Fall/Winter 2005 ANE Notes - Alumni and Development
Transcription
Fall/Winter 2005 ANE Notes - Alumni and Development
ANE Notes Antioch New England Graduate School Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Vol. 32 No. 2 Extensive Flooding in Keene Was Predicted — Steve Gregory MS ’05 (continued on page 4) INSIDE Water Street in Keene lived up to its name after the October rains. Beth Kaplin Receives MacArthur Grant From the President 2 Briefly Noted 3 Jonathan Kozol 5 Eco Books 6 Alumna Profile— David Macy 7 Visiting Days and Information Sessions 8 Notepad for Grads Alumni News Photo: Caleb Clark Last fall’s torrential rains in the Northeast didn’t just focus media attention on the massive flooding in Keene and the Monadnock Region. They also shined a spotlight on the Graduate School and a team of Antioch New England researchers, who for months prior to the October deluge had coincidentally been studying the vulnerability of Keene’s storm water drainage network to heavier than normal rains. “Most graduate students don’t see their theories and assumptions come to fruition as rapidly as we did,” said Sigurd Spearing, one of three graduates of ANE’s Resource Management and Administration program who worked with RMA director Michael Simpson on the study. Along with Sigurd ’05, other Environmental Studies alumni included Thomas Crosslin ’05 and Emily Hague ’05. Latham Stack ’84, a principal of Syntectic International, LLC, was also a member of the research team. The group had set out in spring 2005 to examine what could happen to the drainage system of Keene’s White Brook watershed during the more intense rainstorms predicted by scientific modeling because of 9 10-13 Comings & Goings 13 ANE in the News 14-15 Calendar of Events 16 Rwanda and neighboring countries are in dire need of locally trained conservation biologists to help protect one of Africa’s most important ecosystems. And Antioch New England’s Beth Kaplin has been tapped to help do something about it. Beth Kaplin, Ph.D., a professor of conservation biology in the Department of Environmental Studies, authored a winning proposal to the MacArthur Foundation to fund a three-year project to restructure the curriculum at the National University of Rwanda’s Biology Department. The project aims to provide staff and faculty at the university with more training in how to research and teach issues vital to conservation biology and to establish a Master of Science degree in the field of study. Rwanda is one of five countries comprising the so-called Albertine Rift, a region which is very high in species richness and has a large number of endemic species—species that are only found in that region of the world. The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) has been compiling lists of these mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, butterflies, and plants with the aim of promoting their conservation. As part of the grant, Beth will take an eighteen-month leave from her position at ANE and will relocate to Rwanda to provide technical assistance in the restructuring. Among other endeavors, she’ll help improve instruction on techniques for gathering data on wildlife in the field. The project is something of a homecoming for Beth, who has studied tropical forest ecology in Rwanda since 1990 and has worked closely with the National University. (continued on page 6) Information Session and Visiting Day Schedule, page 10 From the President We’ve changed our name. Effective July 1, 2006, we’re Antioch University New England. Why would we do such a thing? The simplest answer: Antioch DNA. The most celebrated contemporary example of this phenomenon is referred to in Coretta Scott King’s writings about her experience as an undergraduate at Antioch College, and, very poignantly, in her family’s decision to ask that all remembrances in her name be directed to the College. Mrs. King wrote in the 1993 edition of her autobiography My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr., “Antioch—the total experience of Antioch—was an important element in preparing me for the role I was to play as the wife of Martin Luther King, Jr., and for my part in the movement he led.” Other examples of Antioch DNA bear equal witness to Horace Mann’s exhortation: “Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity,” but are entirely unsung, woven in fundamental yet understated ways into the daily lives and actions of Antiochians everywhere, across generations. Here in New England, we celebrate two local heroes who are leaving ANE this year and whose lives epitomize this same DNA: Jim Craiglow, who retired this year as chancellor after thirty years service and dedication in a multitude of roles with ANE and Antioch University, and Mitch Thomashow, who has been appointed president of Unity College in Maine, also after thirty years distinguished service at ANE. It isn’t the years of service (in the case of Jim and Mitch) or the notoriety (in the case of Coretta Scott King) from which we draw inspiration as Antiochians. It’s the tireless and selfless dedication to winning victories for humanity—in the Civil Rights Movement, in higher education, and service to local and regional communities, in passionate stewardship of the environment—and, for all, the mentoring of future generations to in turn go out and win their own victories. When our faculty, staff, students, and alumni meet others from Antioch College, So we’ve Antioch McGregor, Antioch Seattle, Antioch Southern California, University campuses across the country changed our meet, even for the first time, we recognize some ineffable qualities in each other that reveal at once that what we share is greater than what our differences might be. So we’ve changed our name, in large name, in large part to embrace and claim our membership in the larger Antioch family, past, present, and future—all part to embrace across the land. Visioning ourselves forward as Antioch University New England, as one era gives way to the next, we and claim our all rededicate ourselves to winning victories large and small for humanity, guided by our Antioch DNA. membership in the larger Antioch family, past, present, and future—all across the land. 2 ANE Best wishes, Neal King, Interim President Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Briefly Noted Antioch Disaster Shakti Team Heads to the Gulf Coast Just six months after returning from disaster relief work in the tsunami-stricken region of India, Gargi Roysircar, professor of clinical psychology and director of the Antioch Multicultural Center, is preparing to lead a team of students to yet another disaster-stricken area, this one closer to home. Roysircar and clinical psychology students Anders Goranson, Claire Dunnett, Stephanie Miller, Alison Roy, Kate Airey, Michael Brodeur, and Vanessa Partridge will travel to the Gulf Coast in March to do Disaster Shakti— translated as empowerment, strength, and resilience in the face of disaster. “Despite their sadness, anger, and feelings of betrayal, there is a lot of resiliency and optimism in the Gulf Coast people. Their strong religious and spiritual faith pulls them along,” said Gargi. “They are caring survivors concerned about others’ needs. We want to bear witness to the survivors’ experience of the Katrina and its aftermath and tell their story.” While there, Gargi and her team will spend time with families and children in tent and trailer cities; go door-to-door assessing the needs of residents and reporting back to human services case managers; provide psychosocial activities for city employees and first responders who have worked tirelessly since the disaster; and engage survivors in conversations about trauma as it relates to disaster, racism, and poverty. For more information please visit us at www.multiculturalcenter.org. Service Learning Summit Antioch New England was well-represented at the 2nd Annual Service Learning Summit at Keene State College in early February. The event highlighted successful efforts involving students and faculty from both institutions, and was organized by Polly Chandler OM ’05, the academic service-learning coordinator for both ANE and Keene State. Presenters included ANEI project director Paul Bocko ES ’96, who along with Anita CarrollWeldon of the Horatio Colony Museum, provided an overview of the learning collaboration between students and the museum. ANE students created a series of hands-on activities using elements of the museum collection. Environmental Advocacy students Brian Hiatt and Willow Rheault described their work with clients on two separate projects. Brian’s project helped to build a sustainable base for community radio in Keene, and Willow’s work focused on educating Maine voters about a statewide ballot sustainability issue. Whole Terrain “Celebration and Ceremony” Celebrate the Most Recent Issue of Whole Terrain A nationally acclaimed literary journal published by Antioch New England, Whole Terrain’s Vol. 14, Celebration and Ceremony, features well-known authors such as Janisse Ray and our own Tom Wessels, as well as talented new voices. Student editor Brett Thelen writes, the current issue presents reflections of a world that is “alive with celebration, and rich with ritual.” To purchase an issue please visit www.wholeterrain.org. s Second Step Players Dance to a Different Drummer The Second Step Players are a theater troupe comprised of funny and daring volunteers who also have mental health diagnoses. The shows are written, produced, and performed by the troupe in order to explore difficulties within the mental health system, to stigma bust, and to show audiences that our differences can empower and inspire each other. Becca Atkins AP ’01 (pictured with pup!) is the director of the troupe and has found a creative alternative to express Antioch New England’s message of compassion and awareness. Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 3 Keene Flood (continued from page 1) The team stressed global climate that need during a change. They then presentation of extrapolated their their findings to findings over the select city council larger Keene storm members and water drainage planning officials system. October 5. Little Well before the did they know that October floods, the three days later, team concluded Mother Nature that the concrete would unleash a culverts that tempest on Keene channel storm and much of the water runoff within Northeast that the watershed were would serve as a not designed to The Woodland Cemetery on the East Side of Keene, a favorite jaunt for many local students, got its fill of river overflow. real-life test of accommodate the their hypotheses. increased rainfall On the morning of October 8, menacing skies let loose a steady, predicted under climate change models and could lead to flooding and driving rain that during the course of the next twenty-four hours culvert failures. The climate modeling the team used for the study dumped eleven-and-a-half inches of water on Keene and the predicted average rainfall totals could increase between 10 and 30 surrounding area. percent over the next several years in Keene and the surrounding region A swollen river north of Keene swept away houses and left seven because of increasing greenhouse gas accumulations. people dead. The driving rains also washed out several roads, “There is a certain irony in telling someone that they have the potential including a stretch of Route 9 between Keene and Stoddard that left for a problem and then have that problem occur,” researcher Thomas much of the low-lying portions of Keene under several feet of water. Crosslin said, although he noted the storm of October 8 and 9 was a freak “I looked outside and saw that half my street had turned into a occurrence beyond what even the climate change models predicted. pond,” said researcher Emily Hague, who lives near Keene’s Central In a twenty-one-page report, Crosslin and the other researchers Square. She contacted fellow researcher Sigurd Spearing, and together warned Keene officials that they needed to make drastic improvements they toured the study area to survey the damage. to the city’s culvert system to avoid damage to public and private property Most of the culverts held up to the storm’s fury, but one on brought on by heavier than normal rains. Their findings showed that at Whitcombs Mill Road over White Brook failed, causing extensive least 30 percent of the culverts in Keene were vulnerable to flooding with flooding and bank erosion. The road behind the narrow bridge over the heavier rains predicted and also because of increasing development the brook also buckled. of open space in the city. “People were canoeing to their homes,” Sigurd said. “It was surreal.” Michael Simpson launched the study in February 2005 after attending Word of the ANE study caught the attention of newspapers in Keene, a speech by James Gustav Speth, dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Boston, and Concord and was eventually distributed nationally by the Environmental Studies and author of Red Sky at Morning: America and the Crisis of the Global Environment. In his speech, Speth argued that more Associated Press. needs to be done at local, state, and national levels to educate Americans on The researchers hope their study will serve as a wake-up call to city the dangers posed by greenhouse gas accumulations in the atmosphere. planners in New England and elsewhere that the time is now to begin “Responding to global warming requires a higher level of citizen shoring up municipal infrastructure in advance of the more intense scientific education because the problem is not ‘in your face’ on a daily weather predicted by global climate change models. “The professional basis,” Michael said. “In essence, as other academics and advocates community historically has taken a “wait-and-see” approach rather are focusing on reducing future emissions that exacerbate climate than actively preparing for climate change,” the team wrote. change, the culvert study was to emphasize the need to have parallel “However, this wait-and-see approach is no longer tenable.” efforts to prepare and plan for the ramifications of past emissions, Added researcher Emily Hague: “Clearly, planning and climate science whose impact will be experienced over many decades to come.” need to go hand-in-hand from this point forward.” s 4 ANE Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Fiery and Funny, Author Jonathan Kozol Speaks at Antioch New England — Sam Samuels “Segregation is back,” said best-selling author, educator, and activist Jonathan Kozol on Thursday, November 17, to an audience of about seven hundred Antioch New England students, faculty, staff, alumni, and Monadnock Region community members who had gathered in the auditorium of Keene Middle School for a public lecture hosted by ANE. “With a vengeance.” It was an evening that was sometimes enraging, sometimes hilarious, and always enlightening. Kozol came to Antioch New England as part of an Antioch University-wide visiting lecture series. Earlier, he had given talks at Antioch campuses in Southern California and Seattle, and he will speak at Antioch College in the spring. His visit to ANE was an eye-opener. In the course of ninety minutes, Kozol presented a searing, painstakingly researched attack on poverty and racial division in inner-city schools, the American system of paying for education through property taxes, our president, the low value America places on minority children, and the No Child Left Behind Act. Kozol is the author of numerous books on the inequalities of the American educational system. His newest book, The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America, is the product of his many visits to more than sixty public schools in America’s inner cities. In classroom after classroom, Kozol sees the same three disturbing trends. First, he observes that American schools are more racially segregated now than at any time since 1968. Second, the separation by race has been accompanied by a huge separation in funding. And third, Kozol decries the effects of what he calls “No Child Left Untested.” With so much pressure on teachers to pump up their students’ test scores, Kozol sees no time left in the school day for beauty, for laughter, or, in his view, for true education. In the midst of this strong criticism, Kozol maintains a powerful sense of humor and of hope. A self-proclaimed product of the 60s, he believes that if enough people act together they can create a positive change. He predicts that the next ten years will witness a second civil rights movement, this time focused not in the Deep South but in New York City. “History is not like some weather system that comes down out of Canada,” he remarked. “History is what you do in the morning about the beliefs you held the night before.” Peppered throughout his talk were many anecdotes, some joyous and some downright funny, about the many children he has met. Kozol recounted a visit to an elementary school in the Bronx along with his long-time friend Fred Rogers, of public television’s Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. The school was in an area of intense poverty and crime, and the faces of the children were 100 percent African American. When one of the youngsters spotted Mr. Rogers, he flung out his arms, ran full-speed toward his television friend, leapt into the air to embrace him, planted a kiss on his forehead, and said: “Mr. Rogers, welcome to my neighborhood.” The day after Kozol’s public lecture, he returned to the ANE campus for a full day of workshops and talks with smaller groups within the campus community, concluding in the evening with a modified version of his public lecture, shortened to allow for more questions. Jonathan Kozol presented a researched attack on poverty and racial division in inner-city schools, the low value America places on minority children, and the No Child Left Behind Act. That final talk had a special surprise. Among the approximately seventy members of the Antioch community in attendance was Lyonel Tracy, New Hampshire’s Commissioner of Education. Tracy took a front-row seat. When question and answer time arrived, Kozol invited Tracy up to the front of the room to field questions as a team. “Jonathan Kozol has been one of my best friends for thirty years,” Tracy said. “But he only found out about it tonight.” Tracy told the story of his being a rookie school teacher in rural Maine when he read and became inspired by Kozol’s first book, Death at an Early Age. Shortly after that, he learned that Kozol would be speaking about an hour away. The young Tracy jumped in his car and headed toward the lecture, only to be stopped when his car struck a deer. By the time the police arrived on the dark, deserted stretch of country road, Kozol’s lecture was already half over. Tracy had missed it. For the last thirty years, Tracy has been waiting for another chance to hear his idol speak. So when he received the invitation from Antioch not only to attend the talk, but also to take part in a private dinner with Kozol, it was