Showing search results on 09/30/2020 or later in the Colloquia, Seminars & Lectures category
W&M Featured Events
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Family Weekend features events and special programs designed to showcase life at William & Mary. Learn about world-class faculty, experience special performances from one of many talented student groups, and connect with families from across the nation.
This Brown Bag given by Buck Woodard and Megan Victor explores their recent project: Archaeological Research and Community Engagement at The Millie Woodson-Turner Nottoway Reservation Allotment and Farmstead.
The winner of the 2020 Sutlive Book Prize for Historical Anthropology, Alizer Doostdar will give a lecture on his research exploring the intersections of Islam and science.
Join Tara Rudo, Marine Education Specialist with CBNERR, as she leads us through an exploration of the wetlands of the York River. We will learn about the crucial role wetlands play, and discover some of the fascinating animals that live there.
Redistricting is on the ballot this year in Virginia. Join ELS to learn the ins and outs of the amendment, the protections it offers against gerrymandering, and what it would mean for the Virginia electoral process going forward.
Watch the film ahead of time on Kanopy, then meet on Zoom to discuss in German.
https://wm.kanopy.com/video/kebab-connection
Join the Center for African Development (CAD), a Global Research Institute research center, for an installment in their speaker series, this Thursday, October 8th, at 10am via Zoom.
Join Professor Michele Goodwin, who expands the reproductive rights debate beyond abortion and discusses how laws criminalize women - especially poor women and women of color - for miscarriages, stillbirths and threatening the health of their pregnancies.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
“Promoting America: Maps of the Colonies and the New Republic,” follows how maps served as powerful propaganda tools for colonial expansionists eager to convey the richness and abundance of the land and its inhabitants.
Elizabeth Goldschmidt, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Title of talk: Quantum information with photons
Annie Blazer of the William & Mary Religious Studies Department will give a talk on the ethical aspects of doping and confession in elite sports.
Virtual talk on "Disparities, Determinants and Data in the Era of Covid-19" by Rashida Dorsey, Ph.D., M.P.H. (Founder and Principal, WisdomBuilds)
Professor Utkin will discuss configurations of queer subjectivity in interwar Europe’s Russian diaspora.
Funding provided by the Gregory Tepper Lecture Fund, the German Studies Program, and the Reves Center for International Studies
A conversation with alumnus Yuri Lowenthal '93 and Tara Platt, two in-demand voice actors for anime and games. Lowenthal has voiced characters for Naruto, Gurren Lagann, Code Geass, Persona 4, etc. Platt has worked on Naruto, Sailor Moon, etc.
Historical Presentation on Marshall 'Major' Taylor - World Champion Cyclist and African American Pioneer in Professional Sports
Talk by Valentín Concha-Núñez, Art Historian and Educator (MoMA, El Museo del Barrio, Brooklyn Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art).
Physics department invites alimni and members of the general public to listen to the public lecture, inspired by 2020 Nobel prize and to interact with physics faculty and students.
Faculty, alumni, and students gather to offer song, dance, poetry, and tributes to honor the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all Equal Rights heroes like her. Admission by registration: https://www.aguasartsink.com/register-for-a-show
Voter suppression, harsh voter ID laws, and voter disenfranchisement are on the rise. How does this affect primaries and United States' most-watched election?
Dr. Stefani Crabtree from Utah State University will give a talk on archaecology.
Please join us on Thursday, October 22 at 1:00 PM EDT for a panel discussion on the School-to-Prison Pipeline, featuring Cheryl Poe, Keith Howard, and Valerie Slater. Please RSVP here (https://forms.gle/BfcBb61tiiqdk6689) for a link to the event.
Join us for the Bi-Annual Ferguson Blair Publishing Seminar featuring panels from W&M alumni in publishing, journalism, and digital media. This year the event will take place via Zoom.
Creativity and Resilience Amidst the Pandemic: Global Approaches to COVID-19
Lior Cohen, Louisiana State University, Title of talk: Quantum Effects utilizing Photon-Number Detection
Join If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice and the Center for Racial and Social Justice on October 27th at 1 PM for an important discussion on the future of reproductive rights with William & Mary Law Professor Vivian Hamilton.
Chris Rodning of Tulane University will give a talk on Joara, Cuenca, and Fort San Juan: Indigenous Peoples and Iberian Colonists in the Western North Carolina Piedmont, 1540-1600.
Virtual talk : “The Impact of COVID-19 on College Students Studying Abroad” by Eric Pedersen, Ph.D.
The W&M Confucius Institute and Law School are honored to host Frank R. Samolis through Zoom for a virtual lecture on U.S. and China trade relations as of 2020.
Tunas and billfishes support commercial and recreational fisheries around the world. Join Bruce Collette, John Graves, and Val Kells for highlights of these incredible fish and their five-year journey to create the book Tunas and Billfishes of the World.
Part of the Institute for Integrative Conservation Speaker Series, Dr. Melissa Checker will give a Zoom talk about her research exploring the hidden socioeconomic consequences of sustainable policies and urban redevelopment in New York.
In this seminar Dennis Hallema will discuss how to properly train a classifier for the purpose of predicting potential fire control locations, and show what a prediction map looks like.
Prof. Sharona Gordon, Physiology & Biophysics University of Washington, Title of talk: If I’m not safe, nobody is: science, power, and activism in the age of #MeToo
A talk with Professor Tara Grove about textualism, the Supreme Court's decision in Bostock v. Clayton, and the future of LGBTQ+ rights.
Join Shené V. Owens, Associate Director for the Center for Student Diversity in a discussion about identity and belonging.
Interested in learning more about solar technology and the co-op process?
Led by presenter Chloe Edwards, we will dive into history and peel back the comfortable and utterly uncomfortable layers of our individual and collective experience.
This is event is part of the Tree of Life Black Faith Matters Seminar. Panelists for this seminar are Dr. McQueen Derrick, Dr. Nigel Hatton, Dr. Faith Fletcher. Moderated by Dr. Joanne Braxton.
