Fall 2015 - Science, Technology, and Society Program
Transcription
Fall 2015 - Science, Technology, and Society Program
STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 STS Alumni Newsletter Fall 2015 Pictured on left: STS seniors and STS faculty at the Senior Thesis Poster Session on Dec. 10th. IN THIS ISSUE Vassar College: Science, Technology, and Society STS Majors and faculty at the STS thesis poster session on December 10th! Letter from Alum/ Summer &Abroad: Letter from Owen Brady ‘15 What did you do over the summer/abroad? Page 2 Welcome to the STS Alumni Newsletter for the Fall Semester of 2015! Here are a few updates about Vassar! The new science center is so Professor Interview: Interview with Dr. Nancy Pokrywka close to being finished; the campus-wide smoking ban has been Page 3 implemented; Founder’s Day will be “Flounder’s Day” for the selected theme of “Under the Sea”; political activist and feminist Angela Davis Special Speaker/Alumni Feature: spoke in the Chapel during the month of September to commemorate Bill James / Brandon Costelloe-Kuehn (’06) the 30th anniversary of the Women's Studies Program. What did you do over the summer? (cont’d) F The STS Program is expanding with more majors than ever before! To deck out all of our majors, Sylvia Haigh ’16 designed STS sweatshirts Summer Internship: with the Duck-Rabbit image (shown below!). In addition, for the first Shereen Sodder time, the STS Program held a poster session for STS seniors to present their thesis topics (Go to page 8 to see a few photos!). We hope you enjoy the newsletter! Page 4 Page 5 STS Fall Classes Page 6 Alumni Feature (cont’d): Brandon Costelloe-Kuehn (’06) Page 7 Senior Thesis Poster Session Page 8 STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 2 A Letter from Owen Brady ‘15 Hi STS! I am four months into my first post-grad job as an Associate in the Advisory/Consulting arm of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) Chicago! With each passing month, I continue to realize the myriad ways an STS major has equipped me to deal with the constantly changing demands of my (or any) first job after graduation. I was slated to join PwC’s healthcare technology consulting practice, but I was instead aligned with the Financial Services Banking Technology practice. For those of you who don’t know much about consulting (I didn’t until the fall of my senior year), it basically consists of a business buying the time of a knowledgeable team (consultants) to help them with business problems. You could call in consultants if your business needs a new software implementation, advice for their 10-year strategic plan, or a whole host of other services. Projects are weeks, months, or rarely years long, and vary widely in scope, intensity, and travel demands (For example, I travel by air to work at a client Monday through Thursday, and my total project length is about four months). My Vassar STS major has suited me well during my first project, a banking technology strategy project. The client has asked us to work with them to evaluate one of their older IT systems and formulate recommendations on how we think they should proceed. Some of my duties include drafting client-facing “deliverables,” taking detailed notes on their IT processes, and conducting market research for strategic discussions. If you’re wondering how much I knew about Banking Technology after completing a Vassar STS degree, the answer is basically nothing! What did you do over the summer/abroad? Margaret Ginoza ‘16 Katie Chang ‘17 I spent the summer in Paris doing research at the Institut Pasteur with the Insect-Viral Interactions Group. My research focused on the effects of breeding site bacteria on the development of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, carriers of Dengue fever. This past summer, I worked as a Lifeguard at home in Los Angeles and took courses (Intro Philosophy and Macroeconomics) at a local community college. From my limited experience, some first jobs are not about knowing esoteric industry knowledge or having a narrow skill set to offer. As liberal arts graduates, we come equipped with the tools to learn – how to be inquisitive, how to ask questions, how to work together to achieve a common goal, and how to parse out the important from the trivial. Those skills were honed partly during researching and writing my senior thesis on selfdriving cars under the guidance of Prof. Jim Challey and others in the STS Program. Even though I am merely six months into postgrad life, I can already feel how my Vassar education will carry me through to the rest of my life. If any STS majors (current or former) would like to contact me, please email me. I’d love to hear from you: owenbradyj@gmail.com Owen Brady Vassar STS Class of 2015 Molly Osborn ‘16 I spent an amazing spring semester studying at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. I took two classes in their Science Studies unit as well as a Gaelic Language and Culture class. In terms of STS-y things I did while I was there, I visited the National Museum of Scotland several times