the answer to a lifelong wish. “He’s still got that fire in the belly,” Tracy said. As ANE Interim President Neal King said when introducing Kozol, “He has the soul of a poet, the heart of a child, and the mind of a scholar.” For the approximately one thousand people who heard Kozol speak during his two days at ANE, all three were in evidence. s Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 5 Kaplin’s MacArthur Grant (continued from page 1) park wardens to senior wildlife “This work is a culmination managers. One of the main reasons of many things I have been for the shortage has been the thinking about in recent nation’s lack of opportunity to years, including conservation specialize in conservation biology education and biodiversity at the undergraduate level or to conservation in the Albertine pursue graduate studies in this Rift. Needless to say I am field. The National University of both thrilled and overwhelmed Rwanda's Biology Department, at the prospect!” for example, devotes less than Chairperson of ANE’s five percent of its curriculum to Department of Environmental conservation biology. Studies, Mitch Thomashow, To help change that, Beth said “Beth’s excellent research, leaves for Rwanda at the end of teaching, scholarship, and February and will remain based networking in tropical there until Fall 2007, when she conservation biology have resumes her position at ANE. established her as an During the leave, however, Beth international expert. Her will continue working with the MacArthur grant, designed to Master’s students she advises and build conservation biology the Ph.D. candidates on whose programs in Rwanda, reflects Dr. Beth Kaplin (second from left) will collaborate with Rwandan colleagues from the dissertation committees she this fine effort. We expect it National University to restructure curriculum in the biology department. serves. She will also maintain a to spawn many opportunities role with the Center for Tropical Ecology and Conservation and will for student and faculty exchanges in the months and years to come.” return to Keene each summer to teach the Ph.D. Dissertation Seminar. The MacArthur Foundation chose to fund the project to help stem The Department of Environmental Studies will be hiring a one-year the current shortage of locally trained conservation biologists in replacement to cover her ecology and conservation biology courses. Rwanda. Although the government of Rwanda has made wildlife Antioch New England Graduate School wishes Beth the best of luck conservation a top priority, it’s had difficulty recruiting qualified in her new pursuit. s local conservation biologists to fill positions ranging from national Black, White, and Green All Over It all started with a simple message in FirstClass asking a simple question—what do Antiochians consider the top eco books? From Rachel Carlson’s Silent Spring, Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey, and The Control of Nature by John McPhee, to Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax, weeks and weeks went by and the responses just kept on coming. When all was said and done a diverse list of some one hundred books had been offered as among the best and most influential ecocentered books published. Some Eco Selections (in no particular order): A Sand County Almanac, Aldo Leopold Practice of the Wild, Gary Snyder A Reason for Hope: A Spiritual Journey, Jane Goodall Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things, William McDonough and Michael Braungart Seedfolks, Paul Fleischman Please visit antiochne.edu/news for the full list of books submitted as top eco books. Did you miss out on the conversation? Sign up for a FirstClass account and join the dialogue! 6 ANE Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 PH.D. IN LEADERSHIP AND CHANGE A low-residency program for professionals who seek rigorous study and reflective practice in engaged scholarship and principled leadership. web: phd.antioch.edu tollfree: 877-800-9466 Dreamer, Builder, Fixer, Caretaker, David Macy ’00 — Paul B. Hertneky Rarely does a can-do guy wear the label of After three years at Djerassi, Macy leapt at idealist. Practicality often brings dreamers an opportunity to become resident director at down to earth and limits their vistas, or it tests MacDowell. He’s still pinching himself. “I’m so their mettle. When David Macy O&M ’00 talks, happy it worked out. It got us back east (nearer he can make conceptual leaps that leave a to family), and it’s a great place to work. I think listener panting to catch up. As the resident this [today’s] staff is the best that MacDowell director of the MacDowell Colony, the nation’s has ever had.” oldest artists’ retreat, in Peterborough, New But he had a rocky start at the Colony. Hampshire, Macy’s way of thinking and speaking Controversy swirled around the departure of his follows the way art is often made—by bringing predecessor, and, he says, “I had a hard time visions into the material world. understanding the culture of the organization. Macy recalls how he brought his Antioch And, I was young in comparison to the rest of the education straight back to the office. staff, in age and experience. It was hard to be a “Sustainability, for instance, was great to catalyst for positive change. I thought I knew a talk about. I could have a conversation with lot about running an artists’ residency program, somebody that was not about taking on a but felt tenuous about my leadership skills.” David Macy ’00 (O&M) dances between the big project that would knock their life out of That’s when he discovered ANE. “The Antioch esoteric realm of art and the demands of the renowned MacDowell Colony. balance, putting them in a defensive position, program was seamless with my work. Every paper or forcing them to over-commit. Instead, we’d I wrote, all the problem-solving that I studied talk about how to look at an additional project so that we could and presented at Antioch was taking place in my office at MacDowell.” sustain it ourselves, and how to manage it to really thrive.” In addition to the sustainable approach toward management, he found Get him talking about two-ton sculptures made of six-penny nails a professional peer group at ANE, one he thought had been sorely that somehow evoke whipped cream, and how to get them on a truck, lacking. “In working with peer groups at Antioch I realized that this and you’re really in for a ride. Caught up in exploring the abstract was the way I wanted to be engage with my staff at MacDowell— and the seemingly impossible, David breaks down in giggles. His job a realization that continues to be helpful to this day.” allows him, and requires him, to dance between the esoteric realm of Although his position demands that he make speeches, public art and the demands of managing a large staff, and four-hundred appearances, and interact with a constantly rotating population of acres of land dotted with thirty-five buildings, and an operation that artists, Macy, now the father of four-year-old Rowan, craves time for serves artists continuously, 365 days a year. family and his own solitude. In that way, he reflects the mission of Looking into Macy’s past, offers a few glimpses of a dreamer-doer the Colony. The world-renowned institution has been the subject of life unfolding. Fascinated by the way things work, he majored in television dramas and acknowledged in the pages of books and musical biomedical engineering at Case Western Reserve. But he soon took an scores and film credits, but it functions quietly, tucked away in the woods. avid interest in religion, psychology, and art. “Understanding myself Recently, however, Macy has found himself in a media storm. After and understanding why other people behave the way they do seemed a century of exemptions, the town of Peterborough has decided to levy much more interesting than the co-efficient for determining how property taxes on the Colony. The move follows a growing trend among rapidly a piece of plastic will crack,” he said. cash-strapped municipalities throughout the U.S., simultaneously Rebecca Rothfusz, who would become his spouse, studied modern squeezing and endangering nonprofits. MacDowell has drawn the line dance in Cleveland, and the two of them longed for new horizons. and will fight the town in court. Now, on NPR and in Associated Press He went to art school, and waited tables for a while. Then, true to news stories, Macy finds himself asking tough questions of society. form, they set their sights on California. “Do we want to honor the tradition in this country to encourage the Macy finally landed at Djerassi Resident Artists Program, a retreat promotion of arts, or are we just about the bottom-line? Do we not patterned after MacDowell, and he fell in love with the mission. “I have any shared values about the arts and literature?” thought it was fantastic that an organization was established to give In a way, he’s been preparing those lines for a long time. He seems time and to clear a space for people who were really passionate about the perfect sort of man to be asking the questions, one who, every doing exactly what they envisioned. I couldn’t believe that somebody day helps artists, donors, volunteers, and co-workers figure out how had come up with that and I was part of it,” he says. to answer it for themselves. s Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 7 Spring 2006 Visiting Days & Information Sessions Greetings, Antioch New England community members. Many of our students report that they first discovered Antioch