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Graduating seniors honored at the first ever Honors College Senior Recognition Ceremony

4/28/2016

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On April 26, the Honors College hosted its first-ever Honors College Senior Recognition Ceremony. The event was created to replace the former all-campus senior recognition ceremony, which was discontinued this year.
By Olivia Power
Student Honors Council officers greeted graduating seniors, their families, professors, mentors, and thesis advisors alike at the doors of the Student Center Ballroom at the first ever Honors College Senior Recognition Ceremony on April 26.

The ceremony honored the 150 graduating seniors, provided them with their red and white Honors College cords worn at commencement, and recognized various scholarship award-winners and academic honorees.

Secretary to the Dean Coralee Young said that she planned the event in response to the university discontinuing the campus-wide senior recognition ceremony.

“They always had a big event in Worthen for all the graduates, and they outgrew the space. So then it would have been a matter of the students coming to pick up their cords and awards on their own, and Dr. Reubel wasn’t going to have that,” Young said. “We just wanted it to be very special for [the seniors].”

The event began with a dessert bar and mingling. The relaxed atmosphere, complete with live piano music, lasted for an hour before the ceremony itself began at 7:30. The ceremony opened with Associate Dean of the Honors College John Emert delivering a note from Dean James Ruebel, who was unable to attend the event. Ball State’s acting President Terry King then delivered welcoming remarks.

Then, the awards and honors began. The first awards presented were the Joe and Carroll Trimmer Awards for Outstanding Senior Projects. There are two winners annually of this award: one winner for research and one for a creative project. The two respective winners, senior Ally Garrett and senior Gabbi Boyd, were recognized and given the opportunity to inform the audience about their senior honors theses.

Dr. Emert and Student Honors Council President Valerie Weingart then presented all of the graduates with their red and white cords. Every student’s name was read, and those who were present walked across the stage in a fashion reminiscent of a graduation or commencement ceremony.

Next, the 2016 Provost’s Prize was presented to Honors senior Shay Stewart. The Provost’s Prize goes to one student, not necessarily from the Honors College, every year, and requires a grade point average of 3.5 or higher, a resume, 2 letters of recommendation, and a personal statement.

Director of National and International Scholarships Barb Stedman recognized the recipients of national and international scholarships, of which there were 7. Professor Laurie Lindberg recognized the three integrated studies majors who worked with the Honors College to create their own distinctive area of study, which must be a combination of at least two departments or disciplines.

Finally, academic honors were presented. Students receiving cum laude, magna cum laude, and summa cum laude were asked to stand, and Lindberg and Professor Berg recognized the students with departmental honors and academic honors in writing.
Graduating senior Jessica Benz, a human resources management major, said that she enjoyed the ceremony, but didn’t know it was its first year.

Another appreciative graduating senior, psychology major Megan Schott, had some ideas for ways to tweak the ceremony in the future.

“I don’t know if I would have everyone walk across the stage to get their cords, because that took a while,” Schott said. “I liked the scholarship winners and academic honor[ees] more, because you got to hear more about people, and not just their names.”
​
Commencement this year will take place on May 7, where the 150 Honors College graduates will proudly walk across the steps at the David Owsley art museum, adorned with their white and red cords symbolizing their four years of hard work, critical thinking, completion of a senior thesis, and many memories along the way.
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SHC host event for seniors to showcase thesis work

4/21/2016

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It's like a mini-academic conference, but with brunch.
by Victoria Ison
PictureJoanna Ziarko
​At least six Honors College seniors will present oral and/or visual reports on their thesis projects this Sunday at an event hosted by the Student Honors Council. The Honors Thesis Expo will begin at 1 p.m. in the Honors House.

​"There are a lot of really great theses that get done, but we never get to hear about them," said sophomore Maren Orchard, director of online promotions for SHC. "We want this to be a chance for seniors to show off their hard work. We also hope it will give underclassmen an idea about what they'll eventually be expected to do."

​To encourage attendance, Orchard said SHC will serve brunch before and during the presentations. Orchard said afternoon start time was established to respect weekend worship and sleeping schedules. 

​Elementary education major Joanna Ziarko will read excerpts from her thesis project during her presentation. Ziarko, a senior graduating in May, created a children's book about a Polish holiday.

"There are no children’s books in existence about Paczki Day," Ziarko said in an email. "I’m honestly so proud of my thesis."​

PictureStephen Weigel
Music media production major Stephen Weigel will share audio clips and PowerPoint slides in his presentation at the expo. Weigel, a senior graduating in May, studied musical scales.

"[My thesis] is a groundbreaking new application for permutations in music theory.," Weigel said in an email. "This the only number-based music theory I know of that panders to today's set theorists and microtonalists at the same time."

The Honors Thesis Expo is expected to last until 3 p.m.
Orchard said the atmosphere of the event should be "chill."