Barbara Hamm Lee is familiar to Hampton Roads listeners as host and executive producer of WHRO’s Another View. She will moderate an open discussion about race and racism, its history in our region and its current effects.
Frozen Obsession follows the Northwest Passage Project team, including Dr. Donglai Gong from VIMS, on their 18-day, 2,000-mile expedition aboard the icebreaker R/V Oden in the Arctic in search of clues to understanding the effects of climate change.
Scientists Lisa Kellogg and Eric Hilton discuss the development of the RecFish app, winner of VIMS Innovation Fund awards in 2018 and 2019. RecFish will aid in fisheries management by providing fish population data gathered by anglers.
The Center for Student Diversity’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. commemoration program pays tribute to his life and impact.
Learn conversation starters and strategies to help families have meaningful conversations about race with Professor Natoya Haskins from W&M's School of Education.
This talk uses case studies from the seafloor near Rhode Island and the deserts and mountains of Arizona to demonstrate how to combine, synthesize, and translate spatial data into information that is accessible to resource managers for decision-making.
Daniel Griffin, MD, PhD, Ctrop of Columbia University presents
"COVID-19: Phases, Timing of Therapeutics, Focus on Immunization"
Prof. Twomney (Saint Lawrence U.) will speak on "Othering Blackness: Ideas of Racial Difference in Medieval & Early Modern Europe'
Monday, February 8, 2:00-3:20 pm
Welcome back everyone! Join us on 2/10 at 4PM for the first virtual seminar of 2021 presented by PhD student Teri Oehmke from UC Berkeley with a seminar on fluid mechanics (full title next page) | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Join WMCI for a virtual event celebrating the Lunar New Year on Wednesday, February 10!
Decolonization is not a Metaphor
Faculty Discussion, Zoom.
Discover how VIMS researchers produce the polyploid oysters that transformed Virginia’s oyster aquaculture industry. Join us as Aquaculture Technician and Field Specialist Shelley Katsuki presents on the work done at the Kauffman Aquaculture Center.
The next School of Education Courageous Conversation will focus on the topics of democracy, freedom and justice in education.
A conversation with philosopher and essayist Susan Neiman on her book Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil, published in 2019, which asks what Americans can learn from Germans about confronting the evils of the past.
An overview of the new special exhibition at the Jamestown Settlement Museum by Luke J. Pecoraro, Ph.D., Director of Curatorial Services at the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. Please contact Joni Carlson [[w|jdcarlson]] for Zoom link.
Steve Prince will take participants on a historical journey examining the power of racist imagery upon the psyche of America and the world.
How are pandemics like COVID linked to conservation, equity, and governance?
Slice of Data Science is a fun way for students to obtain quick, direct insight into some of the latest applications in data science, machine learning, artificial intelligence, computer vision, natural language processing, and more.
Decolonization is not a Metaphor: Faculty Discussion with Modern Language and Literature Dept.
We will discuss Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonisation is Not a Metaphor" and Patrick Wolfe, “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native."
To kick off the Asian Centennial at W&M commemorating the admission of Chen Pu-Kao, the first Chinese, Asian, and student of color so far on record, the Asian, Pacific, and Middle Eastern Film Series presents Larissa Lam's film "Far East Deep South."
This talk will focus on how I used the tools and skills I learned in the CGA at The Nature Conservancy and National Audubon Society.
Life cycle of SARS-CoV-2 viewed through the lens of proximity proteomics
Dr. Luisa Rebull - Caltech/IPAC, Title of Talk: Stellar Rotation in Young Clusters using K2 and TESS
Dr. Michael L. Blakey is the featured speaker at the NY Academy of Science's annual archaeology lecture, conducted via Zoom on Feb. 22 at 6:30pm. He will discuss the NY African Burial Ground's impact as this national monument marks its 30th anniversary.
Jason Reynolds is the New York Times bestselling co-author of Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You, along with Ibram X. Kendi. Reynolds will discuss his book and answer questions from the audience.
Join us for a discussion about the life and legacy of Harriet Tubman and the educational implications.
Join us for a discussion on multicultural issues within the eating disorder world, with a focus on helping to identify our own seat at the table. This National Eating Disorders Awareness Week speaking event will be led by clinician Khara Randall.
Speaker: Dr. Kevin Leach, Postdoctoral Research Scientist and Lecturer at the University of Michigan.
ESRI has updated StoryMaps! Tune in to learn about the new features they have added and how to use them.
Prof. Geraldine Heng (U. Texas) will give the 2021 Fauvel Lecture on "Teaching Early Global Literatures: Worlding the World, Traveling the World."
Zoom link: https://cwm.zoom.us/s/6281668144
Meeting ID: 628 166 8144
Join Dr. Eric Hilton, curator of the VIMS Nunnally Ichthyology Collection, as he tells the story of the Coelacanth- from its fossil record to its unlikely discovery and why it may be more closely related to four-legged land animals than other fishes.
Speaker: Huajie Shao, UIUC
Monday, 3/1/2021, Noon 12:00 PM
The Office of Diversity & Inclusion, in collaboration with Student Assembly and the Center for Student Diversity, will host its annual Student Diversity & Inclusion Symposium.
Ambassador Dennis Ross is presented by W&M Hillel, the W&M Reves Center for International Studies, the W&M Global Research Institute, and the W&M Department of Government.
Ilit Ferber, who teaches Philosophy at the University of Tel Aviv will be giving a talk on her new research Wednesday, March 3 at 11am on ZOOM.
Speaker: Ziyu Yao, Ohio State University
A talk with Shannon Minter from the National Center for Lesbian Rights about LGBTQ+ rights and his work.
Curious about GISP certification? This discussion aims to demystify GISP (GIS Professional) Certification with an overview of the what, why, and how of the process. Find out if GISP certification is something to consider in your career planning.