New England Graduate School through students, faculty, staff, and alumni. I wanted to share this semester’s visiting day and information session schedule with you. Beginning graduate school is a big undertaking, so your recommendation as an ANE community member means a great deal to prospective students. If you know anyone who is considering graduate school, please pass on this information. You may also direct any prospective students to Antioch New England by sending them one of our new electronic postcards, available on the website at www.antiochne.edu. As always, thank you for your ongoing support of Antioch New England. Leatrice Johnson Director of Admissions Master’s Programs APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY VISITING DAY: Tuesday, April 11, 8:30 AM - 3 PM EDUCATION Experienced Educators VISITING DAY: Saturday, March 11, 11:30 AM - 1:30 PM (in Springfield, VT) INFORMATION SESSIONS: Wednesday, April 5, 3 PM (in Saco, ME), Wednesday, May 3, 4 PM (in Keene, NH), Wednesday, May 10, 3 PM (in Pembroke, NH) Integrated Learning (Elementary Education ) VISITING DAY: Friday, April 7, 9 AM - 3 PM Waldorf Teacher Training VISITING DAY: Friday, April 14, 9 AM - 3 PM ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES VISITING DAY: Friday, April 21, 8:30 AM - 2:30 PM ORGANIZATION & MANAGEMENT VISITING DAYS: Saturday, March 11, 10 AM - 2 PM, Saturday, April 29, 10 AM - 2 PM DOCTORAL PROGRAMS ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES VISITING DAYS: Friday, March 31, 2 PM - 6 PM, Friday, April 28, 2 PM - 6 PM CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY VISITING DAY: Monday, April 24, 8:30 AM - 3:30 PM Certificate Program AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS VISITING DAY: Saturday, April 1, 9 AM - 1 PM 8 ANE Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Notepad for Grads Development News Alumni Relations News Annual Fund Antioch-wide Alumni Gathering in Seattle In February, Antioch alumni from New England, Seattle, Santa Barbara, and Yellow Springs gathered for a luncheon and a two-hour guided walk on the 255-acre nature preserve of Island Wood, a premier outdoor learning center located on Washington’s scenic Bainbridge Island. Thirty Antiochians enjoyed the afternoon. This was the first step toward creating a lively Antioch network in the Seattle area. The Annual Fund is on its way to being the biggest in several years, both in alumni participation and dollars! We are very honored to report that there have been many first time donors this year as well as many who have renewed their support after several years away. If you have not yet made your gift you can do so online at www.antiochne.edu/alumni/giving.cfm Norman Wilson Scholarship Attendees of the Antioch-wide gathering: Susan Hager-Smith SS ’70, Kristin Poppo ES ’89, Jane Alynn LA, and Sam Samuels ANE director of Development. Following the event, alumna Pamela Moore ES ’95 expressed, “In true Antioch fashion, it was a memorable event that stirred that certain fire in the heart, through simple connection of kindred spirit.” Applied Psychology Over forty DMT alumni and students attended a reception in Nashville, Tennessee during the annual ADTA conference in October. Alumni of the Marriage and Family Therapy Program also enjoyed a reception this fall at the annual AAMFT conference. Plans are already underway for alumni receptions at these two events in the fall of 2006. ADTA is in Long Beach, California and AAMFT is in Austin, Texas. Clinical Psychology Gatherings are being organized in the Boston, Massachusetts and New Haven, Connecticut areas. Watch for your invitation. Education The Department of Education launched the Antioch Center for School Renewal this fall for service to schools and educators. Check out the website for upcoming professional development opportunities at www.antiochne.edu/acsr. The Waldorf Teacher Training Program will gather for a reunion July 1 at the High Mowing School. Waldorf alumni, watch the mail for your invitation! Environmental Studies Fred Taylor will again be leading alumni on two weekend retreats. His popular Cape Cod trip will be held April 21-April 23 during Earth Week, and is limited to fourteen participants. Later, he and John Mosimann will lead a forest camping trip July 28-30 which is limited to twelve participants. Tom Wessels is making plans to meet with alumni across the country during his upcoming book tour for The Myth of Progress and the Laws of Sustainability. Watch for invitations to these events! Organization & Management Alumni gathered in early winter in Burlington, Vermont, and in Hanover and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Those attending reconnected with classmates and department chair Steve Guerriero ’88 who reported on programs and projects. Watch for future gatherings in your area. If we don’t have your updated email address on record, be sure to send it to alumni@antiochne.edu so you will receive the new O&M newsletter planned for a March release. s We are only $18,000 away from the goal of $100,000 to fully endow the Norman Wilson Scholarship Fund. Created and named by Heidi Watts, faculty emerita in the Department of Education, the Norman Wilson Scholarship will promote diversity by supporting students of color. To make a gift to this fund, please contact the Office of Development or director Sam Samuels at 603.357.3122 ext. 281 or ssamuels@antiochne.edu. The Glen Maples Society The Glen Maples Society has been established to secure Antioch New England’s future through planned giving. Please let us know if you have included Antioch New England in your estate plans, or if you would like information about how to do so. You can email us at alumni@antiochne.edu and request our Ways to Give brochure, or call Sam Samuels at 603.357.3122 ext. 281 Glen Maples Society Anonymous (1) Donald D. Davis, friend Glenn J. Kaufman, AP ’80 Margaret J. MacDonald OM ’98 Jason Roth AP ’76 Joan G. Saunders OM ’92 Dr. Barbara Toner Psy.D. ’98 Heidi Watts, Faculty Emerita Peter S. Wellenberger ES ’82 Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 9 Alumni News Applied Psychology Anna Aasgaard, M.A. ’98, writes that her marriage and family therapy practice is thriving at Well & Beyond in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Susan J. Anderson, M.A. ’99, is a fourth-year doctoral student at University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is currently doing her internship at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and working on her dissertation. Jordan Crane, M.A. ’85, was named human resources director at Devine Millimet, a law firm with offices in Andover, Massachusetts and Manchester, Concord, and North Hampton, New Hampshire. She directs recruitment of legal and support staff, employee relations and benefits, and training programs. Calvin C. Frost, M.A. ’84, has opened his private practice, Calvin Frost Counseling. His office is on the second floor of the Junction Market Place in White River Junction, Vermont. He has particular interest in substance abuse counseling, stress and anger management, and helping victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse. Suzanne Hastie, ADTR, M.A. ’91, has written a chapter on The Kestenberg Movement Profile in the Creative Arts Therapies Manual: A Guide to the History, Theoretical Approaches, Assessment, and Work with Special Populations of Art, Play, Dance, Music, Drama, and Poetry Therapies, edited by Stephanie L. Brooke, Ph.D. Karen Kelley, M.A. ’93, has opened a private practice in Kingston, New Hampshire to serve adolescents and adults. Karen specializes in helping people heal from trauma and recover from chemical dependency. Tom MacLachlan, M.A. ’76, celebrated his twentyfifth year as faculty at North Shore Community College in Danvers, Massachusetts. He is the founder of the school’s human services and gerontology degree program. Suzy (Rossol) Matheson, M.A. ’03, announced the debut of her daughter Julianna Elizabeth, born July 24, 2005. Shannon Murdoch, M.A. ’01, met up with her cousin and friend Deborah A. Clark, M.A. ’01. Deborah has Antioch interns at her site each semester. “We don’t hear from our ’99-01 group though, so write people! Hope everyone is as healthy and happy as we are.” Colleen E. Murphy, M.A. ’03, is now licensed in Vermont. Recently relocating back to New England, she is a therapeutic case manager for Washington County Mental Health. Robert Nichols, M.A. ’02, provides individual and family therapy at Family Services of Central Massachusetts, forensic mental health services in the Massachusetts correctional system, and substance abuse services in Worcester. 