Sarah Carroll, Assistant Director of Training, Evaluation and System Support for UMW Finance, presented at the 2016 Think Big, Nelnet User Group Conference in San Antonio, Texas. Sarah presented on the topic, “Manage a Large Number of Commerce Manager Sites” to administrators, developers, technical teams and educators from across the country.
Gupta Publishes Research Article
Surupa Gupta, associate professor of Political Science and International Affairs, co-wrote a research paper titled “Agriculture and its Discontents: Coalitional Politics at the WTO with Special Reference to India’s Food Security Interests” with J. P. Singh. The paper was published in a special issue on “Developing Countries, Emerging Powers and the WTO” of International Negotiations, a peer-reviewed journal.
http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/15718069/21/2
Kisila and Giancarlo Publish Research
Ben Odhiambo Kisila (Earth and Environmental Sciences) and Leanna Giancarlo (Chemistry) along with their UMW undergraduate research student Taylor Coxon (EES – 16), had their research paper, “The impact of urban expansion and agricultural legacies on trace metal accumulation in fluvial and lacustrine sediments of the lower Chesapeake Bay basin, USA” published in the peer-reviewed international journal Science of the Total Environment.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969716311937
James Monroe Editor Speaks at Monticello
Cassandra Good, associate editor of the Papers of James Monroe, spoke at the International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello. She presented on her book, Founding Friendships.
Larus Participates in Roundtable on Taiwan’s Military
Elizabeth Freund Larus, Waple Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, exchanged ideas on Taiwan’s military modernization and national security with retired and former Taiwan military officers at Wenzhao Ursuline University in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, in May 2016.
Farewell to Bethany Friesner
After nearly 9 years of service to the University of Mary Washington, Bethany Friesner will say goodbye to this place that has been like home on June 10. She will be accompanying her husband, two sons and extended family to Massachusetts where her husband has accepted a position with the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission. Please join us in wishing her well at a Farewell Reception in the Randolph/Mason Link from 1-3 p.m. tomorrow, Friday, June 10.
SAC Faculty/Staff Mixer, June 29
ORIENTATION
First-Year Orientation sessions begin June 16. We’re expecting more than 900 students to attend orientation with their families and guests between June 16 and June 29. For more information, visit orientation.umw.edu
***** SAC FACULTY/STAFF MIXER *****
After Orientation, join SAC for a MIXER! Come out and spend time with co-workers, meet new people, put a face with a name, network, relax after Orientation, and just have fun! SAC is hosting a faculty/staff mixer at Home Team Grill on Wednesday, June 29, from 4 p.m. until 7 p.m. Enjoy Home Team’s happy hour pricing until 6 p.m.
EXCELLENT EAGLE EMPLOYEE
Don’t forget to nominate your co-workers, supervisor, or employees for the Excellent Eagle Employee award. To recognize someone for excellent work simply send an email to eenominations@umw.edu with Excellent Eagle Employee in the subject line. Be sure to provide the person’s name, department, and work location with the most convenient parking lot, and the reason they should be recognized.
CONTACT THE SAC!
Click here to submit comments, questions, suggestions, or issues to SAC. If you wish to remain anonymous, please put “Anonymous” for the name and leave out the email address. SAC’s next meeting is Thursday, July 21, at the Stafford campus. Meetings are open to any UMW faculty or staff member who’d like to attend. For more information visit http://sac.umwblogs.org/
UMW’s Psi Chi Chapter Honored
The University of Mary Washington’s Chapter of Psi Chi, The International Honor Society in Psychology, was recently honored as the 2016 Southeastern Regional Chapter of of the Year. This award recognizes the chapter as modeling excellence through programming and service and identifies it as one of the premier chapters in the country. The Department of Psychological Science would like to thank the 2015-16 office team and the membership as a whole for all of their hard work, which is truly deserving of this recognition.
Outdoor Educator
“Ra-ppa-han-nock,” chants a group of third-graders, mimicking UMW graduate Lowery Pemberton as she moves her arms up and down with each syllable.
The name of the river comes from a Native American word meaning “to rapidly rise and fall,” a fact Pemberton explains to the wide-eyed students as they sit by the river during their Friends of the Rappahannock (FOR) field trip.
Newly armed with the master’s degree in education she earned from UMW this May, Pemberton is poised to grow FOR’s environmental learning programs as the organization’s education coordinator. Combining her love of nature with her master-level teaching skills, she’s found her niche in outdoor education.

For Pemberton, teaching has always been on her mind – and in her family. Her great-grandmother was a school principal in Essex County and her mom and grandmother were both schoolteachers. So when Pemberton graduated from UVA with a bachelor’s in environmental science, she was looking for a way to teach what she knew – but with her own twist.
“I never wanted to go into a traditional classroom,” said Pemberton, who is from Sharps, Va., where she grew up fishing, crabbing, tubing and swimming on the river. “My work is outside and in the field. I like getting my hands dirty.”
Watching Pemberton gracefully minimize distractions and field questions from the fidgety 8-year-olds, you can tell she’s experienced as an educator – a skill she credits to her master’s courses at UMW and her mentor at FOR, Daria Christian.
“As an environmental educator, I work with new students almost every day,” said Pemberton, who studied classroom management and various teaching methods at UMW. “Being able to quickly assess students and knowing how to be flexible in my teaching strategies has been especially helpful.”
At FOR, Pemberton helps lead the program called A River Runs Through Us, a yearlong, meaningful watershed educational experience for sixth-grade students. Recognized for its school system partnerships and environmental educators, the program recently received the Virginia Mathematics and Science Coalition award for Programs that Work with Richmond County Public Schools.
Working with schools in several Virginia counties, Pemberton helps students investigate how they impact the river, monitor water quality, explore the outdoors and complete action-based activities such as participating in cleanups and writing reflective letters to local officials and newspapers.
“The beauty of environmental education is that it gives meaning to classroom studies,” said Pemberton, who often has kids ask her if they can come back again. “I can show kids things they don’t normally get to experience in the classroom.”