and was lucky enough to be in Edinburgh during their annual Science Festival. STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 3 Interview with Dr. Nancy Pokrywka By Natalie Kopke Why do you teach Bioethics and Human Reproduction (STS 222)? I teach STS 222 because human reproduction is a perfect example of how science informs technology, and how both shape and are shaped by the world we live in. There's a lot of biology to understand to appreciate the possibilities of technologies such as in vitro fertilization or prenatal genetic testing, and these topics also raise a lot of controversial questions, such as what is the moral and legal status of an embryo, or what is a disease, and what is a trait? What do you like about it? I love teaching this course because there is such a great range of students who take it, from Film majors to Biochemistry majors and everyone in between. So we are exposed to a lot of different points of view, and there are a lot of opportunities to learn from each other. I especially love the group project, where students can explore some area of human reproduction that has been affected by technology. I learn so much and the projects are super interesting. What are some of the challenges you face teaching this course? The main challenge is that often, no one in the course has been a parent, or struggled with some of the issues raised. It is a very different experience to talk about IVF with students, and with alums, for example. So I try to make sure and include personal stories in the readings, so that students can get a sense of how emotional these issues are for people who are trying to become parents. Have you taught other STS classes? I've also taught STS 131 (Genetic Engineering) in the past. This is also a course I have really enjoyed teaching. And next year I'm teaching a new STS 200-level course, topic to be determined (if there are biologically-related topics you'd love to see in a course, let me know!) What do you like about teaching STS classes? I love the STS program because I think it epitomizes a liberal arts education. You need to draw on ideas and knowledge from a wide range of subjects, and work to synthesize it into a rich and nuanced exploration of relevant issues. I believe scientists need to work harder than they have in the past to make connections between their research and its effect on society. I also think it's important for citizens to be able to understand and critically evaluate technological breakthroughs and their consequences. STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 4 Bill James’ Lecture Alumni Feature Brandon Costelloe-Kuehn ’06 On November 13th Bill James, CEO of JPods Inc., came to speak Vassar students and faculty. Bill James is a West Point graduate and Infantry veteran who has invented a process to build the PhysicalInternet®. Ultralight ‘pods’ move people and cargo in a packet-switched network of overhead rails. Solarcollectors over those rails gather the energy to power the networks. In his presentation, James addressed the concept of Illicit Energy, the dependence on energy sources outside of self-reliance. He argued that ending dependence on foreign oil through majority democracy and the use of smart technology can end the catastrophic direction of Climate Change. The night Brandon Costelloe-Kuehn (’06) was up against the final deadline to choose a major at Vassar, he couldn’t narrow down to less than six possibilities. Luckily for him, the STS major provided a path to explore classes in quite a few of the areas he was compelled to explore, including anthropology, sociology, history, media studies, communication and political science. He ended up drawing together insights from all these disciplines in an undergraduate thesis analyzing the work of Natalie Jeremijenko, drawing out possibilities for art and technology to animate social and environmental justice. This thesis whet an appetite for research that led to a doctorate in STS at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) a few miles up the Hudson, where he is currently a full time Lecturer, teaching classes on design, sustainability studies and the relationship between science, technology and social justice. (Cont’d on p. 7) What did you do over the summer? Matthew Schwartz ‘16 I worked for Nestle Waters North America at their corporate headquarters in Stamford, CT this summer. I worked in the corporate real estate and facilities division, but also spent some time in the legal and HR departments. Kate Hennessy ‘16 For half of the summer I worked as a farmhand on an organic vegetable farm in Maine. For the other half, I interned at the international non-profit The Hunger Project in the fundraising department. Sylvia Haigh ‘16 During the past summer I interned at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD in the Environmental Health department. I collaborated with State Department employees and Indian partners to develop a workshop on training and capacity building for issues of climate change and health in India. I also assisted in the revision process of the 2015 US