1 0 ANE Jocelyn Shaw, M.A. ’05, is working at Sloan Kettering Memorial in New York City with dance/movement therapist and ANE DMT supervisor Suzi Tortora. Suzi’s work was featured on an ABC-TV News report “Dance Therapy to Help Sick Kids” and demonstrated the effectiveness of dance therapy when combined with traditional medicine. Jocelyn was shown working with the children who are recovering from cancer. Jeffrey Spiegler, M.A. ’95, is in private practice and teaches Introduction to Psychology at the New Hampshire Community Technical College in Keene. Jeffrey’s practice primarily involves treating trauma, phobias, pain, grief, addictions, and personal performance issues. He is trained In Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Level II. “The developmental leaps I observe when the traumatic memories are diffused are miraculous.” Jeffrey is also a full-time dad to three children. You can email him at therapyworks@ne.rr.com. Jean T. Tacy, M.Ed. ’82, is enjoying retirement with her two Siamese cats. She keeps up with Antioch news and says her ANE experience was one of the most valuable and meaningful in her life. Carin L. Torp, M.A. ’95, was awarded the 2005 Dr. James Meath Award from Monadnock Family Services in Keene, New Hampshire. Awarded annually to the staff person who personifies clinical excellence, Carin was chosen for her ability to establish rapport with clients and their families, and to help them to undertake or deal with change; her ability to be a good advocate for her clients, and her ability to be flexible and creative in finding ways to provide services. Sara S. Watters, M.A. ’03, presented a workshop at the 3rd Annual Wilderness Therapy Symposium at Naropa University last September entitled, “Everyday Wilderness Therapy for Psychiatric Clients.” She is a senior clinician at Windhorse Associates, Inc. in Northampton, Massachusetts. Clinical Psychology Edouard A. Carignan, Psy.D. ’01, will leave his position at the Philbrook Children’s Center in February 2006 for one with Riverbend Counseling Associates in Concord, New Hampshire. A family systems therapist, he sees mostly adolescents with behavior problems. On a personal note, Ed informs us that he is currently enjoying his life as a grandfather and is expecting his fourth grandchild. Carmela J. DeCandia, Psy.D. ’99, is now vice president of programs for St. Mary’s Women and Children’s Center in Massachusetts. In this newly defined role, Carmela will over see the management and operations of the agency’s residential, educational, training, healthcare, and clinical programs. Carmela has dedicated herself to supporting vulnerable children Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 and families and providing them with the highest quality of care. She is currently a member of the adjunct faculty at Lesley University's master’s program in counseling psychology. Ellen E. Ford, Psy.D. ’02, has joined the staff at Associated Counselors and Psychotherapists in Lowell, Massachusetts. Ellen’s specialties include working with people who have suffered some form of violence or sexual abuse, as well as people who have problems with mood, anxiety, substance abuse, or eating disorders. Denise Lamothe, Psy.D. ’89, author of the popular book The Taming of the Chew: A Holistic Guide to Stopping Compulsive Eating (Penguin 2002) has expanded her clinical practice to include professional speaking and writing. “With so many millions of people concerned about their weight and health, this is the prime time to suggest a speaker on emotional eating.” For more information visit www.deniselamothe.com. William J. McCann, Psy.D. ’93, has moved from Vermont to Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He is the director of Behavioral Science Education and assistant professor at the Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, and clinical assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine. He is also serving part-time as consulting associate professor with the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham. Cay McDermott-Coffin, Psy.D. ’04, is opening a private practice in Bedford Hills, New York and will provide psychological assessment and testing services and career and educational consulting services. Melissa Rotkiewicz, Psy.D. ’04, has recently accepted a position as the director of assessments at Counseling and Assessment Services (CAS) at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. CAS is the only place on campus of almost thirty thousand students that evaluates learning disabilities and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. She coordinates those assessments and supervises three pre-doctoral interns in their APA-approved internship in psychology. She also works with the UMass Police Department, conducting the psychological evaluations that all of their police officer and cadet candidates must pass in order to be hired. Education Ellen Edson, M.Ed. ’84, used her love of traditional American music and her talent at playing the guitar, dulcimer, autoharp, and banjo to captivate and teach children at the Winchester Elementary school in New Hampshire this fall, as was featured in a local news article. Ellen is an early childhood administrator for the Pioneer Valley Regional School District. Each year she puts on about twenty performances for various local libraries, schools, and family programs. She has begun work on a second CD which she hopes to have by the end of the year. www.ellenedson.com. Margaret W. Farwell, M.Ed. ’77, celebrated her 50th wedding anniversary with husband Norman. Greetings were received from the President and Mrs. George Bush and Senators Judd Gregg and John Sununu as well as from family and friends. They have three children and three grandchildren. Nancy K. Flasher, M.Ed. ’99, is still out on the tip of Cape Cod where she teaches an independent studies course at Provincetown High School. She writes that it feels like that time in her life to wonder “What’s next?” She would love to hear from her classmates. Hans C. Friedly, M.Ed. ’91, returned to curative education (special education) after teaching at Waldorf Schools in Arizona and working in a small Camphill Community in Berlin. Now he is teaching Eurythmy to special needs students in a Waldorf school north of Osnabruck, Lower Saxony, Germany. William Gamard, M.A.T. ’71, published a book of his translations from Persian: “Rumi and Islam” (2004). His website has more of his translations from the works of Jalaluddin Rumi, the 13th century Muslim mystical poet: www.dar-al-masnavi.org. William is a psychologist (Ph.D. 1986, California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco) at a state facility for developmentally disabled adults in California. Lois R. Horan, Waldorf Cert ’05, was hired as the on-site director for a new daycare center at Conval High School to be run by Pine Hill in Wilton, New Hampshire. Lois will oversee thirty to forty children. Ashirah J. Klein, M.Ed. ’02, just moved to Philadelphia to be with her fiancé. She is currently looking for teaching positions in the area. Jennifer E. Nelson, M.Ed. ’97, was hired by the Wellspring School in Chelsea, Vermont as a first grade teacher. A former class teacher at the Upper Valley Waldorf School, she has run a Waldorf daycare and preschool in her own home in South Strafford, and has taught recorder and flute classes for many years. Steven Rohrbeck, M.Ed. ’97 and wife Beth Rohrbeck M.Ed. ’97, have completed their sixth year teaching overseas in international schools. They’ve worked in Senegal, Malaysia, and are now in China where they teach at a small school in mainland China (Shekou), about a 45-minute ferry ride from Hong Kong. Steve is currently teaching fourth grade. They have two great little girls and return home each summer to visit family and friends. Bret E. Schacht, M.Ed. ’05, was hired by the White Mountain Waldorf School in Conway, New Hampshire as a second grade teacher. His experience working with children includes teaching English as a Second Language to first through sixth graders in Daegu, South Korea, as a daycare volunteer in Winchester, in a residential treatment center, and leading a Big Brother/Big Sister program. Jennifer Steckler, M.Ed. ’03, was hired by Wellspring School in Chelsea, Vermont where she teaches in the school’s nursery and kindergarten program and leads the Morning Garden Parent-Child program. Environmental Studies Peter Alexander, M.S. ’04, has been working with Brattleboro Climate Protection which partnered with two local banks to offer Vermont homeowners reduced-rate loans for repairs and upgrades to increase energy efficiency or drop consumption. The pilot program rewards homeowners for using less energy. Peter first thought of the proposal while working on an energy efficiency program in New Mexico. Stephanie B. Brearton, M.S.T. ’89, wrote in to say her ANE education helped move her along a Bohemian journeying: “toward soulful stewardship I go, by stairs sometimes, or riding a magical mossy carpet at those synchronistic moments.” As a volunteer and staff member in her Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, she is called to lead worship in the UU Ministry of the Earth (Green Congregation) group, and lead worship services to share this journeying. A recent service she led “R.E.C.I.P.E. for a Tree” invited her congregation into an intimate creative relationship (“Religious Elan-vital”) Conceiving Idol Personification—toward what is efficacious for a tree. Activism through this channel enables Stephanie to live out the values of earth ministry. Martin Castriotta, M.S. ’02, is one half of Digging Roots, which creates educational experiences that connect the heart to the landscape. He has organized festivals, mask workshops, and school programs in New England for the past five years. He has also performed in parades and produced small puppet theater productions with the troupe, The Registry of Fools. He is a teacher at Gateway School in Springfield, a public school for special needs children. Gregg A. Cohen, M.S. ’00, has been promoted to senior environmental analyst at Dufresne-Henry engineering firm in Portland, Maine. Chris Covel, M.S. ’02, was spotlighted in The Cabinet Press in his award-winning documentary, Heavy Metal, A Mining Disaster in Northern Quebec, which chronicles the Canadian government’s cover-up of pollution that threatens the health and culture of a Cree community. Chris was instrumental