside of my ETA duties,” says Gavin. </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <h2>Finding the right pace</h2>
    
    
    
    <p>For fellow Humanities Scholar <strong>Nailah-Benā Chambers</strong> ’23, global studies, a Fulbright award to Taiwan was a natural next step. Chambers began learning Mandarin and all things Taiwanese in sixth grade at a Taiwanese Mandarin language immersion school in her hometown of Richmond, Virginia. As her Mandarin improved, she tutored other English speakers. This oscillating pattern of being a student and a teacher makes Chambers adaptable and persistent, she says. <br><br>But it hasn’t always been easy. When she first visited Taipei, Taiwan, in the spring of 2023 on a Mandarin language-intensive study abroad program, “I was so confident. I walked into a 7-Eleven to shop. No one could understand me,” says Chambers. “It was a bit embarrassing. Even with my language and cultural skills, I had a long way to go to mastering Mandarin.”<br><br>Now on her Fulbright ETA grant, Chambers arrived on solid ground, both culturally and linguistically. “I felt such a sense of calm and familiarity. Taiwan is so welcoming,” says Chambers. “It calms you down. Things are much slower here than in the U.S.” Soon enough, Chambers was balancing classrooms at Huludun Elementary and Fu Chun Elementary in Taichung City, on the main island of Taiwan, with students at both schools on the extreme spectrum of English proficiency.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="588" height="447" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Chambers-Taiwan.png" alt="Nailah-Bena Chambers with her host family at a shrimping restaurant where you can catch, cook and eat the shrimp." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>The upside of working with proficient English language learners is connecting on more advanced topics and sticking to Fulbright’s English-only immersion model. At one of her schools, the students are beginning English language learners, and the administrators only speak Mandarin. “My experience as a bilingual teacher and learner with a high level of understanding of the local language and culture has helped with classroom management and fostering powerful connections with students and administrators,” says Chambers. “It also helps to advance their grasp of the nuances of American English, especially when there are gray areas or misunderstandings.”  </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Keeping your ears open</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="427" height="577" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-7-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Paul Ocone in front of a display of shikishi, or illustrated boards, at a fan event in April." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>Watching anime, reading manga, (Japanese graphic novels), and participating in their fandom inspired <strong>Paul Ocone</strong> ’22, individualized study, a Linehan Artist Scholar, to research these subjects and learn Japanese. “I have deeply engaged in fan social life and communities—from leading an anime club to participating in and running conventions to moderating online communities—my affinity for and interest in anime fan spaces runs deep,” says Ocone. Part of Ocone’s observations include witnessing how some fan subcultures limit their membership in fear that a broader fanbase would weaken their subculture identity. In contrast, he says, other fan subcultures are more flexible while maintaining their identity.<br><br>Interested in adding to his initial research in U.S. fan spaces, Ocone is now at the epicenter of anime and manga culture as a Fulbright Student Researcher doing anthropological research with Morikawa Kaichirō, a leading scholar in this field at Meiji University’s School of Global Japanese Studies in Tokyo, also home to the Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library of Manga and Subcultures.</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“I have had some amazing experiences participating in anime pilgrimage or anime tourism, including learning much from other fans and benefitting from their generosity,” says Ocone. “My Japanese is conversational—sometimes it’s challenging to understand specialized topics, but this has not deterred me from adding anime and manga tourism as a second research project.” In January, Ocone presented his work at the Popular Culture Tourism Stakeholders Summit in Japan.<br><br>Ocone is a sort of tourist himself, enjoying various aspects of Japanese pop culture. The daily musicality of Tokyo teaches him about enjoying the rhythm of the day. “Each train station plays a unique melody when the train departs,” says Ocone. These melodies or “hassha merodii,” are catchy and echo around in his brain like the convenience store jingles that also greet customers. “I was happily surprised when I heard a loudspeaker playing a symphony in my neighborhood,” says Ocone. “Another one played the following day and the next. I learned this was a daily sunset ritual.” He knows these sound experiences will play in his head long after returning to the U.S.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Learning new languages</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>This is not the first time <strong>David Bullman</strong> ’22, ancient studies, visited North Macedonia. He first went in 1995 as a performing musician and public affairs representative for the U.S. Army.<br><br>“North Macedonia was very different coming out of the Cold War,” says Bullman. “The infrastructure and general state of repair of public spaces and businesses is much better than I recall from that time.”<br><br>Now, as an ETA, Bullman teaches British civilization and American civilization in addition to three different levels of English at the University of Totovo in the Republic of North Macedonia, a landlocked country north of Greece. In Totovo, students begin learning English in elementary school and are fluent by the time they reach college. “I thought I would be teaching English basics,” says Bullman, “but it’s been great to teach a complex subject in the context of where my students live.” <br><br>His students are equally glad to help him with the local language. Macedonian and Albanian are the country’s two official languages. Bullman began learning some key Macedonian phrases in preparation for his trip. However, Albanian is the preferred language in Tetovo. After traveling with the Army to more than 15 countries on three continents, Bullman is used to rapidly switching gears and accepting help.<br><br>He eagerly takes on the student role when it comes to learning about new foods. Bullman’s apartment faces the Hapësira Socio-Kulturore Tetovë, a community center where locals and the nearby Peace Corps Volunteers sometimes organize activities, like an ajvar-making gathering. Ajvar is a delicacy across the Balkans made every fall. It’s a tradition passed down through centuries with many recipe variations. “Ajvar is made by charring red bell peppers that are then peeled, minced, seasoned, and cooked for hours,” says Bullman. It boils down to a relish that can be preserved for months, but locals tell Bullman that’s rare because it’s too good to keep for even one week. After participating in the preparation and getting to take home a few jars,  Bullman agrees with the locals. Ajvar is now his go-to condiment on eggs, pasta, toast—anything goes.<br><br>Albanian and cooking are not the only languages Bullman tapped into while in Tetovo. As a lifelong clarinet player, Bullman hoped to create a musical exchange with local musicians. The opportunity presented itself when the dean of the Faculty of Art wanted to celebrate Thanksgiving. Bullman collaborated with the music faculty, the orchestra director, and students to create a concert of six songs. “I’m glad I returned to North Macedonia. The people are as warm and friendly as I remembered them to be,” says Bullman. “I wanted to come back and experience it myself again.”</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="435" height="981" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-8-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="First image: Ajvar, a red pepper relish native to North Macedonia. Second image: David Bullman at an Iftar dinner on the last night of Ramadan." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Tapping into curiosity</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="412" height="578" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-9-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Sianna Serio at Bojnice Castle, a medieval castle in Slovakia." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>On her way to her Fulbright placement, <strong>Sianna Serio</strong> ’23, computer science, went city hopping. “I was headed to Žilina, Slovakia, east of Austria and south of Poland,” says Serio. “I flew into Vienna, Austria, then I took a one-hour bus ride crossing Austria’s eastern border into Slovakia to get to Bratislava, the capital.“ There she met other ETAs for orientation. “A week later, I hopped on a two-hour train ride to my teaching placement in Žilina and I met my wonderful mentor, Maria Veršova, who became my second mom.”<br><br>Serio teaches at the Hotel Academy, Žilina. The academy focuses on hotel management, gastronomy, and tourism. “My students are beginning English language learners,” says Serio. “I teach what the class is interested in, like American pop culture, because they rarely meet a native English speaker.” During outings with her students, they ask about a wide range of topics. “There are many topics that I would not have thought to cover if it were not for time spent outside of the classroom,” says Serio, “Some of those conversations became formal lessons, like the lesson on the three branches of the U. S. government.”<br><br>Serio appreciates her students’ curiosity. She tapped into her love of website development and design to improve her students’ confidence in writing and speaking English and prepare for their Maturita exam, a national high school exit exam. “Some of my students are helping me design a class webpage for them where I will showcase their class and post some of their practice writing in English,” says Serio. “These posts will include topics covered in the Maturita exam, information about their school, and answers to questions about Slovakia.