Climate Health Assessment and I attended the 2015 White House Summit on Climate Change and Health. STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 5 Summer Internship By Shereen Sodder ‘17 This summer, I somehow managed to take two classes for my STS major, complete an internship at a health advocacy organization, and watch far too much Netflix than I would care to admit. At least I’ve mastered the art of time management. My summer started off at Boston University, where I took classes in Medical Anthropology and Global Environmental Public Health. Besides coming along with the perks of a big city campus--like having a Starbucks literally INSIDE one of the colleges--these courses definitely have made a lasting impact on my academic and career interests. My Medical Anthropology course focused on the social determinants of health and the use of ethnocentrism in Western biomedicine. I’m now considering using these topics as the basis of my thesis next year, as I have found them to be very relevant to my coursework and my own personal experiences. My course in Global Environmental Public Health covered a wide variety of issues in environmental health, a topic in which I had never really been interested before. Now I am considering global health and environmental public health as possible subfields of interest for my future career. There is a trend in where I spent my time this summer: Health Care For All is in a building with a Starbucks in the lobby. If anything, I am consistent. I worked at HCFA’s HelpLine, which helps callers from all over Massachusetts get access to health insurance and related resources. My job was to do statistical analysis and make figures of caller data (things like primary language, insurance coverage, etc.) that were presented by my boss to HCFA’s donors to show how the HelpLine is making an impact on MA’s health status. I also created two resource guides for use by HelpLine counselors --one containing an extensive list of health and related resources in MA (including abortion funds, health services for recent immigrants, and more) and the other containing a record of all the languages offered via interpreters or phone lines by the community health centers in the state. The second one required calling a LOT of hospitals and clinics, all of which for some reason have an elevator version of “Africa” by Toto as their music on hold. This experience has definitely made me even more aware of my health privilege, being from a rich suburb of Boston with easy access to highquality health care (and being from MA in general, which has a much more liberal health policy than many other states). My internship also connected back to my STS classes at Vassar and BU and affirmed my career interests in health management and equity. Even though this was a very busy summer, I would definitely do something like this again as both my classes and my internship were relevant to issues in which I’m genuinely interested, making those early morning wake-up calls and fighting tourists to get onto the Green Line totally worth it. STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 6 Fall 2015 STS Classes Science and Justice in the Anthropocene Geoscientists have proposed a new designation in the geologic time scale for our current time period, “the Anthropocene.” The designation reflects the fact that human beings are acting as geological agents, transforming the Earth on a global scale. In this freshman seminar course we explore the possibilities of reconfiguring the actions of humans in the Anthropocene so as to lead to a flowering of a new Era once called ‘the Ecozoic’ by cultural historian Thomas Berry. Relatively Uncertain: A History of Physics, Religion and Popular Culture This course examines the cultural history of key ideas and experiments in physics, looking in particular at how nonscientists understood key concepts such as entropy, relativity, quantum mechanics and the idea of higher or new dimensions. It begins with an assumption that’s widely accepted among historians – namely, that the sciences are a part of culture and are influenced by cultural trends, contemporary concerns and even urgent personal ethical or religious dilemmas. In this course we are attuned to the ways that physicists drew key insights from popular culture and how non-scientists, including religious or spiritual seekers, appropriated (and misappropriated) scientific insights about the origin and nature of the world, its underlying laws and energetic forces, and its ultimate meaning and purpose. Bioethics and Human Reproduction Scientific and technological advances are revolutionizing the ways in which human beings can procreate. This has given rise to debates over the ethical use of these methods, and over whether and how law and public policy should regulate these procedures and recognize the family relationships created by their use. This course examines topics such as fertility treatments, the commodification of gametes and embryos, contraceptive development and use, genetic screening and genetic modification of embryos, genetic testing