in uncovering “the worst contamination problem” he’d ever seen. You can view the story at www.cabinet.com/ headlines/2005/cab11.10.05-2.html Elizabeth S. Fletcher, M.S. ’83, still keeps her hands in art and the environment and had a solo exhibition at Conant Gallery in Groton, Massachusetts. She reports that she is working with wonderful people to protect area land as a member of the Mason New Hampshire Conservation Commission. Susan Hale-de Seve, M.S. ’92, following an accident eleven years ago that resulted in a traumatic brain injury, Susan has again found work in the environmental field, the Statewide Program of Action to Conserve the Environment (S.P.A.C.E) at the Forest Society in Concord, New Hampshire. Steve Ivas, M.S. RMA ’86, principal with Ivas Environmental of Norwell, Massachusetts writes to share that his business is meeting both his lifestyle and career goals. Christopher J. Mattrick, M.S. ’92, is the senior conservation programs manager for the New England Wild Flower Society (NEWFS) based in Framingham. Christopher directs the activities of the Society’s Plant Conservation Volunteer Corps, is a member of the New England Plant Conservation Program, and is involved in the management of endangered and H E L P B U I L D ANE’ S C A R E E R N E T W O R K Send position openings to alumni@antiochne.edu. Or sign up for a FirstClass email account to post job openings directly, search for your next career move, and network with fellow alumni. Visit antiochne.edu/alumni to get started. Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 1 1 invasive plant species throughout the region. He serves as the survey coordinator for the Invasive Plant Atlas of New England. He was a featured speaker on invasive plants presented by the Mystic River Watershed Association “Alien Invasions: A look at New England’s Invasive Species.” Thomas F. Good, M.S. ’96, is an assistant professor in the general education department at the New England Institute of Art, teaching environmental science, human anatomy and physiology, and physical science/visual media to non-science majors. He stands here with students from his Environmental Science classes during an October field trip to the Boston Nature Center, a Massachusetts Audubon sanctuary. Ralph Pope, M.S. ’03, was the first to present in a talk series in Nelson, New Hampshire where residents share their jobs and hobbies. He focused his discussion on “Lichens of Nelson.” An adjunct professor of New England flora at ANE, Ralph led a lichen foray around the Harris Center grounds in Hancock followed by a slide presentation about alpine zone lichens and lichen ecology. Pope is a Harris Center board member and author of Lichens above Treeline, Field Guide to Alpine Zone Lichens of the Northeast. Charles D. Saulnier II, M.S. ’90, the head of the environmental science, department at Essex Agricultural and Technical School, was named Educator of the Year during Essex Aggie’s Massachusetts Envirothon. The school gave Charles the opportunity to create the department six years ago, and the freedom to develop his “expeditionary learning” model. He is the first winner of the Massachusetts Envirothon Educator of the Year Award. Christine L. Schadler, M.S. ’95, a coyotes and wolves specialist, presented “Coyotes, Wolves and Humans: or You Can’t Always Get What You Want (But you get what you need)” in August as part of a free lecture series by the Friends of the Randolph Public Library in Vermont. She taught for ten years at the University of New Hampshire in the Department of Natural Resources where she was recognized three times for teaching excellence. She is working on a book, Coyote Nation, featuring the eastern coyote. Aaron Schneider, M.S.T. ’77, wonders if there are other ES students from circa ’77 that remember the PR/Virgin Islands field trip based at his house in Punta St. Jacinto. If so, he’d love to hear from you at aaronschn@yahoo.com. Sietske A. Smith, M.S. ’03, and her family have moved overseas to be with her husband’s family in England where she pursues teaching and environmental work. Rachel Van Houten, M.S. ’03, a science educator at the Montshire Museum of Science, co-authored the article “Student Researchers: An Environmental Science Symposium” published in Connect: Teacher’s Innovations in K-8 Science, Math and Technology. The article focused on the Environmental Detectives curriculum, a project emphasizing student-designed investigations related to environmental toxicology research—a unique collaboration between the Montshire Museum, Dartmouth College, and five middle schools in Vermont and New Hampshire. Jeff Wallner, M.S.T. ’86, recently accepted a year-round position at Saguaro National Park after ten years of seasonal interpretive work at Saguaro (winter) and Mesa Verde and Black Canyon National Parks (summer). His earlier book Cape 1 2 ANE Cod Wild Flowers: A Vanishing Heritage was re-published by University Press of New England. Wendall Waters, M.S. ’03, is a landscaper in Ipswich, Massachusetts. She recently published an article in the local paper called “Ipswich snails, their lives, and my own” which covered her work of tracking snails to study the possibility of whether they form lasting social bonds. Organization & Management Michael L. Borsari, M.H.S.A. ’95, recently graduated from the Massachusetts School of Law in Andover with a Juris Doctor degree. Arthur H. Burbank, M.H.S.A. ’78, has been enjoying retirement for a year and a half. Before that he and his wife put their son through Cornell and MIT for chemical engineering. Arthur can’t believe his son was a three-year old when he enrolled at Antioch. Patricia A. Sorento, M.Ed. ’91, is the director of health information management at Alice Peck Day Memorial Hospital in Lebanon, New Hampshire. Sorento spent more than twenty years at DartmouthHitchcock Medical Center in various health information positions, most recently as manager of record services in the medical record department. Nicole Wilkinson, M.Ed. ’02, has moved to New England. Nikki was appointed middle school director for Thayer Academy in Braintree, Massachusetts. She loves the area, loves the people, and is thrilled to be so close to family and friends. She encourages classmates to get in touch at nwilkinson1@excite.com. Jeffrey B. Wood, M.Ed. ’75, says you just can’t get away from New England, even when you’re in California! His work in California at the Monterey Institute of International Studies was scheduled to be run by Middlebury College, Vermont in January 2006. Irene Dickinson, M.S. ’94, is an adjunct faculty in the M.B.A. program at St. Joseph’s College of Maine, in Standish where she teaches business dynamics and theory. She has remarried former husband Craig. First married in 1970, she quotes Bossuel. “The heart has reasons that reason doesn’t understand.” Gayle L. Gifford, ACRFE, M.S. ’99, is pleased to announce the release of her newest book in May, How are we Doing? A 1-Hour Guide to Evaluating the Performance of Your Nonprofit Board by Emerson & Church Publishing. Gayle also is a regular columnist on nonprofit governance and fundraising for Contributions Magazine. Martha S. Jacobs, M.S. ’86, appeared in the Spotlight on New Businesses of the Valley Business Journal for her consulting firm, Systems In Sync. Her firm provides strategic planning and consulting services for educational and nonprofit organizations applying a systems thinking approach. Martha has been teaching and consulting for the past seventeen years. www.systemsinsvnc.com. Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Sally S. Tremaine, M.H.S.A. ’92, was appointed to director of corporate and foundation relations at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. Sally is responsible for the cultivation and development of gifts and grants for institutional initiatives. In Memoriam Leslie A. Cobb, M.A. ’96, (AP) Mont Vernon, New Hampshire, 77, died of cancer in April 2005. He served in the US Marine Corps during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Leslie valued higher education and spent a career as an electrical engineer. He completed his Master’s Degree in Counseling Psychology at age 70. James S. Farr, M.Ed. ’86, (ED) died in December of 2004 in Claremont, New Hampshire. He was a science teacher at Gilford Middle-High School. He attended Williams and received his bachelor’s degree at Carleton State College in 1966. He is survived by his wife, son, and two grandchildren. Jeffrey S. Hale, M.S. ’03, (ES) one of three originators of Davis Square’s Someday Café, passed away in September after a seven-year bout with leukemia. He was 36. Long time friends best remember the sunshiny, happy attitude that he had even on rainy, grumpy, Monday mornings at 5 a.m., the time he regularly opened the coffee shop for business. Born in Bellevue, Washington, Jeff came to Boston at 23-years-old to draw the early 90s Seattle coffee craze to the Boston area. He was highly involved with environmental economics and the concept of bio-diesel. MaryAnn B. Smith, M.A. ’91, (AP) age 63, of Norwich, Vermont died in February after a long struggle with congestive heart failure. She was born in Ohio and attended the Toledo School of Nursing before coming to Hanover to work at Dick Halls House where she met her husband, Barry Smith, M.D. She subsequently worked as an operating room nurse, a school nurse in Norwich and after earning her master’s degree, and as a psychiatric nurse practitioner at Gifford Memorial hospital until her heart disease forced her to retire. MaryAnn was a member of the