Speaker: Yu Huang, PhD candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan
Join Italian Studies at W&M for a lunchtime conversation with acclaimed Italian columnist and writer Beppe Severgnini.
Speaker: Dr. Nate Veldt, Postdoctoral associate in the Center for Applied Mathematics at Cornell University
Join us for a discussion about the life and legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the educational implications.
Eurocentrism, Knowledge Making and Decolonial Dialogue
Linda Martín Alcoff (Hunter, CUNY) and Carlos Rivera Santana (Hispanic Studies, W&M)
Thursday March 11 3:30-5pm:
Open to Public
Speaker: Dr. Andrew Perrault, Postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Research in Computation and Society at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Science
GRI's Blockchain Lab presents a discussion on privacy and policy, featuring Elena Giralt of Blockchain Latinx.
Join us on 3/12 at 12:05PM for a zoom seminar by Denison geoscience professor Dr. Anjali Fernandes titled "Backwater Controls on the Kinematics and Sedimentary Records of Large Rivers and Deltas" | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Diego Mendez-Carbajo, Senior Economic Education Specialist , will give a basic introduction to FRED; an overview of GeoFRED; and a demonstration of using GeoFRED data on inflation for economic analysis and instruction.
A lecture presented by Professor Tamara Sonn, the 2021 Virtual Kraemer Middle East Distinguished Scholar-In-Residence. Presented in celebration of the Asian Centennial at William & Mary.
Rana Ashkar-Virginia Tech, Title of Talk: Collective Dynamics in Lipid Membranes: From Fundamental Physics to Health and Disease
Rana Ashkar, Department of Physics & Center for Soft Matter and Biological Physics, Virginia Tech
e-mail: ashkar@vt.edu
Speaker: Dr. Camille Cobb, CMU
Dr. Carnegie, a research professor at VIMS, will share about his research focusing on host-parasite interactions in oysters, aquaculture health, and shellfish restoration in the Chesapeake Bay.
Speaker: Dr. Benjamin Fish, Postdoctoral fellow at Mila
Join ELS for a conversation with W&M Law alumni Jonathan Peterson on campaign finance and his work at the Federal Election Commission.
Esteemed novelist and filmmaker Alia Yunis (The Night Counter) is the premiering author of Asian American Plural: Literature Across Borders, organized by Dr. R. Benedito Ferrao as part of his course OUTSIDE IN: TRANSNATIONAL ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Anthropology professor Grey Gundaker will give the 2021 Tisch Lecture at Columbia Teachers College.
Building Bridges between Technology, Business, and Conservation: How Augmented Reality is Advancing Conservation Solutions in Hawai'i
Speaker: Najoung Kim, Department of Cognitive Science at Johns Hopkins University
Dr. Joel S. Levine - William & Mary Applied Science, Title of Talk: The Human Exploration of the Moon and Mars: A Preview
Speaker: Hongyuan Mei, Department of Computer Science at the Johns Hopkins University (JHU)
Our Spring 2021 Symposium will take place virtually Monday, March 22 through Saturday, March 27, 2021.
Four Centuries of Black Women in America: Freedom, Activism, and Justice for All
Register and view the program here.
This talk presented by Megan Victor of Queen's College is an overview of the recovery excavation season at the Standford Arboretum Chinese Labor Quarters and discusses findings of an analysis ceramic assemblages. Email jdcarlson@wm.edu for Zoom link.
Speaker: Dr. Dan Williams, Research Staff Member at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Lab
Join our virtual conversation on "Security in the Cyber Age" with Mr. John Inglis, former Deputy Director of the National Security Agency.
“Searching for Anna May Wong,” traces the journey of actor Natasha Tina Liu, who raises the question, “If trailblazing Anna May Wong were still alive today, would she still face the same racism and challenges she experienced during her time in Hollywood?”
Chris Dunn is a licensed Missouri attorney, geospatial business owner, expert witness, and geohistorical researcher. His talk focuses on his work investigating, mapping, and modeling incidents, accidents, and crimes.
Join us for GCC W&M Career Seminar on Saturday 8pm-10pm, March 27th to learn from experts from different fields across international relations! Learn more on our event page.
Author Paul Ocampo will speak on his short story "Butterfly" which appears in Maxine Hong Kingston's anthology, "Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (2006), as part of Dr. R. Benedito Ferrao's series Asian American Plural: Literature Across Borders.
Join Natoya Haskins, director of diversity and inclusion at the School of Education, for a discussion of the book "The Likeability Trap: How to Break Free and Succeed As You Are" by Alicia Menendez.
Learn about exciting research representing each of the five senses (plus a bonus "sixth" sense!) at three National Estuarine Research Reserves (NERRs) in the Mid-Atlantic Region, followed by breakout rooms to ask questions and network.
Maps used for the management of UNESCO World Heritage sites served bureaucratic resource management. However, maps offer an opportunity to represent associative cultural landscapes, intangible cultural elements, and the geographies of Indigenous peoples.
Dr. Elizabeth Burgin, assistant professor of counselor education, will present "Adversity in Childhood: Counseling Strategies for Prevention and Intervention."
Please join FELS and ACS during the lunch hour on Wednesday, April 7, for a discussion on the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on special education and the related law. Speakers include Cheri Belkowitz, Heartley Huber, and Cheryl Poe. Please RSVP for the link.
Don't miss this public event with poets Oscar Guardiola-Rivera, Azad Sharma, and Juana Goengen, hosted by the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures as part of the Bellini Colloquium series.
Poetry That Re/Decenters with Poets:
Juana Iris Goergen (Puerto Rico), Azad Ashim Sharma (UK), & Oscar Guardiola-Rivera (Colombia) read their poetry.
Moderated by Prof. Emily Wilcox (Chinese) with translation by Prof. Silvia Tandeciarz (Hispanic Studies).
Join our long-serving Representative to Congress who will share his plans for education, criminal justice, healthcare and labor reform.