in establishing family rights and responsibilities, and human cloning. We examine issues surrounding the ethical use of these methods, and consider whether and how law and public policy should regulate these procedures and recognize the family relationships created by their use. Interpreting Religious Fits, Trances and Visions This course is an introduction to ways of understanding and interpreting religious experiences. The course analyzes religious experiences from a variety of (mostly American) contexts, with attention to how religious people themselves describe experiences and how scholars try to account for them. It examines moments of sudden conversion, insight or inspiration, nature mysticism, and ritual practices that are performed by Muslims, Christians and others. STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | Alumni Feature: Brandon Costelloe-Kuehn ’06 (Cont’d from p.4) Using multi-sited ethnographic methods, Brandon’s current research examines, and participates in, the design of innovative media systems to address the communication and collaboration challenges of politically and scientifically complex environmental issues. He works within a number of collaborative endeavors (always looking for new collaborators!), including an ethnographic project called The Asthma Files, the Platform for Experimental, Collaborative Ethnography (PECE), the Digital Practices in History and Ethnography Interest Group within the Research Data Alliance and the Multispecies Salon. Since completing graduate school in the Fall of 2012, Brandon has been teaching courses in the STS, Sustainability Studies and Design, and Innovation and Society programs at RPI. Courses include Century of Environmental Thought, Sustainability Problems and Solutions, Nature/Society, Product Design and Innovation Studio, Sustainability Debates, Sustainability Education, Public Service Internship, Environment and Politics, Environment and Society, Sustainability Senior Thesis and Sustainable Careers. In the Asthma Files, an interdisciplinary ethnographic project, Brandon has focused on developing the Platform for Collaborative and Experimental Ethnography (PECE) on which TAF operates, developing multi-media content for the website and curating within the Communicating Asthma section. Within the Research Data Alliance, and thanks to funding from the National Science Foundation, Brandon is working with the Interest Group in Digital Practices in History and Ethnography, conducting ethnographic research and mapping a wide variety of digital humanities projects. In parallel with coursework relating fieldwork and artistic practices, Brandon has worked with Eben Kirksey and other colleagues in a “para-ethnographic swarm” that documented and analyzed a Multispecies Salon, bringing together artists, scientists and anthropologists during the 2010 American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting in New Orleans. Brandon contributed to a chapter, “Life in the Age of Biotechnology” in a book, published with Duke University Press, and designed and built the accompanying website. With support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Vectors and a Fellowship in Digital Humanities at USC, Brandon contributed to Nick Shapiro’s Trailer Tracker, developing a platform using Geographic Information Systems to map the dispersal of formaldehyde-laden trailers originally deployed in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. Besides work in academia, Brandon has fallen in love with life in Troy, NY and, with skills gained through graduate coursework in the RPI Arts Department, has worked and volunteered at the Sanctuary for Independent Media, as a critical media literacy educator, video editor and teacher with the DIY Animation Workshop. Brandon has also taught private video editing lessons and produced content for the Journal of Cultural Anthropology, the Multispecies Salon and Capital District Community Gardens. For nearly a decade, he has been entranced by the music and culture of Cuba, playing with an Afro-Cuban and New World Percussion Ensemble called Ensemble Congeros. Brandon writes with gratitude about the life-long imprint that his Vassar years have left, including a passion for social justice, a love of learning and a dedication to community and the arts. He hopes that any Vassar students or alumni considering graduate school in STS, at RPI or elsewhere, will get in touch. He would be happy to give a tour of Troy and its many delights. You can reach Brandon at brcostelloehuehn@gmail.com 7 STS ALUMNI NEWSLETTER FALL 2015 | 8 Senior Thesis Poster Session On December 10th, STS seniors presented their thesis topics in poster form. This was a great way for seniors to present all of the work they have done so far and to give a hint of what is to come as they continue to research and write. If you would like to contribute to the Science, Technology, and Society newsletter, or if you have any comments, questions, or feedback, please contact the 2015-2016 Science, Technology, and Society academic intern, Kate Hennessy at kahennessy@vassar.edu.