Norwich Congregational Church. She loved her children, the community of Norwich, the Upper Valley, her gardens, skiing, cooking gourmet meals, and the beauty of the earth. Despite a long history of heart problems she was an avid skier. Michael St. John, M.Ed. ’89, (ED) died at home surrounded by family and close friends, losing a battle to lung cancer. He was one of the original master teachers in the ANE Critical Skills program, and an important contributor to the Critical Skills Classroom model. Mike made an impact in the field of education. Anne H. Stanley, M.Ed. ’84, (ED) 55, died in September of 2005, in Burlington. Survived by her husband and son, she was a much-loved and respected teacher at Mt. Holly School. s Donna T. Verschueren, M.Ed. ’03, (OM) Donna T. Verschueren, M.Ed. ’03, (OM) former administrator of the O&M Portsmouth site, died of pancreatic cancer in October of 2005. Donna was raised in Whitney Point, New York and received her B.S. from SUNY Oneonta. She served in the Peace Corps in the Philippines and worked in many fields including teaching, accounting, and college administration. She was a member of South Church in Portsmouth and sang in Voices of the Heart, an all-women’s choir. Donna was a student of life, constantly expanding her wealth of ideas and interests. She was passionate about the arts, the outdoors, and international travel and experience, taking every opportunity to reach out to the international community. She was an extraordinary friend, a dedicated educator, and gifted humanitarian. Donna was an exemplar of what it means to dedicate one’s life for the improvement of all. The department and Donna’s family are discussing how best to honor Donna’s work and spirit at Antioch and we will let you know when a memorial fund has been established. We will miss her very much. Comings & Goings Warm Welcomes Abigail Clark is working part-time in the ANE library while completing her master’s degree in library and information science at Simmons College in Boston. Abby lives at the Boston University Sargent Center in Hancock where she thoroughly enjoys the surrounding seven hundred acres of woods and trails. Caleb Clark started creating web media when the web began and worked as a webmaster, online community manager, and freelance writer until 1999 when he received a master’s degree in educational technology from SDSU. In the years since, Caleb has worked as a technology manager and is now Antioch’s access services supervisor. Emily Mason, ANE’s library assistant, is a recent graduate of the Environmental Advocacy and Organizing Program here at Antioch. She is pleased to be paid at last for the long hours she spends in the library. She has a cat, a commitment to the democracy movement, and excels at ping pong. Pamela White, administrative assistant in the Office of Alumni Relations and Development, moved to the area with husband Warren Hammack. Together they ran a professional theatre company in Kentucky for twenty-five years. She is happy to return to her New England roots. Besides being Antioch New England’s administrative assistant in the Office of Financial Aid, Suzanne Whittemore is a co-chair of Swanzey Open Space Committee and a board member of the Historical Society of Cheshire County. Suzanne retired from Keene State College after eighteen years. She enjoys her family, gardening, biking, reading, and practices Reiki. Fond Farewells Renée Fortner is leaving her position as assistant director of communications after three years. She will be focusing on 2-year-old Jonas and 3-monthold Ava, and on her full-time UMass master’s program in public health and epidemiology. She will be missed terribly! Loribeth Robare has departed from ANE in order to return to being a full-time mom. She is very involved in the local schools and is a Girl Scout leader in Walpole, New Hampshire. She is very creative with textiles and we may still see her at local craft fairs. Good luck, Loribeth! x z y z y y Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 1 3 ANE in the News Joy Ackerman, ES Ph.D. ’05 academic director of the ES Master’s program and director of the Individualized program, received her Ph.D. in Environmental Studies from Antioch New England in November. Joy was also published in a special issue of Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture on Rhetorics of Place with “A Politics of Place: Reading the Signs at Walden Pond.” Antioch New England Institute (ANEI), a non-profit consulting and community outreach arm of the Graduate School, is spending nine months on land-use planning support and technical assistance to the communities affected by the expansion of Interstate 93. ANEI also co-hosted the first annual Community Engagement Training Workshop at Bear Brook State Park with the Student Conservation Association last October. The workshop focused on developing leadership, project management, and communicative skills. Kay Delanoy, ES ’93 practicum coordinator in Environmental Studies, was cited in the Summer 2005 issue of the Population Connection’s quarterly magazine, The Reporter, in an article titled “Population and the Environment: Between a Rock and Hard Place in the Granite State.” Kay expressed concern with the expanding population considering the earth’s finite resources. James Fauth, assistant professor and director of the Center for Research on Psychological Practice, Department of Clinical Psychology, published two articles in 2005. One article, “The In-Session Self-Awareness of Therapist Trainees: Hindering or helpful?” appeared in the Journal of Counseling Psychology. The second article, “A Psychotherapy Process Study of Therapist in Session Self-Awareness,” can be found in Psychotherapy Research. William Halikias, Psy.D. ’89 senior associate faculty, Department of Clinical Psychology, was published in Clinical Interviews for Assessment and Intervention Planning published by Guilford Press in 2005. The chapter was titled “Assessing Youth Violence and Threats of Violence in Schools: School-Based Risk Assessments.” 1 4 ANE Bill also presented a workshop for Vermont Psychological Association called “Psychological Assessment of the Juvenile Offender: Dangerousness and Criminal Responsibility Evaluations of Children and Adolescents” in November 2005. Susan Hawes, associate professor and and director of information systems and accountability research, Department of Clinical Psychology, published “Dialog Across Differences” in R. McNair’s Working for Peace: A Handbook of Practical Psychology. Beth Kaplin, academic director of the doctoral program and core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies, was invited to join the Editorial Board for the journal Biotropica for a 3-year appointment. Biotropica is the journal of The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation. The journal concentrates on ecology, conservation, and management of all tropical ecosystems. Susan Loman, director, Dance/Movement Therapy program, Department of Applied Psychology, was highlighted in the Keene Sentinel on Saturday, September 10, 2005 for her innovative work in the field. The article acknowledged that Susan is the foremost expert in the Kestenberg Movement Profile (KMP), an assessment method used to translate movement patterns of the body to reveal information about a person. In 2005, Susan presented KMP in Tennessee, and in Italy and Germany. Janie Long, director, Marriage and Family Therapy program, associate chairperson, Department of Applied Psychology, authored the chapter “Lesbian and gay couples therapy” which will appear in The State of the Art of Couple Therapy to be published by The Haworth Press. Janie also co-authored a paper titled “Sexual identities and HIV risk among Mexican American adolescents” which she presented at the 2005 National Conference on Family Relations in Phoenix, Arizona this past October. Anne Prouty Lyness, MFT director of clinical training, Department of Applied Psychology, is the editor of a book currently in press called The Politics of the Personal in Feminist Family Therapy: An International Notes Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 Examination of Several Family Policy Issues that will be published by The Haworth Press. She co-authored a chapter with her husband, Kevin Prouty Lyness, associate professor and MFT director of research, Department of Applied Psychology, titled “Feminist issues in couple therapy” which will appear in The State of the Art of Couple Therapy to be published by The Haworth Press. In addition, Kevin presented Family functioning, differentiation, and identity development at the Annual Conference of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, Kansas City, Missouri last October. Donna Mellen, core faculty, Department of Organization & Management, facilitated a workshop on “Developing Human Resources” for the New England Institute of Addiction Studies Leadership Institute in Hartford, Connecticut and in Portsmouth, New Hampshire in December 2005. Roger Peterson, professor and chairperson, Department of Clinical Psychology, presented “Cultures in Education and Training” at the Epistemological Diversity in Psychology symposium at the American Psychological Association Educational Leadership Conference in Arlington, Virginia this past September. In January he co-presented “Toward Meaningful Broad and General Education for Clinical Psychologists” with ANE graduate student Margaret Ober at the Midwinter meeting of the Council of University Directors of Clinical Psychology. He was also the NCSPPP representative