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>Serio’s mentor Maria Veršova, head of the English department, is her motivation. She guides her through lesson planning, class schedules, and the challenges of relocating to a new country. “When my original housing plans fell through, Maria found housing for me five minutes from her house,” says Serio. “She helped me find health insurance and open a bank account. Her husband set up my internet.” They have welcomed Serio almost daily into their home for dinner, tea, coffee, or wine. Serio is a gracious guest and lent her graphic design expertise to help Veršova design invitation cards for her 50th birthday party. Veršova tells Serio she will always have a place to stay in Žilina.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Fulbright: The next generation</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>Teaching has defined the last decade for <strong>Tiffany Powell</strong>, a master’s student in UMBC’s TESOL program, a passion she invested in as an English language learner teacher in Seoul and in Miryang City, South Korea, for five years, and in Florida this past year. Now, she is in Iași, Romania, southwest of Ukraine, at the Alexandru Ioan Cuza University teaching American studies. Powell is committed to bridging culture, community, and belonging by bringing technology into the classroom. <br><br>Powell also decided to bring the research and cultural understanding closer to home by partnering with Romanian teachers to develop a five-part series on African American women’s history. “We talked about Black women in science in the context of the movie Hidden Figures and discussed Hollywood’s portrayal of Black life,” says Powell. The class is now creating a series on Romanian women. Helping students better understand the similarities and differences between U.S. and Romanian cultures has been an eye-opening experience for Powell.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="780" height="602" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-10-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Tiffany Powell with her American studies class" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>She sees the impact of a country formerly under communism. In Iași, sometimes the internet doesn’t work and, in her school, there are no clubs or student organizations to gain the skills needed to earn a Fulbright award. “My students have given me a new perspective. You may want to come in and make changes, but you must understand where they’re coming from. There is a saying in Iași, ‘It’s not impossible. It’s just difficult,’” says Powell. She is trying to help with the difficult part by leading Fulbright application and leadership workshops. <br><br>Powell, like the other Fulbrighters, will bring her experiences home with her and wherever she ends up teaching English next. When their Fulbright year ends, these Retriever ambassadors will find themselves as emissaries yet again, returning to their hometowns, sharing the good news of ajvar made in community, the freedom of a scooter ride along a Taiwanese beach, or the correct stroke order for writing the Mandarin number five. The lessons their students and host families passed along—including pausing to take a breath and appreciate their international successes small and large—will continue to form and shape the way they see the world.<br><br>“Having a flexible mindset and under-standing the historical context of your placement is key,” says Powell. “I carry myself as a U.S. representative. Living abroad teaches humility, adaptability, and open-mindedness to press on through challenging times.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>International travel offers ample opportunities to stretch yourself—one minute you may be the expert and the next, completely clueless about how something works. Retrievers currently in the...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/a-journey-of-growth/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142391/guest@my.umbc.edu/429a43e449ef9d4187b1ae1d4e63ca4e/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>alumni</Tag>
<Tag>ancient-studies</Tag>
<Tag>bioinformatics-and-computational-biology</Tag>
<Tag>cahss</Tag>
<Tag>cge</Tag>
<Tag>computer-science</Tag>
<Tag>education-abroad</Tag>
<Tag>english</Tag>
<Tag>feature</Tag>
<Tag>fulbright</Tag>
<Tag>global-studies</Tag>
<Tag>humanities</Tag>
<Tag>inds</Tag>
<Tag>linehan</Tag>
<Tag>llc</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>meyerhoff</Tag>
<Tag>spring-2024</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>5</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 14:32:52 -0400</PostedAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142404" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142404">
<Title>A Journey of Growth</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/opening-image-fulbright-feature-150x150.jpg" alt="A collage of images showing students traveling with mentors and teaching with children" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p><strong>International travel offers ample opportunities to stretch yourself—one minute you may be the expert and the next, completely clueless about how something works. Retrievers currently in the Fulbright U.S. Student Program—teaching English or researching around the globe—find themselves oscillating between their teaching and student roles on a daily or hourly basis. By engaging their host communities through openness and cultural humility (and many shared cups of tea or coffee), these Fulbrighters are finding their balance along the way.</strong></p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="500" height="629" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-2-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Milan Richardson at Taroko National Park, one of many stops while traveling around Taiwan on a scooter with new friends." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>All eyes are on <strong>Milan Richardson</strong> ’23 as she helps her co-teacher keep score in a Jeopardy-like game her students are playing. Richardson teaches English to several classes of first through sixth-grade students at Jinsha Elementary School in Kinmen County, Taiwan. As she completes the Mandarin character for the numeral 5, a wave of giggles and chatter flows through the room. <br><br>Similar to a U.S. tally—four strokes and a strike though, the Mandarin character has 5 strokes total and needs to be written a certain way to represent 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5. “The students were so confused because I wrote the character strokes in the wrong order,” says Richardson, who is used to solving complex math as a Meyerhoff Scholar having earned a bachelor’s degree in bioinformatics and computational biology and minors in computer science and modern, languages, linguistics, and intercultural communication. <br><br>“I wanted to write the character correctly. I asked, and they showed me the proper order to write the strokes,” says Richardson, a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant (ETA). “They started clapping once I got it right. This was one of the many cool moments where my students were able to teach me.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>While she may be new to teaching in Taiwan, Richardson brings with her four years as an English and math tutor and a minor in Mandarin. “Taiwan was so different from any place I’ve ever been to. I was overwhelmed at first,” says Richardson. “I like it a lot, now. In my second month, I applied for a scooter license. Now I ride around the island and have taken my scooter other places on trips.”<br><br>Diplomas earned. Visas in hand. Vaccines completed. Luggage packed. Destination confirmed. Last summer, UMBC’s eight participants in the 2023 – 2024 Fulbright U.S. Student Program checked off all the important items on their to-do lists. The only thing left was to get to their placements on islands and in landlocked countries, cities, and countrysides across East Asia and Eastern Europe. It’s easier written than done. To adapt well to a new community, job, language, and culture, they must practice the art of humility and flexibility as their roles shift regularly from teacher to student.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="454" height="626" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/image-3-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Milan at the local lantern festival celebration in Taiwan." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Leading the Fulbright charge</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="832" height="665" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/3-Milan.png" alt="English Teaching Assistants and others from Kimmen and Penghu (two of Taiwan's islands) at a Thanksgiving event. Photo courtesy of Kara Gavin." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>All technicalities aside, the Fulbright experience is the beginning of building an international network of teachers and researchers who share the diversity and possibility of the U.S. with the world. In return, across the globe, communities welcome the next generation of leaders into their cities, neighborhoods, schools, and homes to share their country’s history, innovations, and culture. Since Fulbright’s inception in 1946, these reciprocal acts of kindness have created multiple paths forward to lifelong worldwide collaboration and understanding based on the simple act of giving someone different than yourself a chance.</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“The Fulbright Program truly demonstrates public diplomacy in action,” says <strong>Brian Souders</strong>, M.A.’19, TESOL, and Ph.D. ’09, language, literacy, and culture, the associate director of global learning at UMBC’s Center for Global Engagement. In this role, Souders, who received a 2023 Fulbright International Education Administrator award to Germany, has led hundreds of Retrievers through the Fulbright application process as UMBC’s Fulbright Program advisor. “Whether in the classroom as teachers, students, or researchers, recipients learn about the world as much as they share what it means to be from the U.S. and UMBC alumni,” says Souders. <br><br>Thanks to Souders’ guidance, UMBC is one of 57 doctoral universities nationwide and three in Maryland to receive a Fulbright Top Producing Institution designation for 2023 – 2024, for the third time in the last five years. In the last decade, more than 80 UMBC alumni have received  Fulbright awards. Out of the 10 Retrievers who received a 2023 – 2024 Fulbright, eight are currently placed internationally, seven are ETAs and one is on a research grant.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <h2>The hard work of play</h2>
    