One of the Little Rock Nine, Minnijean Brown Trickey will speak about her experience as a lifelong activist and the power of centering nonviolence in every aspect of her life at this Lemon's Legacies Porch Talk.
Join us for our next Courageous Conversation about race and culture within schools and society.
2021 Honors Student Research Showcase celebrating the work of our graduating students. In this symposium, students will give previews of their thesis work with short "three minute thesis" -style presentations.
Friday, April 9th, 4 pm: keynote address by Professor Engerman (Yale University): "The Global Cold War from Near and Far"
Saturday, April 10th, 9:30am - 10:30: student panels on the Global Cold War
Contact gxpaci@wm.edu for Zoom link.
Please join The Health Law and Policy Society for our first annual Symposium: "A Snapshot of Health Law" on April 10, 2021 (10:30am -3:00pm). Register in advance for this meeting: https://cwm.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAsde2hrTwoEtFqq5M2tZMphutKpuPSQKXf
Josué Nieves, a MA/PhD student, will present his final dissertation.
ILS presents a lecture by Katie Johnston devoted to the issue of use of force in the International Law.
For OTOD: At W&M we strive to understand and change the world through collaborative research. Join us for a discussion highlighting the cultural, economic and political implications of the new administration as it relates to China.
Presentation on 'Food Insecurity' issues in undeserved communities
Nigerian-born Bangladeshi American writer and photographer Abeer Hoque presents the finale conversation in Asian American Plural: Literature Across Borders series, curated by Dr. R. Benedito Ferrao for the Asian Centennial.
William & Mary, NATO CCDCOE, and King’s College London are pleased to invite you to the sideline event of the NATO Cyber Defence Pledge conference 2021.
Join us for the keynote talk of the first annual Racial and Social Justice Graduate Student Research Symposium. Dr. Singh’s talk will focus on racial healing, based on her recent book, The Racial Healing Handbook.
Join the Center for Geospatial Analysis and Institute for Integrative Conservation for the 3rd annual Geospatial Research Symposium, a part of undergraduate research month.
Come join us for Senior Research Saturday! Click for more info on viewing.
Earth Week is held annually the week of April 22, Earth Day!
W&M Sustainability Symposium Event 2
Understanding our Interconnectedness: A Discussion with Céline Cousteau on Why Protecting the Rights of the Indigenous Communities of the Vale do Javari in Brazil is Essential to Our Survival
Students will present research highlights and key takeaways from the past year of work. Join peers, faculty, and alumni to celebrate students' outstanding contributions and to learn more about their pertinent findings.
With the help of VIMS scientists like Marta Sanderson, researchers have begun understanding how and why harmful algal blooms happen. This information can aid in improving the detection of these blooms and even forecast when they may happen.
Josué Nieves, a MA/PhD student, will present his final dissertation. Please email Joni Carlson [[jdcarlson]] for Zoom link.
Dr. Katrina Eichner of the University of Idaho will present the Anthropology Graduate Student Collective Brown Bag titled "About Face: Laundress (Her) Stories at Fort Davis, Texas." Please email Joni Carlson [[jdcarlson]] for Zoom link.
Join the Family & Education Law Society (FELS) on Wednesday, April 21, during the lunch hour (12:50-1:50 EST) for a talk with Professor Thomas McSweeney on Marriage, Sexuality, & the Law in the Middle Ages. Please RSVP using the appropriate form.
Christopher Crain will present a defense of his dissertation. Please email Joni Carlson jdcarlson@wm.edu for Zoom link.
Understanding our Interconnectedness: A keynote with Winona LaDuke, Native American environmentalist and political activist, on the importance of connecting with your local communities and ecosystems to the benefit of the future and world.
When you think about the impacts of climate change, do you see visions of far-off polar bears? What about our own backyard?
Educators from CBNERR-VA and the VIMS Marine Advisory Program/Virginia Sea Grant Extension Program invite Virginia's K-12 teachers to our fourth annual Lesson Plan Expo featuring classroom-tested lesson plans developed by science graduate students.
Eleven seniors in Classical Studies will present their research projects on the theme of "Ancient Religion," with a keynote address by Prof. Jessica Stephens.
Chemistry Faculty ask, "Are YOU interested in UG research?"
Highlights & pointers from Chem department faculty research labs.
Dr. Andrea J. Welsh, University of Pittsburgh, Title of talk: Dealing with Mental Health as a Young Scientist
Prof. Angelo Torre (Università del Piemonte Orientale, Italy) will be speaking on "Space for the Commons: a spatial approach to the study of early modern European local political cultures" on Friday, April 23d, at 4:30 pm.
Dr. Patrick Mullen will present "The Work before the Work: A Discussion on Factors related to Thriving on the Job" at the next School of Education Faculty Research Brown Bag Talk.
This virtual presentation will show how persistent issues about how to relate environmental law and ethics become legible through Muslim registers for environmental justice.
THE ACTORS ARENA is a two-part master class series that educates on the ins and outs of pursuing a successful professional career in acting. April 27 & 29, 7-9pm. One on one monologue coaching available on a limited basis.
Dr. Barton-Grimley is a remote sensing Instrument Scientist at the NASA Langley Research Center. This talk gives a brief overview lidar and its working principals, geographic registration and data reduction, examples of the resulting data products.
Join the students of the 2020-2021 Sharp Journalism Seminar as they present their year-long, investigative reporting stories.
Amber Boehnlein, Associate Lab Director Computational Science and Technology Division Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, Title of Talk: Building the Roads for Self-Driving Scientific Facilities
Thursday MAY 6 3:30-5pm:
What Is To Be Done:
READING: Fred Moten and Stefano Harney, “The University and the Undercommons."
Open to All Faculty (Students welcome. Please contact Prof. Stephen Sheehi.)
Join us (via Zoom!) as the second cohort of the Japanese Studies Major present their final research projects. These students have faced unique challenges this semester; come and help us celebrate their achievements!
