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December 4, 2006
Institute on Early College Pedagogy to be established

Simon's Rock has announced that it will establish a national Institute on Early College Pedagogy.

Through the Institute, the College's faculty will reach educators nationally who are interested in learning about early college and those who are interested in establishing early college programs, as well as teachers who want to enrich their existing curricula.

The Fund for the Improvement of Post Secondary Education (FIPSE) gave a grant of $393,405 to establish the Institute, which will offer support and guidance to early colleges, post-secondary institutions, and high schools interested in a new model for educating adolescents.

Early college is growing phenomenon in the U.S., having been given a significant boost by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which is funding the start-up of 180 early college high schools throughout the United States. For two years, the Gates Foundation funded Early College Teaching Seminars at Simon's Rock. These week-long intensive summer programs for teachers will form the foundation on which this Institute is built. You may remember that we covered those seminars in Simonsays. This funding will allow the College to expand those seminars and do other things as well.

The Institute on Early College Pedagogy will:
  • Hold Teaching Seminars at the Simon's Rock campus three times per year.
  • Provide on-site consulting services throughout the United States. Simon's Rock faculty members have piloted this part of the project by consulting with Riverside Community College District in California, the San Antonio District (Texas), and a group working to rebuild schools in New Orleans.
  • Host a National Conference on Adolescence, Acceleration and National Excellence, which will serve as a springboard for the development of a Consortium on early college pedagogy.

The overarching mission of the Institute on Early College Pedagogy is to:
  • Disseminate the principles and practices of our early college pedagogies to more post-secondary institutions, early colleges and high schools engaged in reform;
  • Promote the growth of new early colleges;
  • Develop an active network of sharing and support among post-secondary institutions and others interested in excellence in liberal arts education of younger adolescents;
  • Create a collective force for change in secondary and post-secondaryeducation.

Science and Math at Simon's Rock
Alexandra Bowen (02) is designing bike access in Manhattan as her senior thesis

Anyone who has lived near a park in a big city knows the presence that such a space can have. It can be an oasis—a place to get needed nature and fresh air—or it can be like a haunted house: intriguing, but nobody with any sense goes into it. Think Central Park, where thousands of New Yorkers find a bit of sanity every day, running, strolling, even watching miniature motorized sailboats and eating ice cream.

Then go north to the end of that park, just across 110th Street, and into the much less utilized Morningside Park. If you look up the hill from that park, you see where Alexandra Bowen ('02) lives, and you may also note that her perch is probably a perfect place to think about her project: She is designing bike access to connect upper Manhattan's parks.

Bowen is an Engineering 3/2 student at Simon's Rock and Columbia University. That means she studied at Simon's Rock her first and second year and earned her A.A. degree, stayed on for a year to take pre-engineering requirements, and then went to Columbia University's School of Engineering to earn her B.S. degree. When she graduates this May, Bowen will have a degree from each school.

The park bike access project is both her senior design project at Columbia and her Simon's Rock thesis. To do it, she has hooked up with an ambitious project started at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health, CLIMB (City Living is Moving Bodies), which is "an initiative founded on the belief that safe parks and neighborhoods are essential to community health, and that all communities, regardless of socioeconomic background, are entitled to access to safe parks and neighborhoods." CLIMB, says Bowen, sees the mission of healthy parks and access to parks as part of a solution to myriad community problems, including gang violence and obesity. CLIMB, she says, "has a grand vision to connect people to parks, encourage community ownership, change then from being feared, dirty and dangerous, into places that are beautiful."

To read more about CLIMB, see:

Her own project is, as you might imagine, quite concrete: to figure out ways to move bicycles safely through the city streets, thus encouraging riders to travel from park to park. That means studying traffic patterns and traffic engineering—a high art form in this city—or as she puts it: "How to design an intersection so the bikes can get through and the cars can get through." And, she adds, "If you were on a bike and you wanted to go up this spine of parks, how would you go? And what do we do to make sure that you don't get run over by a truck?"

The goal is a clear and safe route from Central Park to Morningside Park, to St. Nicholas Park, across 145th St. to Jackie Robinson Park, and then across 155th St. to the bottom of High Bridge Park, the biggest green space in Manhattan, and a place in which most New Yorkers have never been.