    
    
    <p>There are U.S. Fulbright student scholars in more than 100 countries worldwide. Three Retrievers were placed in Taiwan—they keep in touch regularly, see each other at ETA trainings, and are planning to travel together during their Fulbright year. But they all arrived in Taiwan separately and faced different challenges settling in. <br><br>“I arrived in Taiwan and immediately changed my plans because the airline lost my luggage,” says Humanities Scholar <strong>Kara Gavin</strong> ’20, English. She was grateful to have a carry-on. “It was chaotic. I was taking it all in,” says Gavin. A day and a 50-minute plane ride later, she arrived in Penghu County, Taiwan, an archipelago of about 90 islands between China and the main island of Taiwan. “The little beach town is in its own little world,” says Gavin. “The smell of the sand gave me comfort.”<br><br>Gavin teaches beginner English at two local junior high schools. New to Asia and Mandarin, Gavin’s thinking cap is on 24 – 7, including learning Mandarin in between teaching classes. “Living independently for the first time is hard on its own, but doing it in a foreign country is a whole other ball game,” says Gavin. “I’m acquiring many new life skills that will last me a lifetime.” </p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="453" height="606" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-5-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Kara Gavin at the Fulbright Taiwan English Language Teaching Program for first-year grantees in April 2024" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>One of those is sympathizing with her students and anyone learning a new language and culture. “I teach the English pronunciation and spelling of a word,” says Gavin. “Then, they like to share the Mandarin equivalent with me. It’s all about patience, balance, and trust.” She also models intercultural teamwork by developing and teaching lessons with her bilingual (Mandarin/English) Taiwanese co-teacher to foster student engagement and enrichment.<br><br>For Fulbright Scholars, it is equally important to engage with communities beyond the classroom. When they apply for the grant, the Fulbright Program asks them to develop ideas to share their passions and skills in a community project. For Gavin, this meant adding a little drama to have a lot of fun. As a performing artist, Gavin knows the theatre can be a powerful community-building outlet. “I wanted to encourage students and other community members to express themselves and share their culture with me and others,” says Gavin. <br><br>She found a kindred spirit in a professor at a local university. They formed a drama club at the university for English language learners at all levels to explore American play formats with Taiwanese traditions and histories.“Writing original bilingual plays, in English and Mandarin, based on folktales about island traditions is creating an artistic and fun cultural exchange and understanding outside of my ETA duties,” says Gavin. </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <h2>Finding the right pace</h2>
    
    
    