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A Recap: Meyer Endowed Lecture features 200 years of Indiana history

4/14/2016

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Picture
Esteemed I.U. professor James H. Madison, this year's Meyer Endowed Lecture speaker, presented 200 years of Indiana history to honor the state's bicentennial.
By Noah Patterson
The speaker at Tuesday night’s lecture was faced with no easy task: give a “brief” recap of the 200 years of Indiana history since the Hoosier territory became a state in 1816. Nevertheless, James H. Madison, an Indiana University Thomas and Kathryn Miller Professor Emeritus of History and the author of Hoosiers: A New History of Indiana, delivered in a 60-minute address.

Change was the resounding theme of the night: how society has progressed, how citizens respond to change, and the idea of historiography, or the interpretation of history and how it changes over time.

“The people of Indiana thought and feared the world was changing in 1916 – there will always be change, that’s what historians know,” Madison said.

Starting at the beginning, in 1816, Madison talked about the pioneers who settled in waves, filling Indiana from South to North. At this time, the fertility rate was among the highest of any other place in the world, and Native Americans and settlers were meeting face-to-face.
Recalling the theme of change, Madison noted how the perception of Native American figures in U.S. history has shifted.

“Tecumseh is an American hero, not only a Native American hero.” Madison said. “Scholarship is beginning to change its focus from Europeans to Native Americans.”

The topic of the state’s origin evoked the topic of its people’s collective nickname: Hoosier.

“There is no answer to the question of ‘Where did Hoosier come from?’ And honestly, I prefer it that way. We are a magical, mystical people,” Madison said.

Moving into the Civil War time period, Madison noted two of the most important Indiana politicians: former Governor Oliver P. Morton and President Abraham Lincoln. Throughout his life, Lincoln lived in Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, and Washington D.C. But, Madison had no qualms to include him in Indiana’s history.

“Is Abraham Lincoln a Hoosier? You bet your socks,” Madison declared.

With the mention of Abraham Lincoln comes the story of slavery and the Civil War: while slavery did not function in Indiana like it did in the South, there was indentured servitude in the Hoosier state. Madison showed his audience an advertisement for a 39-year indenture, selling a “negro woman and child.”

Nevertheless, Indiana became a free state, and a crucial component of the Underground Railroad.
“We love to tell the Underground Railroad story, because it makes us look good; however, the majority of Hoosiers had no interest in slavery or helping slaves escape. That was left to a radical minority,” Madison said.

After the Civil War came an era of Jim Crow in the North, where laws of segregation were not enforced, but informally followed. Furthermore, an era of industrialization began. Companies such as  Eli Lilly, the Ball Brothers, Studebaker, US Steel, and more, opened shop in Indiana. By 1900, Indiana had become an industrial and agricultural heartland.

At this time, schools and social reform began taking place. Child labor laws were put in place, tenement housing became regulated, and women agitators began protesting for the right to vote. In fact, nearly every social cause at this time had strong women behind them, pushing for change. In Indiana and throughout the country, women obtained the right to vote in 1920.

The 20s and 30s were dark times for Indiana. In the 20s, the Ku Klux Klan became a prevalent part of Indiana society, having parades through the middle of towns, including Muncie.

“They believed that America was going to hell in a handbasket. That we were in crisis, and the government was doing nothing,” Madison said.

The Klan had members from all social backgrounds: lawyers, doctors, housewives, those from poorer backgrounds, etc. They targeted Catholics, immigrants, African-Americans, Jewish people, and more.

In the 30s, the Depression began, and Gov. Paul McNutt brokered the “Little New Deal,” calling for government intervention. This was done before President FDR instituted his federal New Deal.

In the 40s came the war, and loss. But, the 1950s ushered in the age of affluence. There was prosperity and individual wealth, until the 70s came and creative destruction and disruption reigned. Corporations began moving overseas.

“As jobs were leaving, people were like deer caught in the headlights. They thought it was temporary,” Madison said.

Today, Madison said that we are seeing two Indianas emerging: one of continued prosperity, and one diverging, ravaged by illicit drugs and poverty.

“We have always had differences. Indiana has never been homogeneous. But, we are all bound by the brand name ‘Hoosier,’” Madison said.

Professor of History and Honors professor Bruce Geelhoed was coordinator for the Meyer Endowed Lecture this year. The lecture, an annual event that honors the late Honors College Dean Bruce F. and his wife, Ildiko B. Meyer, a school psychologist for the Muncie Community Schools and New Castle Community Schools, was co-sponsored by the Honors College and Ball State’s Department of History and took place in the Teacher's College.

“Madison is the authoritative person on the history of Indiana. We were fortunate to get him, he was booked solid and this was the only day on his schedule. I was pleased with the turnout, and pleased he was here. He was very complimentary about the students and faculty,” Geelhoed said.

Keeping with the theme of change, Madison had one last message for the audience.

“As we celebrate 200 years, I hope you pay attention to what happens in Indiana: past, present and future. We’ve been around for a long, long time. Think about who we are, and where we come from.”
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