Chardé Reid will give her Dissertation Defense Proposal for her PhD. Please email Joni Carlson [[jdcarlson]] for the Zoom link.
Please email Joni Carlson [[jdcarlson]] for the Zoom link.
Each year, Project on International Peace and Security research fellows identify emerging international security issues and develop original policy recommendations to address those challenges. Six fellows will present their work at this year's Symposium.
Curious about GISP certification? This discussion aims to demystify GISP (GIS Professional) Certification with an overview of the what, why, and how of the process. Find out if GISP certification is something to consider in your career planning.
Join Us For a Conversation with the Authors
Dr. Jacquelyn Y. McLendon
Dr. Chima Osakwe
Dr. Chinua Thelwell
Moderated by Dr. Hermine Pinson
Signed copies of their works are available for order at bookstore.wm.edu
Stephanie Bergman will present her final dissertation titled "Properties of Belonging: Landscapes of Racialized Ownership in Post-Emancipation Barbados" on Thursday, May 20th. Please email Joni Carlson [[jdcarlson]] for the Zoom link.
Learn more about the basics of asylum law and procedure in the United States.
Join Natoya Haskins, director of diversity and inclusion in the School of Education, for a discussion of the book An American Marriage by Tayari Jones.
Join Natoya Haskins, director of diversity and inclusion in the School of Education, for a discussion of the book Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad.
Are you interested in research? Join us Friday, Sept. 3rd, in the ISC to experience Tribe Chemistry Research Labs!
Senator Mason is a member of the Virginia General Assembly with extensive knowledge of mental health policy in Virginia and current legislation to address the mental health system.
W&M is proud to celebrate Latinx Heritage Month. Please join the William & Mary community as we celebrate Latinx heritage month. For more information, visit: bit.ly/WMLHM2021
Jessica Jenkins will present on her research concerning the historical ecology and sustainability of the Chesapeake estuary, focusing on the relationship of past communities with oyster populations. Contact [[jdcarlson]] for the Zoom link to this event.
Professor Andrea Wright of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies and Anthropology is the first recipient of the Jinlan Liu APIA Faculty Award. She will discuss her latest research as part of the Awards Ceremony.
The Center for Geospatial for Analysis welcomes award-winning cartographer Justin Madron to give a guest lecture on History, Maps, and Digital Storytelling.
Colloquium: Junping Shi (William & Mary)
In this talk, Dr. Mara Dicenta will present her work around beavers, settler-colonialism, and science in Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost tip of Chile and Argentina. Please email [[jdcarlson]] for Zoom link.
Emerging Scholars Series Talk: "How Scientists are Saving Birds from Window Collisions."
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Family Weekend features events and special programs designed to showcase life at William & Mary. Learn about world-class faculty, experience special performances from one of many talented student groups, and connect with families from across the nation.
This Brown Bag given by Buck Woodard and Megan Victor explores their recent project: Archaeological Research and Community Engagement at The Millie Woodson-Turner Nottoway Reservation Allotment and Farmstead.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
The winner of the 2020 Sutlive Book Prize for Historical Anthropology, Alizer Doostdar will give a lecture on his research exploring the intersections of Islam and science.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Join Tara Rudo, Marine Education Specialist with CBNERR, as she leads us through an exploration of the wetlands of the York River. We will learn about the crucial role wetlands play, and discover some of the fascinating animals that live there.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Redistricting is on the ballot this year in Virginia. Join ELS to learn the ins and outs of the amendment, the protections it offers against gerrymandering, and what it would mean for the Virginia electoral process going forward.
Join us on 10/7 at 4PM for a virtual seminar presented by Dr. Justin Richardson from University of Massachusetts titled "Trace Metal Biogeochemistry in the Rock-Soil-Plant Continuum" | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Watch the film ahead of time on Kanopy, then meet on Zoom to discuss in German.
https://wm.kanopy.com/video/kebab-connection
Join the Center for African Development (CAD), a Global Research Institute research center, for an installment in their speaker series, this Thursday, October 8th, at 10am via Zoom.
Chapter Officer Development Series on engaging chapter alumni
Join Professor Michele Goodwin, who expands the reproductive rights debate beyond abortion and discusses how laws criminalize women - especially poor women and women of color - for miscarriages, stillbirths and threatening the health of their pregnancies.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
“Promoting America: Maps of the Colonies and the New Republic,” follows how maps served as powerful propaganda tools for colonial expansionists eager to convey the richness and abundance of the land and its inhabitants.
Elizabeth Goldschmidt, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Title of talk: Quantum information with photons
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Annie Blazer of the William & Mary Religious Studies Department will give a talk on the ethical aspects of doping and confession in elite sports.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Virtual talk on "Disparities, Determinants and Data in the Era of Covid-19" by Rashida Dorsey, Ph.D., M.P.H. (Founder and Principal, WisdomBuilds)
Professor Utkin will discuss configurations of queer subjectivity in interwar Europe’s Russian diaspora.
Funding provided by the Gregory Tepper Lecture Fund, the German Studies Program, and the Reves Center for International Studies
A conversation with alumnus Yuri Lowenthal '93 and Tara Platt, two in-demand voice actors for anime and games. Lowenthal has voiced characters for Naruto, Gurren Lagann, Code Geass, Persona 4, etc. Platt has worked on Naruto, Sailor Moon, etc.
Historical Presentation on Marshall 'Major' Taylor - World Champion Cyclist and African American Pioneer in Professional Sports
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Talk by Valentín Concha-Núñez, Art Historian and Educator (MoMA, El Museo del Barrio, Brooklyn Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art).
Physics department invites alimni and members of the general public to listen to the public lecture, inspired by 2020 Nobel prize and to interact with physics faculty and students.
Faculty, alumni, and students gather to offer song, dance, poetry, and tributes to honor the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and all Equal Rights heroes like her. Admission by registration: https://www.aguasartsink.com/register-for-a-show
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Voter suppression, harsh voter ID laws, and voter disenfranchisement are on the rise. How does this affect primaries and United States' most-watched election?