    <p>For fellow Humanities Scholar <strong>Nailah-Benā Chambers</strong> ’23, global studies, a Fulbright award to Taiwan was a natural next step. Chambers began learning Mandarin and all things Taiwanese in sixth grade at a Taiwanese Mandarin language immersion school in her hometown of Richmond, Virginia. As her Mandarin improved, she tutored other English speakers. This oscillating pattern of being a student and a teacher makes Chambers adaptable and persistent, she says. <br><br>But it hasn’t always been easy. When she first visited Taipei, Taiwan, in the spring of 2023 on a Mandarin language-intensive study abroad program, “I was so confident. I walked into a 7-Eleven to shop. No one could understand me,” says Chambers. “It was a bit embarrassing. Even with my language and cultural skills, I had a long way to go to mastering Mandarin.”<br><br>Now on her Fulbright ETA grant, Chambers arrived on solid ground, both culturally and linguistically. “I felt such a sense of calm and familiarity. Taiwan is so welcoming,” says Chambers. “It calms you down. Things are much slower here than in the U.S.” Soon enough, Chambers was balancing classrooms at Huludun Elementary and Fu Chun Elementary in Taichung City, on the main island of Taiwan, with students at both schools on the extreme spectrum of English proficiency.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="588" height="447" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Chambers-Taiwan.png" alt="Nailah-Bena Chambers with her host family at a shrimping restaurant where you can catch, cook and eat the shrimp." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>The upside of working with proficient English language learners is connecting on more advanced topics and sticking to Fulbright’s English-only immersion model. At one of her schools, the students are beginning English language learners, and the administrators only speak Mandarin. “My experience as a bilingual teacher and learner with a high level of understanding of the local language and culture has helped with classroom management and fostering powerful connections with students and administrators,” says Chambers. “It also helps to advance their grasp of the nuances of American English, especially when there are gray areas or misunderstandings.”  </p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Keeping your ears open</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="427" height="577" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-7-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Paul Ocone in front of a display of shikishi, or illustrated boards, at a fan event in April." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>Watching anime, reading manga, (Japanese graphic novels), and participating in their fandom inspired <strong>Paul Ocone</strong> ’22, individualized study, a Linehan Artist Scholar, to research these subjects and learn Japanese. “I have deeply engaged in fan social life and communities—from leading an anime club to participating in and running conventions to moderating online communities—my affinity for and interest in anime fan spaces runs deep,” says Ocone. Part of Ocone’s observations include witnessing how some fan subcultures limit their membership in fear that a broader fanbase would weaken their subculture identity. In contrast, he says, other fan subcultures are more flexible while maintaining their identity.<br><br>Interested in adding to his initial research in U.S. fan spaces, Ocone is now at the epicenter of anime and manga culture as a Fulbright Student Researcher doing anthropological research with Morikawa Kaichirō, a leading scholar in this field at Meiji University’s School of Global Japanese Studies in Tokyo, also home to the Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library of Manga and Subcultures.</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>“I have had some amazing experiences participating in anime pilgrimage or anime tourism, including learning much from other fans and benefitting from their generosity,” says Ocone. “My Japanese is conversational—sometimes it’s challenging to understand specialized topics, but this has not deterred me from adding anime and manga tourism as a second research project.” In January, Ocone presented his work at the Popular Culture Tourism Stakeholders Summit in Japan.<br><br>Ocone is a sort of tourist himself, enjoying various aspects of Japanese pop culture. The daily musicality of Tokyo teaches him about enjoying the rhythm of the day. “Each train station plays a unique melody when the train departs,” says Ocone. These melodies or “hassha merodii,” are catchy and echo around in his brain like the convenience store jingles that also greet customers. “I was happily surprised when I heard a loudspeaker playing a symphony in my neighborhood,” says Ocone. “Another one played the following day and the next. I learned this was a daily sunset ritual.” He knows these sound experiences will play in his head long after returning to the U.S.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Learning new languages</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>This is not the first time <strong>David Bullman</strong> ’22, ancient studies, visited North Macedonia. He first went in 1995 as a performing musician and public affairs representative for the U.S. Army.<br><br>“North Macedonia was very different coming out of the Cold War,” says Bullman. “The infrastructure and general state of repair of public spaces and businesses is much better than I recall from that time.”<br><br>Now, as an ETA, Bullman teaches British civilization and American civilization in addition to three different levels of English at the University of Totovo in the Republic of North Macedonia, a landlocked country north of Greece. In Totovo, students begin learning English in elementary school and are fluent by the time they reach college. “I thought I would be teaching English basics,” says Bullman, “but it’s been great to teach a complex subject in the context of where my students live.” <br><br>His students are equally glad to help him with the local language. Macedonian and Albanian are the country’s two official languages. Bullman began learning some key Macedonian phrases in preparation for his trip. However, Albanian is the preferred language in Tetovo. After traveling with the Army to more than 15 countries on three continents, Bullman is used to rapidly switching gears and accepting help.<br><br>He eagerly takes on the student role when it comes to learning about new foods. Bullman’s apartment faces the Hapësira Socio-Kulturore Tetovë, a community center where locals and the nearby Peace Corps Volunteers sometimes organize activities, like an ajvar-making gathering. Ajvar is a delicacy across the Balkans made every fall. It’s a tradition passed down through centuries with many recipe variations. “Ajvar is made by charring red bell peppers that are then peeled, minced, seasoned, and cooked for hours,” says Bullman. It boils down to a relish that can be preserved for months, but locals tell Bullman that’s rare because it’s too good to keep for even one week. After participating in the preparation and getting to take home a few jars,  Bullman agrees with the locals. Ajvar is now his go-to condiment on eggs, pasta, toast—anything goes.<br><br>Albanian and cooking are not the only languages Bullman tapped into while in Tetovo. As a lifelong clarinet player, Bullman hoped to create a musical exchange with local musicians. The opportunity presented itself when the dean of the Faculty of Art wanted to celebrate Thanksgiving. Bullman collaborated with the music faculty, the orchestra director, and students to create a concert of six songs. “I’m glad I returned to North Macedonia. The people are as warm and friendly as I remembered them to be,” says Bullman. “I wanted to come back and experience it myself again.”</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="435" height="981" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-8-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="First image: Ajvar, a red pepper relish native to North Macedonia. Second image: David Bullman at an Iftar dinner on the last night of Ramadan." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Tapping into curiosity</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <img width="412" height="578" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-9-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Sianna Serio at Bojnice Castle, a medieval castle in Slovakia." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <p>On her way to her Fulbright placement, <strong>Sianna Serio</strong> ’23, computer science, went city hopping. “I was headed to Žilina, Slovakia, east of Austria and south of Poland,” says Serio. “I flew into Vienna, Austria, then I took a one-hour bus ride crossing Austria’s eastern border into Slovakia to get to Bratislava, the capital.“ There she met other ETAs for orientation. “A week later, I hopped on a two-hour train ride to my teaching placement in Žilina and I met my wonderful mentor, Maria Veršova, who became my second mom.”<br><br>Serio teaches at the Hotel Academy, Žilina. The academy focuses on hotel management, gastronomy, and tourism. “My students are beginning English language learners,” says Serio. “I teach what the class is interested in, like American pop culture, because they rarely meet a native English speaker.” During outings with her students, they ask about a wide range of topics. “There are many topics that I would not have thought to cover if it were not for time spent outside of the classroom,” says Serio, “Some of those conversations became formal lessons, like the lesson on the three branches of the U. S. government.”<br><br>Serio appreciates her students’ curiosity. She tapped into her love of website development and design to improve her students’ confidence in writing and speaking English and prepare for their Maturita exam, a national high school exit exam. “Some of my students are helping me design a class webpage for them where I will showcase their class and post some of their practice writing in English,” says Serio. “These posts will include topics covered in the Maturita exam, information about their school, and answers to questions about Slovakia.”</p>
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>Serio’s mentor Maria Veršova, head of the English department, is her motivation. She guides her through lesson planning, class schedules, and the challenges of relocating to a new country. “When my original housing plans fell through, Maria found housing for me five minutes from her house,” says Serio. “She helped me find health insurance and open a bank account. Her husband set up my internet.” They have welcomed Serio almost daily into their home for dinner, tea, coffee, or wine. Serio is a gracious guest and lent her graphic design expertise to help Veršova design invitation cards for her 50th birthday party. Veršova tells Serio she will always have a place to stay in Žilina.</p>
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    <h2>Fulbright: The next generation</h2>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <p>Teaching has defined the last decade for <strong>Tiffany Powell</strong>, a master’s student in UMBC’s TESOL program, a passion she invested in as an English language learner teacher in Seoul and in Miryang City, South Korea, for five years, and in Florida this past year. Now, she is in Iași, Romania, southwest of Ukraine, at the Alexandru Ioan Cuza University teaching American studies. Powell is committed to bridging culture, community, and belonging by bringing technology into the classroom. <br><br>Powell also decided to bring the research and cultural understanding closer to home by partnering with Romanian teachers to develop a five-part series on African American women’s history. “We talked about Black women in science in the context of the movie Hidden Figures and discussed Hollywood’s portrayal of Black life,” says Powell. The class is now creating a series on Romanian women. Helping students better understand the similarities and differences between U.S. and Romanian cultures has been an eye-opening experience for Powell.</p>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="780" height="602" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/image-10-fulbright-feature.jpg" alt="Tiffany Powell with her American studies class" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    </div>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>She sees the impact of a country formerly under communism. In Iași, sometimes the internet doesn’t work and, in her school, there are no clubs or student organizations to gain the skills needed to earn a Fulbright award. “My students have given me a new perspective. You may want to come in and make changes, but you must understand where they’re coming from. There is a saying in Iași, ‘It’s not impossible. It’s just difficult,’” says Powell. She is trying to help with the difficult part by leading Fulbright application and leadership workshops. <br><br>Powell, like the other Fulbrighters, will bring her experiences home with her and wherever she ends up teaching English next. When their Fulbright year ends, these Retriever ambassadors will find themselves as emissaries yet again, returning to their hometowns, sharing the good news of ajvar made in community, the freedom of a scooter ride along a Taiwanese beach, or the correct stroke order for writing the Mandarin number five. The lessons their students and host families passed along—including pausing to take a breath and appreciate their international successes small and large—will continue to form and shape the way they see the world.<br><br>“Having a flexible mindset and under-standing the historical context of your placement is key,” says Powell. “I carry myself as a U.S. representative. Living abroad teaches humility, adaptability, and open-mindedness to press on through challenging times.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>International travel offers ample opportunities to stretch yourself—one minute you may be the expert and the next, completely clueless about how something works. Retrievers currently in the...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/a-journey-of-growth-retriever-fulbright/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142404/guest@my.umbc.edu/ed280c216f570c718be808f58bf7c55a/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>alumni</Tag>
<Tag>ancient-studies</Tag>
<Tag>bioinformatics-and-computational-biology</Tag>
<Tag>cahss</Tag>
<Tag>cge</Tag>
<Tag>computer-science</Tag>
<Tag>education-abroad</Tag>
<Tag>english</Tag>
<Tag>feature</Tag>
<Tag>fulbright</Tag>
<Tag>global-studies</Tag>
<Tag>humanities</Tag>
<Tag>inds</Tag>
<Tag>linehan</Tag>
<Tag>llc</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>meyerhoff</Tag>
<Tag>spring-2024</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>0</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 14:32:52 -0400</PostedAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142238" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142238">
<Title>Meet a Retriever&#8212;Merryll Kallungal &#8217;24, translational life science technology graduate</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/USG-UMBC-SG-PAT23-2539-150x150.jpg" alt="a woman translational life sciences student in a t-shirt poses on a bridge outside" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <h6><em><strong>Meet </strong>Merryll Kallungal<strong>, a brand new graduate of the translational life science technology program at <a href="https://shadygrove.umbc.edu/program/translational-life-science-technology/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">UMBC at the Universities at Shady Grove</a>. In this program, students like Merryll <em>learn hands-on skills through biotechnology labs and other applied experiences</em>. We’re excited to hear all about her experience. Take it away, Merryll!</strong></em></h6>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What’s one essential thing you’d want another Retriever to know about you?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A:</strong> I majored in translational life science technology (TLST). I mainly attended the USG campus. I was part of the Peer Advisory Team. Outside of classes, I am interested in dancing, reading, and enjoying time with family.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What’s the one thing you’d want someone who hasn’t joined the UMBC community to know about the support you find here?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>All of the professors have been so wonderful in helping me with any questions i had, whether it be about classes or internship. Your advisors will always be helpful in figuring out what steps you have to take when it comes to registering for classes and also when looking for internships.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="769" height="1024" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/1000001363-769x1024.jpg" alt="four women from UMBC's translational life sciences program in graduation robes pose together outside" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Kallungal (second from right) and classmates at UMBC-Shady Grove celebrate their recent graduation. Photo by Godwin Aizenofe ’24, translational life science technology.
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What did you love most about the translational life sciences program at UMBC-Shady Grove?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A:</strong> What I love about the TLST program is how close the students are with each other since we are smaller major. Also, how I was able to have that one-on-one relationship with my advisor who is also my professor.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What brought you to UMBC in the first place?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A:</strong> I came to UMBC at USG because the program that I was interested was only offered at USG. Plus at USG, the smaller classes allowed me to interact with my professor and get any help I need.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: Were you a student leader? What did you like most about it? What advice would you give incoming students?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A:</strong> Aside from being the Vice President of the Biotech Club, I was also part of the USG student council, and both these leadership experiences have helped me immensely to become a better student and also improve my leadership skills.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: Where are you headed from here, now that you’ve graduated?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A:</strong> My post graduation plans are to enter the work field and join a biotech company where I was an intern for the past year, then slowly think about joining graduate school for my master’s.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>* * * * *</p>
    