at the American Psychology Association Accreditation Summit last year. Gargi Roysircar, professor, Department of Clinical Psychology and founding director of the Antioch New England Multicultural Center, was one of the editors and creators of the book Handbook for Social Justice in Counseling Psychology: Leadership, Vision, and Action which was recently published by Sage Publications. Her book chapters are “Prevention Work in Schools and With Youth: Promoting Competence and Reducing Risks,” “A Theoretical and Practice Framework for Universal School-Based Prevention,” and “Counseling Health Psychology’s Role in the Community.” Peter Smith, associate core faculty in the Department of Organization & Management, was lead trainer for the 3rd Annual Leadership Institute sponsored by the Addiction Technology Transfer Center of New England and state agencies responsible for substance abuse treatment and prevention. The program provides leadership skills for emerging leaders in the field and strengthens the professional network in the region. Other trainers include core faculty Donna Mellen, adjunct faculty Tad Dwyer, ANE alumna Gayle Gifford, and former core faculty Ann Driscoll. Peter also co-lead a discussion, “How Can I Improve my OD Consulting Practice,” during the January meeting on Careers and Work In OD, sponsored by the Massachusetts OD Learning Group in Boston. David Sobel, ED ’72 director of teacher certification programs in the Department of Education, presented on place-based education at the Tennessee Environmental Educator’s Conference and Carson-Newman College in Jefferson City, Tennessee last September; the Promise of Place conference in Jackson, New Hampshire in November; and for a professional development course for teachers in Waco, Texas in January. He wrote a chapter, “Exploring the Power of Solo, Silence and Solitude,” in Visiting Dreamland, a book published last year by the Association for Experiential Education. Fred Taylor, adjunct faculty in the Department of Environmental Studies, conducted a weekend workshop “Digging to the Roots, Riding the Winds” sponsored by the Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill on Cape Cod. The weekend focused on creativity and nature explored through writing and clay-work. Fred also facilitated an eight-week series in Brattleboro exploring similar themes. Rachel Thiet, core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies, spoke at the University of Vermont last October on “Seeing the Forest in the Seeds: Agroecosystems as Areas of Conservation Value.” Rachel also gave another lecture at Dartmouth College’s Department of Earth Sciences on “Soil Microbes and Nutrient Cycling.” She was published in the journal, Plant and Soil, on “The Effect of Biological Soil Crusts on where she presented “Gold & Globalization: The Case of a U.S. Multinational’s Exploits in Asia’s Last Wilderness. Abi’s work on Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc., also was cited in a New York Times special investigative series on gold mining. The front-page article ran on December 27, 2005. Susan Gentile Ward, ES ’97 associate core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies and managing director of CEEonline, has been working with Gill Elementary School in Massachusetts to help redesign the K-6 science curriculum, focusing it on local watershed. Susan worked in conjunction with alumna Dori Drachmen, and two Antioch students: Megan Hess and Joslyn Homberg. In November, Susan facilitated a workshop for Vermont Academy faculty titled “Place-Based Education at Vermont Academy.” Susan also presented “Considering a Career in Environmental Education” in January at Williams College. Mitchell Thomashow, ES ’76 chairperson, Department of Environmental Studies and the associate dean for institutional advancement at Antioch New England, has accepted the position of president of Unity College in Maine, a small environmental liberal arts college that is pledged to sustainability, community, service, and experiential learning. He will be departing from the Antioch community after thirty years of service. Mitch will remain affiliated with the Ph.D. program in an adjunct capacity. Stayed tuned to the Spring/Summer issue of ANE Notes for more on Mitch’s impact at the Graduate School. Rainwater and Nitrogen Infiltration into Lake Michigan Sand Dune Soils.” Ed Tomey, faculty emeritus, Department of Organization & Management, conducted strategic planning consultations with several organizations including Behavioral Health Sciences, New Futures, New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies, and the Behavioral Health Association. He also presented “The Link Between Strategic Planning and Fund Raising” for Giving Monadnock, and “The Entrepreneur Takes Charge of Self, Company, and Relationships” for Microcredit New Hampshire. Abigail Abrash Walton, associate core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies, was a featured speaker at the Human Rights and Environment Lecture Series at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut last November Thomas Webler, academic director of the Ph.D. program and core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies, co-authored “Competing Perspectives on Public Involvement: Planning for Risk Characterization and Risk Communication about Radiological Contamination from a National Laboratory,” an article in Health, Risk & Society. He also went to Spain to present “Reflections on the process for stakeholder engagement in radioactive waste management planning in Spain” for the Forum for Stakeholder Confidence in Spanish Workshop organized by the Nuclear Energy Agency in November. Tom Wessels, core faculty, Department of Environmental Studies and author of Reading the Forested Landscape: A Natural History of New England and The Granite Landscape: A Natural History of America’s Dome Mountains, led a field walk in Sandwich Notch for the Wonalancet Outdoor Club this past August. The walk focused on looking into past forest disturbances, both human and natural, and their effects on plant succession and wildlife habitat. He led a similar guided walk around Mill Pond Conservation area in Walpole last October. s Fall ’05 / Winter ’06 ANE Notes 1 5 Calendar of Events Friday, April 7 Antioch Center for School Renewal, Coalition of Essential Schools Spring Forum 2006, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Antioch New England. For more information call Laura Thomas at 603.357.3122 ext. 364. Saturday, July 1 Antioch New England Waldorf Reunion, 3 p.m. at the High Mowing School in Wilton, New Hampshire. Cost: $15 per person. For more information call Sarah Wilson at 603.357.3122 ext. 355. Friday, April 21 – Sunday, April 23 Nature Writing on Cape Cod, an ES alumni weekend retreat facilitated by Fred Taylor, r_taylor@antiochne.edu for information. Monday, July 10 – Friday, July 14 Antioch Center for School Renewal, Level I Critical Skills Institute, at Antioch New England. Cost: $375 per person. For more information call Laura Thomas at 603.357.3122 ext. 364 Friday, April 28 – Sunday, April 30 Antioch Center for School Renewal, The Courage to Teach (retreats designed for the personal and professional renewal of school teachers, administrators, and counselors), at the Merrowvista Educational Center in Center Tuftonboro, New Hampshire. Cost is $375 (room and board inclusive). For more information call Laura Thomas at 603.357.3122 ext. 364. Friday, July 28 – Sunday, July 30 Environmental Vision and Renewal Weekend, ES alumni retreat led by Fred Taylor and John Mosimann (ES ’97). For more information contact Fred at r_taylor@antiochne.edu Saturday, May 6 Antioch New England Commencement Exercises at Keene Middle School. Participants arrive at 9 a.m. Ceremony begins at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 6 Antioch New England Institute, Quest Fest 2006, 12 – 3 p.m. at the Horatio Colony House Museum in Keene. For more information call 603.357.3122 ext. 294. Monday, August 7 – Friday, August 11 Antioch Center for School Renewal, Critical Friends Group Coaches Training, at Antioch New England. Cost: $500 per person (includes all materials and light breakfast). For more information call Laura Thomas at 603.357.3122 ext. 364. Monday, August 7 – Friday, August 11 Antioch Center for School Renewal, The Math and Science Institute, at Antioch New England. Cost: $575 per participant. For more information call Laura Thomas at 603.357.3122 ext. 364. Saturday, June 3 Antioch New England Institute, National Trails Day, seasonal maintenance volunteers needed, 1 – 5 p.m. at the Horatio Colony Nature Preserve in Keene. For more information call 603.357.3122 ext. 294. For a full schedule of Antioch Center for School Renewal events, visit www.antiochne.edu/acsr. For updated event listings and more information, visit www.antiochne.edu. NONPROFIT Notes U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #192 WRJ, VT Printed on recycled paper with soy-based inks. is published twice a year (fall/winter and spring/summer) by the Office of Communications of Antioch New England Graduate School. It is distributed to alumni, students, faculty, staff, and friends. ANE A special thanks to Deb Arvidson, Stephanie Boisits, Renée Fortner, and Sherman Morrison for their editorial genius. Laurie Webster DESIGNER EDITOR Elizabeth Belle Isle Antioch New England Graduate School ANE Notes ORGANIZATION 40 Avon Street Keene, New Hampshire 03431-3552 www.antiochne.edu Address Service Requested
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