As Bowen looks around at her fellow students' projects, she realizes she picked one that suits her. "I wanted a project with a social component," she says; and the local component—really getting to know the city in which she is living—suits her as well. She is also a liberal arts oriented engineering student, with interests in photography, sociology and physics.

Bowen, who grew up in Lafayette, Indiana, and Cincinnati, Ohio, applied to both Washington University and Columbia for the 3/2 program, and then picked Columbia.

Her thesis committee at Simon's Rock is Ryan Carey (History) and Don Roeder, (Environmental Issues, Botany), with her thesis advisor being Michael Bergman (Physics). Her academic advisor is Eric Kramer.

Bergman started the 3/2 program in 2002. He says, "I noticed a lot of students were going into engineering, but taking three years to finish because of our liberal arts requirements. So I figured why not do three years here, and two at the engineering school. I knew engineering schools sometimes made arrangements with liberal arts colleges, and it seemed like a perfect match pedagogically, since 16 year olds are not ready to commit to something as specialized as engineering." Interestingly, and helpfully, an old professor of his was dean of the engineering school at Columbia. Bergman did his undergraduate work at Columbia.

The first Simon's Rock students started at Columbia in 2003 and finished their B.A./B.S degrees in 2005. Four students entered the first year, Bergman said, one the following year, and one last year. This year, there are five juniors in the program and a junior at Dartmouth as well. Bergman says he hopes to have four or five students pursuing the program each year.

Two sets of faculty, two groups of students, two cultures, and even two graduations for Alexandra Bowen. There is Columbia, where groups of 500 stand up at one time, she says, and then there is Simon's Rock, where each person shakes the president's hand. She may attend both, but first things first, and for now her mind is pretty much taken up with getting through senior year, including her design project/thesis. —J. M.


Simon's Rock Alumnae/i Community Meeting Webcast
With Provost Mary B. Marcy
Thursday, December 14, at 6:30 p.m. EST

To register and log on to the web cast, please visit the following URL: [Note: the Webcast URL is no longer active.]

This presentation is designed to run on most computers using a dialup or faster internet connection, using freely available software. To assure that your system has the necessary software, please visit the presentation site well before the scheduled time and follow the 'System Test' link.

Questions? Call or email Eline Potoski at (413) 528-7500, epotoski@simons-rock.edu or go to www.simons-rock.edu/webcast.


Seeds For Peace
By Bizzy Davis ('06)

On Wednesday evening, the social justice groups at the Rock all got together in the Alumni Performance Center for Seeds for Peace, an event sponsored by the Activist Collective. The event was planned in honor of International Human Rights Day—scheduled early on campus due to finals, of course— as an opportunity for students to learn about what was happening in terms of Simon's Rock politics and activism and how to get involved.

A few of the seeds planted for Wednesday grew like this:

Whilst being serenaded by various campus musicians, the CommunityService Club raised money by taping faculty member James King to the wall. Though he was unable to stick when the chair was moved from beneath him, the CSC raised $230 to donate to Heifer International, or the equivalent of one Llama and four flocks of ducks. Heifer International works toward providing long-term food sources for those in need, rather than short-term donations, helping communities all over the world with animal and agricultural projects.

The Activist Collective continued their campaign to remove Coke from the campus, and they seek alternatives for Simon's Rock to support a more local company and disassociate the school from a corporation which they say has a history of human rights and environmental violations. Nearly 200 hundred colleges across the U.S. and globally are also working to remove or have already removed Coke from their campuses.

The Campus Labor Alliance, a group of students and staff, is researching work conditions on campus and working to create what they feel would be a more equitable infrastructure for staff at Simon's Rock.

The Black Student Union and the Latino Student Union were at Seeds for Peace too, as well as Amnesty International, Habitat for Humanity, SRCDemocrats, Politics Society, Women's Art Revolution, SRC Bible Study, Social Action and Service, the International Students Club, students, faculty, staff and community members.

Ed. Note: Bizzy Davis ('06) is a member of the Activists Collective. This is her bicycle.