    
    
    <p><em>UMBC’s greatest strength is its people. When people meet Retrievers and hear about the passion they bring, the relationships they create, the ways they support each other, and the commitment they have to inclusive excellence, they truly get a sense of our community. That’s what “Meet a Retriever” is all about.</em></p>
    
    
    
    <p><a href="http://umbc.edu/how" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em>Learn more about how UMBC can help you achieve your goals.</em></a></p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Meet Merryll Kallungal, a brand new graduate of the translational life science technology program at UMBC at the Universities at Shady Grove. In this program, students like Merryll learn hands-on...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/merryll-kallungal-translational-life-sciences/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142238/guest@my.umbc.edu/118e12968b4cef86b5bcd0e0f735fa8f/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>cnms</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>meet-a-retriever</Tag>
<Tag>perspectives</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Tag>tlst</Tag>
<Tag>universities-at-shady-grove</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>1</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 12:11:55 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 12:11:55 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142230" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142230">
<Title>Meet a Retriever&#8211;Bruce Perry Jr. &#8217;97, UMBC Chief of Police</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Sustainers-Bruce-Perry21-5788-150x150.jpg" alt="UMBC Police Chief Bruce Perry Jr. ‘97 smiling and waving to students on Academic Row." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p><em>Meet </em><strong><em>Bruce Perry Jr. </em></strong><em>’97, psychology. Bruce has spent 33 years at UMBC as both a student and staff member. He first joined the police department in 1994 as a student aide. After graduation, Bruce rejoined the police department in 1998 as an officer and has served in many roles over the years, including Operations Commander and Deputy Chief. In 2022, Bruce was named Chief of Police. Take it away, Bruce!</em></p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What is your WHY? What brought you to UMBC?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>In high school, I was in a club that had a field trip to UMBC. My guidance counselor highly recommended that I apply to three colleges. UMBC was one of those three and quickly became my top choice. I have been at UMBC ever since, practically my entire adult life, moving from a graduate to a staff member in a year.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="604" height="400" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/1918895_173794177887_5061981_n.jpg" alt="Bruce Perry Jr. attending Quadmania as a UMBC student." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Bruce attending Quadmania as a UMBC student.
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: Where have you found support in the UMBC community?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>Once I moved into Chesapeake Hall as a freshman and participated in Playfair, I met several other students that I connected with and became friends with. As a staff member, I was able to connect with other staff, faculty, and students through committees, programs and meetings.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What’s the one thing you’d want someone who hasn’t joined the UMBC community to know about the support you find here?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>I love how collaborative the people on campus are. It is easy to just call or email someone and get a quick response. There are lots of activities that take place, there are many food options, and they get to use the RAC facilities for free. I would especially mention two big events that we have every year, Homecoming and Quadmania.</p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div>
    <h4>Q: Tell us about your current job. What do you like most about it?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>I first joined the UMBC Police Department in 1994 as a student aide. After graduation, I rejoined the department in 1998 as an officer and has served in many roles over the years, including Operations Commander and Deputy Chief. In 2022, I was named Chief of Police. I love the opportunity to collaborate with others across campus. I have been involved with numerous campus groups, including the Alcohol and Other Drug Committee, the Hazing Awareness Work Group, the Employee of the Quarter Committee, Mental Health First Aid Instructors, and the Black Faculty and Staff Association (BFSA) to name a few. I like that I am able to interact with other colleagues around campus.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: Tell us what you love most about working in the UMBC Police Department.</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>Working in the police department, every day is a different day. The members of my department feel more like family members than co-workers, which is good since we have to rely on each other. I enjoy interacting with others on campus, volunteering, and being involved in different groups and committees.</p>
    
    
    
    <p><em>Pictured right: The Retriever Weekly (Volume 33, Number 16) announcing the hiring of three new UMBC Police officers, including Bruce.</em></p>
    </div>
    <a href="https://contentdm.ad.umbc.edu/digital/collection/Retriever/id/13002/rec/1" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><img width="260" height="629" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Retriever-Weekly-The-Volume-33-Number-16-The-Retriever-Weekly-Albin-O-Kuhn-Library-Gallery-Digital-Collections.png" alt="The Retriever Weekly (Volume 33, Number 16) annoucning the hiring of three new UMBC Police officers, including Bruce Perry Jr." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;"></a>
    </div>
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: Tell us about someone in the community who has inspired you or supported you, and how they did it.</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>I have been fortunate enough to have each supervisor that I have had since becoming an employee be a valuable mentor. They offered a lot of guidance and advice.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/UMBC_Police_07.14.2022-278-1200x800.jpg" alt="Bruce Perry Jr.'s Chief of Police Swearing-In Ceremony in 2022." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Bruce’s Chief of Police swearing-in ceremony in 2022. Pictured here with UMBC president emeritus Freeman A. Hrabowski, III.
    