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Dr. Stefani Crabtree from Utah State University will give a talk on archaecology.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Please join us on Thursday, October 22 at 1:00 PM EDT for a panel discussion on the School-to-Prison Pipeline, featuring Cheryl Poe, Keith Howard, and Valerie Slater. Please RSVP here (https://forms.gle/BfcBb61tiiqdk6689) for a link to the event.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Join us for the Bi-Annual Ferguson Blair Publishing Seminar featuring panels from W&M alumni in publishing, journalism, and digital media. This year the event will take place via Zoom.
Creativity and Resilience Amidst the Pandemic: Global Approaches to COVID-19
Lior Cohen, Louisiana State University, Title of talk: Quantum Effects utilizing Photon-Number Detection
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Join If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice and the Center for Racial and Social Justice on October 27th at 1 PM for an important discussion on the future of reproductive rights with William & Mary Law Professor Vivian Hamilton.
Chris Rodning of Tulane University will give a talk on Joara, Cuenca, and Fort San Juan: Indigenous Peoples and Iberian Colonists in the Western North Carolina Piedmont, 1540-1600.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Virtual talk : “The Impact of COVID-19 on College Students Studying Abroad” by Eric Pedersen, Ph.D.
The W&M Confucius Institute and Law School are honored to host Frank R. Samolis through Zoom for a virtual lecture on U.S. and China trade relations as of 2020.
Tunas and billfishes support commercial and recreational fisheries around the world. Join Bruce Collette, John Graves, and Val Kells for highlights of these incredible fish and their five-year journey to create the book Tunas and Billfishes of the World.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Chapter Officer Development Series session on effective officer transition.
Part of the Institute for Integrative Conservation Speaker Series, Dr. Melissa Checker will give a Zoom talk about her research exploring the hidden socioeconomic consequences of sustainable policies and urban redevelopment in New York.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
In this seminar Dennis Hallema will discuss how to properly train a classifier for the purpose of predicting potential fire control locations, and show what a prediction map looks like.
Prof. Sharona Gordon, Physiology & Biophysics University of Washington, Title of talk: If I’m not safe, nobody is: science, power, and activism in the age of #MeToo
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
A talk with Professor Tara Grove about textualism, the Supreme Court's decision in Bostock v. Clayton, and the future of LGBTQ+ rights.
Join Shené V. Owens, Associate Director for the Center for Student Diversity in a discussion about identity and belonging.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Join us on 11/11 at 4PM for a virtual seminar presented by Dr. Pedro Manuel Monarrez from Stanford titled "Alternating Macroevolutionary Regimes of Phanerozoic Marine Animal Body Size " | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Join Dr. Kelly Crace, Director of the Center for Mindfulness and Authentic Excellence and Associate Vice President for Health and Wellness, as he talks about dealing with burnout and stress your student may be facing
Thesis Title: "Genetic and Morphological Assessment of Population Structure of the Clearnose Skate (Rostroraja eglanteria)"
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Thesis Title: "Effects of acidification and salinity on Callinectes sapidus, Mercenaria mercenaia, and their interactions"
Dissertation Title: "Submarine Canyons' Hydrodynamics and Impact through Consecutive Upwelling and Downwelling Wind Events in the Mid-Atlantic Bight"
Interested in learning more about solar technology and the co-op process?
Led by presenter Chloe Edwards, we will dive into history and peel back the comfortable and utterly uncomfortable layers of our individual and collective experience.
This is event is part of the Tree of Life Black Faith Matters Seminar. Panelists for this seminar are Dr. McQueen Derrick, Dr. Nigel Hatton, Dr. Faith Fletcher. Moderated by Dr. Joanne Braxton.
Barbara Hamm Lee is familiar to Hampton Roads listeners as host and executive producer of WHRO’s Another View. She will moderate an open discussion about race and racism, its history in our region and its current effects.
Frozen Obsession follows the Northwest Passage Project team, including Dr. Donglai Gong from VIMS, on their 18-day, 2,000-mile expedition aboard the icebreaker R/V Oden in the Arctic in search of clues to understanding the effects of climate change.
Scientists Lisa Kellogg and Eric Hilton discuss the development of the RecFish app, winner of VIMS Innovation Fund awards in 2018 and 2019. RecFish will aid in fisheries management by providing fish population data gathered by anglers.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
The Center for Student Diversity’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. commemoration program pays tribute to his life and impact.
Learn conversation starters and strategies to help families have meaningful conversations about race with Professor Natoya Haskins from W&M's School of Education.
This talk uses case studies from the seafloor near Rhode Island and the deserts and mountains of Arizona to demonstrate how to combine, synthesize, and translate spatial data into information that is accessible to resource managers for decision-making.
Daniel Griffin, MD, PhD, Ctrop of Columbia University presents
"COVID-19: Phases, Timing of Therapeutics, Focus on Immunization"
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Prof. Twomney (Saint Lawrence U.) will speak on "Othering Blackness: Ideas of Racial Difference in Medieval & Early Modern Europe'
Monday, February 8, 2:00-3:20 pm
Welcome back everyone! Join us on 2/10 at 4PM for the first virtual seminar of 2021 presented by PhD student Teri Oehmke from UC Berkeley with a seminar on fluid mechanics (full title next page) | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Join WMCI for a virtual event celebrating the Lunar New Year on Wednesday, February 10!
Decolonization is not a Metaphor
Faculty Discussion, Zoom.
Discover how VIMS researchers produce the polyploid oysters that transformed Virginia’s oyster aquaculture industry. Join us as Aquaculture Technician and Field Specialist Shelley Katsuki presents on the work done at the Kauffman Aquaculture Center.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
The next School of Education Courageous Conversation will focus on the topics of democracy, freedom and justice in education.