    
    
    <h4>Q: What would you tell someone who is considering a career at UMBC?</h4>
    
    
    
    <p><strong>A: </strong>UMBC continues to be named as a top workplace by ModernThink’s <a href="https://greatcollegesprogram.com/list/colleges/UMBC/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Great Colleges to Work For program</a>. UMBC ranks as a top institution nationwide in every category, from well-being and shared governance to mission and pride.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>* * * * *</p>
    
    
    
    <p><em>UMBC’s greatest strength is its people. When people meet Retrievers and hear about the passion they bring, the relationships they create, the ways they support each other, and the commitment they have to inclusive excellence, they truly get a sense of our community. That’s what “Meet a Retriever” is all about.</em></p>
    
    
    
    <p><a href="http://umbc.edu/how" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em>Learn more about how UMBC can help you achieve your goals.</em></a></p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Meet Bruce Perry Jr. ’97, psychology. Bruce has spent 33 years at UMBC as both a student and staff member. He first joined the police department in 1994 as a student aide. After graduation, Bruce...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/meet-bruce-perry-umbc-chief-of-police/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142230/guest@my.umbc.edu/b1f66ef2d515244870c41e32ad9bf4b8/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>alumni</Tag>
<Tag>impact</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>meet-a-retriever</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Tag>umbc-police</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>0</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 07:27:43 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Wed, 29 May 2024 07:27:43 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="142186" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142186">
<Title>Live Music Strikes a Chord for Retrievers</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/default-3-1-150x150.jpg" alt="" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <img width="1184" height="971" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Screenshot-2024-04-20-at-12.10.13%E2%80%AFPM.png" alt="Singer, Gerard Way looking into a mirror putting on eyeliner." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Singer Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance at the UMBC Fieldhouse (currently known as the RAC) on October 21, 2005. Photo by Kenneth Cappello.
    
    
    
    <p>It may be coincidental that UMBC was founded in the midst of rock n’ roll’s most revolutionary years, but early Retrievers certainly made sure to create spaces to bring live music to the campus, in intimate settings and on much bigger stages.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>Since then, iconic bands and artists such as Frank Zappa, the Goo Goo Dolls, Alanis Morissette, All-American Rejects, the Strokes, Brand New, Foo Fighters, Yellowcard, All Time Low, My Chemical Romance, and more, have all played shows for UMBC’s students. But while UMBC has a rich history of hosting renowned artists, they have always had a soft spot for local music and student artists too.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>On September 21, 1968, the Collage, an on-campus weekend coffee house, was first opened. The Collage was one of the first notable instances of live music on campus, often drawing in a large crowd, especially on Saturday nights, and was the go-to place to check out the best student performers, as well as local performers from the surrounding Baltimore area. With music, poetry readings, and films, it was a perfect social and artistic atmosphere for its students.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>Although the Collage is no more, today, UMBC still supports its local and student musicians with the many events held on and off campus, and through the creative spaces it provides. The Students Events Board (seb) frequently hosts open mic nights where students can sing, play an instrument, and present poetry or spoken word. In recent years, (seb) seems to have drawn on a similar ethos to the Collage, with its Coffee House: Open Mic Night Edition.</p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <img width="1200" height="868" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Screenshot-2024-05-21-at-11.30.07%E2%80%AFAM-1200x868.png" alt="Audience members watching a performance inside a coffee house." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Audience members at the Collage in 1969.
    
    
    
    <img width="274" height="437" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/default-1.jpg" alt="Two men on stage singing into a microphone. One playing tambourine, the other playing the guitar." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Two performers, Lewis and Dolgoff, on stage at<br>the Collage in 1969.
    </div>
    
    
    
    <p>Yearly events like Quadmania and campus radio station WMBC’s and the Retriever Music Society’s (RMS) music festival often provide a chance for student artists to play for an audience, and the support and turnout for these events shows how tuned in Retrievers still are to good music.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>WMBC’s recent revitalization has played a big role in organizing live music events and booking student and local bands for on-campus shows. ​​WMBC’s station manager <strong>Sean Jilek</strong> ’25, computer science, says, “We have so much great music being made on campus and we really want to highlight that when we can. This year we made it a goal to have a UMBC band headline the festival, which is why we had Fly By the Seat. The station has been blown away with the turnout for the concerts we have hosted on campus.” </p>
    
    
    
    <p>Additionally, off-campus, OCA Mocha, the UMBC student-founded coffee shop, provides a venue for UMBC’s student musicians, including jam sessions hosted by RMS, classical music from UMBC’s Cello Group, and performances by UMBC’s jazz groups. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>While the Collage may now be gone, after all these years it is apparent that UMBC has expanded its creative spaces, and is still passionate about fostering these venues for its students. Jilek says, “I think this last semester has shown that small shows are something that people are interested in seeing on campus.”</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="857" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/29March_FBS24-2.jpg" alt="Two students on stage playing music. One standing towards the front playing bass guitar, and the other one in the background playing the drums. Stage lights shine overhead." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Fly By The Seat playing at WMBC &amp; RMS’s 2024 Spring Music Festival. Photo by Erin Bennett.</div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Singer Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance at the UMBC Fieldhouse (currently known as the RAC) on October 21, 2005. Photo by Kenneth Cappello.     It may be coincidental that UMBC was founded in the...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/live-music-strikes-a-chord-for-retrievers/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142186/guest@my.umbc.edu/c5eca86e23b324e19193e57aecf5d2d2/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>arts-and-culture</Tag>
<Tag>campus-life</Tag>
<Tag>music</Tag>
<Tag>oca-mocha</Tag>
<Tag>retriever-music-society</Tag>
<Tag>seb</Tag>
<Tag>spring-2024</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Tag>wmbc</Tag>
<Tag>wmbc-radio</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>3</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 16:43:54 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 16:43:54 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142185" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142185">
<Title>A resilient Class of 2024 celebrates its successes</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-5687-150x150.jpg" alt="Three UMBC graduates during the Spring 2024 Commencement ceremony. The students are smiling while surrounded by the audience in the background." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p>UMBC’s graduating Class of 2024 knows a thing or two about resilience. Many of this year’s 1,900-plus graduates began their collegiate journey at the onset of a global pandemic. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>This week, as they walked across the Commencement stage adorned in black and gold regalia and mortarboards elaborately decorated with sayings such as “The tassel was worth the hassle,” “I did it,” and “The end is here,” the Class of 2024 reveled in the celebratory moment of reaching this milestone in the face of much adversity. </p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Grad-Commencement-Sp24-4884-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduates smiling and posing for a selfie. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Class of 2024 graduates capturing Commencement day excitement. 
    
    
    
    <p>“Resilience is a dynamic process. It’s a journey that we embark on in the face of challenges. Resilience is not just bouncing back or being able to recover—It’s the ability to bounce forward,” said graduate student speaker <strong>Grace De Oro</strong>, M.P.P. ’19, a Ph.D. candidate in public policy and president of the Graduate Student Association. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>“We’ve all bounced forward to get here, right now, in this moment. This journey of resilience has not only brought us here, but it’s transformed us into stronger and more capable individuals.”</p>
    
    
    
    <div>
    <div><div class="embed-container"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/cKtWb1IFEB0?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="webkitAllowFullScreen" mozallowfullscreen="mozallowfullscreen" allowfullscreen="allowFullScreen">[Video]</iframe></div></div>
    </div>UMBC’s <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKtWb1IFEB0" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Spring 2024 Commencement video</a>. (Elijah Davis, M.F.A. ’21/UMBC)
    
    
    
    <h4><strong>Service as a Retriever</strong></h4>
    
    
    
    <p>During Thursday morning’s undergraduate ceremony for students in the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences; School of Social Work; and Erickson School of Aging Studies, co-valedictorian <strong>Nyla Howell </strong>’24, geography and environmental systems and sociology, spoke to the value of service and how the graduating class will “serve with more than our degrees.”</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-5776-1-1200x800.jpg" alt="Valedictorian for the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences; School of Social Work; and Erickson School of Aging Studies morning ceremony, Nyla Howell, speaks at Commencement. Nyla is standing behind a podium while on stage. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Valedictorian for the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences; School of Social Work; and Erickson School of Aging Studies morning ceremony, Nyla Howell ’24, speaks at Commencement. 
    
    
    
    <p>“We all serve those around us daily by using our time and talent to encourage each other, give advice to each other, and take care of one another,” Howell said. “I believe that if we approach this next phase of life, despite all its uncertainty, with the intention of genuinely caring for others and living out our personal understandings of service, we will have the launch pads we need to do more than we ever believed we could.”</p>
    
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-5653-1-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC student during Spring 2024 commencement. Student is looking ahead with a slight smile and is the focal point in image. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Grad-Commencement-Sp24-5080-1-1200x800.jpg" alt="Two UMBC Class of 2024 graduates smiling at the camera. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-5893-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduate smiling and hugging someone who's back is turned away from the camera. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-6025-1-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduate with loved one, posing for a photo taken on a cellphone. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    
    <p>Howell, who is the first <a href="https://mcnair.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">McNair Scholar</a> to be a valedictorian at UMBC, has dedicated much of her time as an undergraduate in service to local communities and engaged in research examining how vulnerable and underrepresented communities can be better protected when disasters strike. Since 2021, Howell has worked as the food pantry manager of <a href="https://retrieveressentials.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Retriever Essentials</a> helping to combat food insecurity at UMBC. Howell’s leadership and public service efforts earned her scholarships from the France and Merrick Scholars Endowment and the Jacqueline C. Hrabowski Endowment. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>She will continue her studies in geography as a Ph.D. student at Rutgers University as a fellow of the National Science Foundation’s Graduate Research Fellowship Program. </p>
    
    
    
    <h4><strong>A dedication to STEM and the arts</strong></h4>
    
    
    
    <p>During the afternoon ceremony for the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences; College of Engineering and Information Technology; and Division of Undergraduate Academic Affairs, co-valedictorian <strong>D’Juan Moreland </strong>’24, biological sciences and music, shared with his fellow graduates the lessons he has learned, particularly ones imparted to him by his mother.</p>
    
    
    
    
    <blockquote>
    <p>Congratulations to our Engineering and Computing students <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/UMBCgrad?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">#UMBCgrad</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/UMBC?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">@UMBC</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/UMBCengineering?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">#UMBCengineering</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/UMBCComputing?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">#UMBCComputing</a> <a href="https://t.co/M3gk0HkFLu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">pic.twitter.com/M3gk0HkFLu</a></p>— Jamie Gurganus, PhD (@JamieRGurganus) <a href="https://twitter.com/JamieRGurganus/status/1793727775045804372?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">May 23, 2024</a>
    </blockquote>
    
    
    
    
    <p>“The first [lesson] is to celebrate yourself even in the little victories. The secondis to recognize who supported you. The lastis to set a good example because other people are watching your every move,” said Moreland. “Part of our achievement today is to set a strong example for those who are watching us right now. They don’t just see our success, but also our perseverance, as encouragement and inspiration for themselves.”</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Grad-Commencement-Sp24-5068-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduate who has a student athlete graduation sash on looking upward and smiling with joy. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">UMBC Class of 2024 graduates all smiles during Commencement. 
    
    
    
    <p>During his time at UMBC, Moreland, a <a href="https://meyerhoff.umbc.edu/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Meyherhoff Scholar</a>, balanced and even found a way to intertwine his interests in biological sciences and music. He was a <a href="https://umbc.edu/stories/four-umbc-students-receive-goldwater-scholarship-for-stem-research-tying-prior-record/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">2022 – 2023 recipient of a prestigious Goldwater Scholarship</a>, for which he used his research on the song syllable use differences in female and male songbirds as the basis of his application. Moreland’s original composition “Ascension” won the inaugural UMBC Symphony Orchestra Composer Competition last year. </p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-PM-Commencement-Sp24-6212-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Valedictorian of the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences; College of Engineering and Information Technology; and Division of Undergraduate Academic Affairs afternoon ceremony co-valedictorian, D'Juan Moreland, addressing the audience during Commencement. He is standing a podium on stage delivering his speech." style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Valedictorian of the College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences; College of Engineering and Information Technology; and Division of Undergraduate Academic Affairs afternoon ceremony co-valedictorian, D’Juan Moreland ’24, addressing the audience during Commencement.
    
    
    
    <p>Additionally, he is a recipient of the Thomas V. Marsho and Martin Schwartz Memorial Fund scholarship and a recipient of the Ronald and Kathryn Shapiro Meyerhoff Mentoring scholarship. Moreland has dedicated much of his time to mentoring younger students, a passion that inspired him to create a mentoring program at his church for young Black men in middle and high school. Following graduation, Moreland will pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience at the University of Pennsylvania. </p>
    
    
    
    <h4><strong>“The DNA of UMBC”</strong></h4>
    
    
    
    <p>The lineup of this year’s Commencement speakers included <strong>Mina Cheon</strong>, M.F.A. ’02, imaging and digital arts, the dean of undergraduate studies at the Maryland Institute College of Art and a <a href="https://umbc.edu/stories/alumni-awards-2018-mina-cheon-mfa-02-imaging-digital-arts/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">2018 UMBC Alumni Award winner</a>. <strong>Farah Helal</strong> ’24, political science and global studies, also delivered remarks as the <a href="https://umbc.edu/stories/umbcs-farah-helal-longtime-student-advocate-is-named-usm-student-regent/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">University System of Maryland student regent</a> representative. </p>
    
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-PM-Commencement-Sp24-6042-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduates posing with faculty member outside on UMBC campus. Many of the people in the photo have their hands up" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-PM-Commencement-Sp24-6365-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduates standing in the audience applauding and smiling. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Undergrad-AM-Commencement-Sp24-5628-1200x800.jpg" alt="UMBC Class of 2024 graduate looking left and smiling and waving. " style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    
    
    
    
    <p>Sethuraman Panchanathan, director of the National Science Foundation, received an honorary doctor of science degree during the afternoon ceremony. He dazzled the crowd with an energetic speech advising new graduates to follow “the 10 C’s”—words like “commitment,” “courage,” “collaboration,” and “curiosity”—as they go on to the next chapter of their lives.</p>
    
    
    
    
    <blockquote>
    <p>After grad, Chiad Onyeje, chem eng, will go to Johns Hopkins via the new Vivien Thomas Scholars Initiative program. His research will concentrate on the development of drug delivery biomaterials to open up new opportunities for disease &amp; trauma treatment &amp; prevention. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/UMBCgrad?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">#UMBCgrad</a> <a href="https://t.co/pVZ10ieEVs" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">pic.twitter.com/pVZ10ieEVs</a></p>— UMBC (@UMBC) <a href="https://twitter.com/UMBC/status/1791457103045087555?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">May 17, 2024</a>
    </blockquote>
    
    
    