A conversation with philosopher and essayist Susan Neiman on her book Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil, published in 2019, which asks what Americans can learn from Germans about confronting the evils of the past.
An overview of the new special exhibition at the Jamestown Settlement Museum by Luke J. Pecoraro, Ph.D., Director of Curatorial Services at the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. Please contact Joni Carlson [[w|jdcarlson]] for Zoom link.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Steve Prince will take participants on a historical journey examining the power of racist imagery upon the psyche of America and the world.
How are pandemics like COVID linked to conservation, equity, and governance?
Slice of Data Science is a fun way for students to obtain quick, direct insight into some of the latest applications in data science, machine learning, artificial intelligence, computer vision, natural language processing, and more.
Decolonization is not a Metaphor: Faculty Discussion with Modern Language and Literature Dept.
We will discuss Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonisation is Not a Metaphor" and Patrick Wolfe, “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native."
To kick off the Asian Centennial at W&M commemorating the admission of Chen Pu-Kao, the first Chinese, Asian, and student of color so far on record, the Asian, Pacific, and Middle Eastern Film Series presents Larissa Lam's film "Far East Deep South."
This talk will focus on how I used the tools and skills I learned in the CGA at The Nature Conservancy and National Audubon Society.
Life cycle of SARS-CoV-2 viewed through the lens of proximity proteomics
Dr. Luisa Rebull - Caltech/IPAC, Title of Talk: Stellar Rotation in Young Clusters using K2 and TESS
Dr. Michael L. Blakey is the featured speaker at the NY Academy of Science's annual archaeology lecture, conducted via Zoom on Feb. 22 at 6:30pm. He will discuss the NY African Burial Ground's impact as this national monument marks its 30th anniversary.
Jason Reynolds is the New York Times bestselling co-author of Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You, along with Ibram X. Kendi. Reynolds will discuss his book and answer questions from the audience.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Join us for a discussion about the life and legacy of Harriet Tubman and the educational implications.
Join us for a discussion on multicultural issues within the eating disorder world, with a focus on helping to identify our own seat at the table. This National Eating Disorders Awareness Week speaking event will be led by clinician Khara Randall.
Speaker: Dr. Kevin Leach, Postdoctoral Research Scientist and Lecturer at the University of Michigan.
Join us for Nick Vaka's brown bag presentation: Bushwhack Bonanza! — Metamorphosed Ultramafic Rocks in the Central Piedmont. | Click on the event title for info on getting the Zoom link to attend!
ESRI has updated StoryMaps! Tune in to learn about the new features they have added and how to use them.
Prof. Geraldine Heng (U. Texas) will give the 2021 Fauvel Lecture on "Teaching Early Global Literatures: Worlding the World, Traveling the World."
Zoom link: https://cwm.zoom.us/s/6281668144
Meeting ID: 628 166 8144
Join Dr. Eric Hilton, curator of the VIMS Nunnally Ichthyology Collection, as he tells the story of the Coelacanth- from its fossil record to its unlikely discovery and why it may be more closely related to four-legged land animals than other fishes.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Speaker: Huajie Shao, UIUC
Monday, 3/1/2021, Noon 12:00 PM
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
The Office of Diversity & Inclusion, in collaboration with Student Assembly and the Center for Student Diversity, will host its annual Student Diversity & Inclusion Symposium.
Ambassador Dennis Ross is presented by W&M Hillel, the W&M Reves Center for International Studies, the W&M Global Research Institute, and the W&M Department of Government.
Ilit Ferber, who teaches Philosophy at the University of Tel Aviv will be giving a talk on her new research Wednesday, March 3 at 11am on ZOOM.
Speaker: Ziyu Yao, Ohio State University
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
A talk with Shannon Minter from the National Center for Lesbian Rights about LGBTQ+ rights and his work.
Come join us for a useful information session on careers in the geosciences! | Click on the event title for info on getting the Zoom link to attend!
Curious about GISP certification? This discussion aims to demystify GISP (GIS Professional) Certification with an overview of the what, why, and how of the process. Find out if GISP certification is something to consider in your career planning.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Speaker: Yu Huang, PhD candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan
Join Italian Studies at W&M for a lunchtime conversation with acclaimed Italian columnist and writer Beppe Severgnini.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Speaker: Dr. Nate Veldt, Postdoctoral associate in the Center for Applied Mathematics at Cornell University
Join us for a discussion about the life and legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the educational implications.
Eurocentrism, Knowledge Making and Decolonial Dialogue
Linda Martín Alcoff (Hunter, CUNY) and Carlos Rivera Santana (Hispanic Studies, W&M)
Thursday March 11 3:30-5pm:
Open to Public
Speaker: Dr. Andrew Perrault, Postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Research in Computation and Society at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Science
GRI's Blockchain Lab presents a discussion on privacy and policy, featuring Elena Giralt of Blockchain Latinx.
Join us on 3/12 at 12:05PM for a zoom seminar by Denison geoscience professor Dr. Anjali Fernandes titled "Backwater Controls on the Kinematics and Sedimentary Records of Large Rivers and Deltas" | Click the event title to contact Brent Owens to attend!
Diego Mendez-Carbajo, Senior Economic Education Specialist , will give a basic introduction to FRED; an overview of GeoFRED; and a demonstration of using GeoFRED data on inflation for economic analysis and instruction.
A lecture presented by Professor Tamara Sonn, the 2021 Virtual Kraemer Middle East Distinguished Scholar-In-Residence. Presented in celebration of the Asian Centennial at William & Mary.
Rana Ashkar-Virginia Tech, Title of Talk: Collective Dynamics in Lipid Membranes: From Fundamental Physics to Health and Disease
Rana Ashkar, Department of Physics & Center for Soft Matter and Biological Physics, Virginia Tech
e-mail: ashkar@vt.edu
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Speaker: Dr. Camille Cobb, CMU
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Dr. Carnegie, a research professor at VIMS, will share about his research focusing on host-parasite interactions in oysters, aquaculture health, and shellfish restoration in the Chesapeake Bay.