    
    <p>“Retrievers, you have the DNA of UMBC,” Panchanathan said to the graduates. “That DNA is about lifting people up…and making sure people are given chances, making things accessible, and inspiring people.” </p>
    
    
    
    <p><em>Congratulations to the Class of 2024! Please continue to share your messages of congratulations on social media using #UMBCgrad. Read more about Class of 2024 graduates on the </em><a href="https://umbc.edu/news/class-of-2024/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><em>UMBC News Site</em></a><em>. </em></p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>UMBC’s graduating Class of 2024 knows a thing or two about resilience. Many of this year’s 1,900-plus graduates began their collegiate journey at the onset of a global pandemic.       This week,...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/class-of-2024-commencement/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142185/guest@my.umbc.edu/ba783fd9283fc597f7356a4051373b34/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>cahss</Tag>
<Tag>campus-life</Tag>
<Tag>class-of-2024</Tag>
<Tag>cnms</Tag>
<Tag>coeit</Tag>
<Tag>commencement</Tag>
<Tag>erickson-school</Tag>
<Tag>feature</Tag>
<Tag>magazine</Tag>
<Tag>public-policy</Tag>
<Tag>social-work</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>3</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 16:03:51 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 16:03:51 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="142177" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/j-1/posts/142177">
<Title>UMBC statistician selected to work with Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">
    <img width="150" height="150" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Limpopo-UMBC-MOU18-3541-150x150.jpg" alt="group photo of six people; chalkboard in the background" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">
    <p><strong>Yehenew Kifle</strong>, assistant professor of statistics at UMBC, has been awarded a fellowship by the <a href="http://www.iie.org/africandiaspora" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program</a> (CADFP). Kifle will travel to Addis Ababa University (AAU) in Ethiopia to work with the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics. There, he will work with colleagues to enhance teaching and mentoring and grow research collaborations to support Ph.D. training in biostatistics.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="842" height="848" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Yehenew-Kifle.jpg" alt='man standing in front of a brick wall, white lettering on wall reads "...rican ...tical ...iat...)' style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Yehenew Kifle visited the American Statistical Association in April 2024, around the signing of the agreement between the ASA and UMBC related to the African International Conference on Statistics. (Courtesy of Kifle)
    
    
    
    <p>Kifle will spend three months in Ethiopia this summer, working with his African host, Zeytu Gashaw Asfaw, associate professor of biostatistics at AAU. In addition to producing collaborative research, during his stay Kifle plans to conduct short-term training sessions and workshops on advanced software-aided statistical techniques for junior statisticians, graduate students, and medical professionals within the school of public health at AAU. He will also assist in crafting grant proposals aimed at increasing research collaborations in biostatistics between UMBC and AAU.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>The Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program, now in its 10th year, is designed to strengthen capacity for graduate education at host institutions and develop long-term, mutually beneficial collaborations between universities in Africa and the United States and Canada. It is funded by <a href="http://www.carnegie.org" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Carnegie Corporation of New York</a> and managed by the <a href="http://www.iie.org" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Institute of International Education (IIE)</a> in collaboration with the <a href="http://www.aau.org" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Association of African Universities</a>. Nearly 650 fellowships have been awarded since the CADFP’s inception in 2013.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>“I’m grateful for the opportunity to represent the University of Maryland, Baltimore County in its international outreach endeavors, highlighting the importance of CADFP,” Kifle says, adding, “I’m looking forward to sharing my expertise in teaching biostatistics graduate courses, offering mentorship, and supervising doctoral dissertations.” Additionally, Kifle plans to conduct seminars on his recent research findings and offer insights into improving graduate programs in biostatistics.</p>
    
    
    
    <h4><strong>Building on international connections</strong></h4>
    
    
    
    <p>Before arriving at UMBC, Kifle was a professor of statistics at the University of Limpopo in South Africa. UMBC signed a collaborative <a href="https://umbc.edu/stories/umbc-and-university-of-limpopo-partner-to-grow-research-and-exchange-opportunities/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">agreement with University of Limpopo</a> in 2018, initiated by Kifle while he was a visiting faculty member from Limpopo at UMBC. Kifle first encountered UMBC’s strength in statistics at the 2015 African International Conference (AIC) on Statistics, a UMBC-led conference held in a different African country annually since 2014. </p>
    
    
    
    <p>Since then, Kifle has been a leader in <a href="https://magazine.amstat.org/blog/2024/05/01/8th-african-international-conference/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">organizing the AIC</a>, which recently received a pledge for <a href="https://umbc.edu/stories/new-partnership-supports-african-international-conference-on-statistics/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">support from the American Statistical Association</a>. The Carnegie fellowship builds further on Kifle’s commitment to forging partnerships with African universities for the mutual benefit of scholars at UMBC and in Africa.</p>
    
    
    
    <img width="1200" height="800" src="https://umbc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/IMG_7226-1200x800.jpg" alt="two men shake hands, one holding a large folder, while another looks on between them" style="max-width: 100%; height: auto;">Bimal Sinha (left), professor of statistics at UMBC, and Yehenew Kifle (center), assistant professor of statistics at UMBC, with N.M. Mokgalongs, president of University of Limpopo, at the 4th Annual African International Conference on Statistics. (Courtesy of Kifle)
    
    
    
    <p>Kifle’s work in Ethiopia is one of 60 new projects supported by the CADFP that pair African diaspora scholars with higher education institutions and collaborators in Africa to work together on curriculum development, research, graduate training, and mentoring activities in 2024.</p>
    
    
    
    <p>“This is indeed exciting news for all of us in the department and at UMBC,” shared <strong>Bimal Sinha</strong>, professor of statistics at UMBC. “We are thrilled to know that Dr. Kifle will represent UMBC in this extraordinary outreach effort to offer seminars and training courses and possibly to jointly supervise doctoral dissertations. There is no doubt that many statistics departments in Ethiopia will benefit from Dr. Kifle’s vast teaching and research experiences.”</p>
    </div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Yehenew Kifle, assistant professor of statistics at UMBC, has been awarded a fellowship by the Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program (CADFP). Kifle will travel to Addis Ababa University...</Summary>
<Website>https://umbc.edu/stories/kifle-travels-to-ethiopia/</Website>
<TrackingUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/api/v0/pixel/news/142177/guest@my.umbc.edu/39b867af6145be9b62a0a5382d82c1d6/api/pixel</TrackingUrl>
<Tag>cnms</Tag>
<Tag>mathstat</Tag>
<Tag>news</Tag>
<Tag>research</Tag>
<Tag>science-and-tech</Tag>
<Tag>story</Tag>
<Group token="umbc-news-magazine">UMBC News &amp;amp; Magazine</Group>
<GroupUrl>https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/umbc-news-magazine</GroupUrl>
<AvatarUrl>https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="original">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/original.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xlarge">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xlarge.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="large">https://assets3-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/large.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="medium">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/medium.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="small">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/small.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xsmall">https://assets1-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<AvatarUrl size="xxsmall">https://assets2-beta.my.umbc.edu/system/shared/avatars/groups/000/001/943/24435aa6207c452e7bc15cc74b42c7bb/xxsmall.png?1748556657</AvatarUrl>
<Sponsor>UMBC News &amp; Magazine</Sponsor>
<PawCount>0</PawCount>
<CommentCount>0</CommentCount>
<CommentsAllowed>false</CommentsAllowed>
<PostedAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 10:39:34 -0400</PostedAt>
<EditAt>Fri, 24 May 2024 10:39:34 -0400</EditAt>
</NewsItem>

</News>