Speaker: Dr. Benjamin Fish, Postdoctoral fellow at Mila
Join ELS for a conversation with W&M Law alumni Jonathan Peterson on campaign finance and his work at the Federal Election Commission.
Esteemed novelist and filmmaker Alia Yunis (The Night Counter) is the premiering author of Asian American Plural: Literature Across Borders, organized by Dr. R. Benedito Ferrao as part of his course OUTSIDE IN: TRANSNATIONAL ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Anthropology professor Grey Gundaker will give the 2021 Tisch Lecture at Columbia Teachers College.
Building Bridges between Technology, Business, and Conservation: How Augmented Reality is Advancing Conservation Solutions in Hawai'i
Speaker: Najoung Kim, Department of Cognitive Science at Johns Hopkins University
Dr. Joel S. Levine - William & Mary Applied Science, Title of Talk: The Human Exploration of the Moon and Mars: A Preview
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Speaker: Hongyuan Mei, Department of Computer Science at the Johns Hopkins University (JHU)
Our Spring 2021 Symposium will take place virtually Monday, March 22 through Saturday, March 27, 2021.
Four Centuries of Black Women in America: Freedom, Activism, and Justice for All
Register and view the program here.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
This talk presented by Megan Victor of Queen's College is an overview of the recovery excavation season at the Standford Arboretum Chinese Labor Quarters and discusses findings of an analysis ceramic assemblages. Email jdcarlson@wm.edu for Zoom link.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Speaker: Dr. Dan Williams, Research Staff Member at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Lab
Join our virtual conversation on "Security in the Cyber Age" with Mr. John Inglis, former Deputy Director of the National Security Agency.
“Searching for Anna May Wong,” traces the journey of actor Natasha Tina Liu, who raises the question, “If trailblazing Anna May Wong were still alive today, would she still face the same racism and challenges she experienced during her time in Hollywood?”
Come join us for Caitlin Walker's Brown Bag titled: Holocene trends in biogenic silica revealed by FTIR spectroscopy applied to a lake sediment record from northern Norway | Click on the event title for info on getting the Zoom link to attend!
Chris Dunn is a licensed Missouri attorney, geospatial business owner, expert witness, and geohistorical researcher. His talk focuses on his work investigating, mapping, and modeling incidents, accidents, and crimes.
Join us for GCC W&M Career Seminar on Saturday 8pm-10pm, March 27th to learn from experts from different fields across international relations! Learn more on our event page.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Author Paul Ocampo will speak on his short story "Butterfly" which appears in Maxine Hong Kingston's anthology, "Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (2006), as part of Dr. R. Benedito Ferrao's series Asian American Plural: Literature Across Borders.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Aquatic Health Sciences department.
Weekly departmental seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Fisheries Science department.
Join Natoya Haskins, director of diversity and inclusion at the School of Education, for a discussion of the book "The Likeability Trap: How to Break Free and Succeed As You Are" by Alicia Menendez.
Learn about exciting research representing each of the five senses (plus a bonus "sixth" sense!) at three National Estuarine Research Reserves (NERRs) in the Mid-Atlantic Region, followed by breakout rooms to ask questions and network.
Maps used for the management of UNESCO World Heritage sites served bureaucratic resource management. However, maps offer an opportunity to represent associative cultural landscapes, intangible cultural elements, and the geographies of Indigenous peoples.
Where will your Tribe Chemistry degree take you? Learn from Alumni who have moved into industry, medicine, education, and more!
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
Dr. Elizabeth Burgin, assistant professor of counselor education, will present "Adversity in Childhood: Counseling Strategies for Prevention and Intervention."
Please join FELS and ACS during the lunch hour on Wednesday, April 7, for a discussion on the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on special education and the related law. Speakers include Cheri Belkowitz, Heartley Huber, and Cheryl Poe. Please RSVP for the link.
Don't miss this public event with poets Oscar Guardiola-Rivera, Azad Sharma, and Juana Goengen, hosted by the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures as part of the Bellini Colloquium series.
Poetry That Re/Decenters with Poets:
Juana Iris Goergen (Puerto Rico), Azad Ashim Sharma (UK), & Oscar Guardiola-Rivera (Colombia) read their poetry.
Moderated by Prof. Emily Wilcox (Chinese) with translation by Prof. Silvia Tandeciarz (Hispanic Studies).
Join our long-serving Representative to Congress who will share his plans for education, criminal justice, healthcare and labor reform.
One of the Little Rock Nine, Minnijean Brown Trickey will speak about her experience as a lifelong activist and the power of centering nonviolence in every aspect of her life at this Lemon's Legacies Porch Talk.
Join us for our next Courageous Conversation about race and culture within schools and society.
Join us for Tim Terlizzi's Brown Bag presentation titled: Quantifying the composition of vegetation within the W&M College Woods using phytoliths | Click on the event title for info on getting the Zoom link to attend!
2021 Honors Student Research Showcase celebrating the work of our graduating students. In this symposium, students will give previews of their thesis work with short "three minute thesis" -style presentations.
Friday, April 9th, 4 pm: keynote address by Professor Engerman (Yale University): "The Global Cold War from Near and Far"
Saturday, April 10th, 9:30am - 10:30: student panels on the Global Cold War
Contact gxpaci@wm.edu for Zoom link.
Please join The Health Law and Policy Society for our first annual Symposium: "A Snapshot of Health Law" on April 10, 2021 (10:30am -3:00pm). Register in advance for this meeting: https://cwm.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAsde2hrTwoEtFqq5M2tZMphutKpuPSQKXf
Josué Nieves, a MA/PhD student, will present his final dissertation.
Weekly interdisciplinary seminar series presented by faculty and students in the VIMS Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences departments.
ILS presents a lecture by Katie Johnston devoted to the issue of use of force in the International Law.
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