The innovative ThinkLab Makerspace in the Simpson Library of UMW has been featured in the latest publication from the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative’s 7 Things series on rapid innovation. UMW is cited alongside Stanford, Rutgers, and Case Westerns among other institutions for recognizing early on the importance of makerspaces as a way to inspire self-directed and hands-on learning using emerging technologies like 3D printing, robotics, and e-textiles. DTLT and UMW’s work has been featured in past issues of the 7 Things series on a variety of topics including MOOCs, WordPress, and 3D Printing technology. The full paper can be found on the EDUCAUSE website in PDF and ePub format.
DTLT’s Innovative Work featured in The Blue Review
Leslie Madsen-Brooks featured the long history of innovative work coming out of UMW’s Division of Teaching and Learning Technology in her article “Beyond Disruption” for The Blue Review. Below is a somewhat extensive quote from the article:
Those who have been paying attention only to partnerships among Silicon Valley companies and the Ivies may be surprised that the beating heart of a tremendous amount of academic technology innovation is a small state university in Fredericksburg, Virginia. At theUniversity of Mary Washington, the Division of Teaching and Learning Technology has launched at least four amazing initiatives that should be replicated widely because it’s clear to even casual observers that they advance teaching and learning in myriad ways. For one, evidence of student learning appears on the open web, and I encourage you to check out the current blogs developed for courses. Faculty, too—and I know this from first-hand experience—benefit from knowing what students are thinking (as expressed in blog posts and comments) before they convene for class.
Several years ago, UMW’s DTLT premiered UMW Blogs, termed “the Bluehost experiment” by the DTLT staff because in its first iteration, it was little more than a WordPress Multi-User installation on an inexpensive ($6.95 per month) shared server at Bluehost. Today, any UMW student, faculty, or staff can set up a blog for class or personal use on UMW Blogs—and 500 courses have been brought onto the platform since fall 2008. Anyone can browse the courses using UMW Blogs or discover all kinds of non-course blogs by exploring the latest posts featured on the home page. The UMW archives, for example, recently put online a series of lectures by the late civil rights leader James Farmer, and Jess Rigelhaupt’s Oral History class has createdRosie the Riveter, an excellent resource that includes “firsthand accounts of what people experienced on the American home front during World War II.”
Next to emerge from this innovation engine was DS 106, an open course on digital storytelling, originally taught by Jim Groom, but since taught by several different instructors, including noted ed tech thought leaders and innovators Martha Burtis and Alan Levine, and recently by instructors at other universities as well. Because of the strong networks of the instructors and students, DS 106 took on a life of its own, with students—both those enrolled at UMW and those following the course from elsewhere—providing daily fun assignments (“the Daily Create”) that stimulate participants’ creativity and stretch their technological savvy. DS 106 spawned ds106 radio, a free-form, streaming broadcast for which anyone could volunteer to provide content. How popular is DS 106 and its apparently endless stream of creative multimedia content? In spring 2012, Groom launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund a better web server for DS 106, and the campaign raised 600% of its goal in just a few days, providing funding for all kinds of course improvements and expansions. While Kickstarter provided private funds for this project, I’m excited about this kind of crowdsourced funding—although I’d be even more enthusiastic about greater public funding—because it allows project creators greater future freedom than would, say, funding from investors whose motive is more likely to be profit than pedagogical revolution.
Springing next from the mind of the DTLT geniuses was Domain of One’s Own, in which each first-year student at UMW receives a domain name and space on a web server. The project encourages each student to “reclaim the web” by “taking control of your digital identity,” gathering its artifacts “in a central place that you own and control.” And it’s offered in collaboration with the university’s Office of Information Technology Services,
The pilot gave 400 students and faculty their own domain name and web space to install a portfolio of work or map onto existing systems. In Fall of 2013 every incoming student at UMW will have the opportunity to choose their own domain and receive a web hosting account with the freedom to create subdomains, install any LAMP-compatible software, setup databases, email addresses and carve out their own space on the web that they own and control.
Then, as if granting students this creative freedom and technical autonomy wasn’t enough, this spring UMW launched Thinklab, amakerspace. According to its About page:
ThinkLab is the exciting new makerspace located in the Simpson Library at the University of Mary Washington. As a collaboration between the Division of Teaching and Learning Technologies, the College of Education, and the Library, ThinkLab hosts a variety of emerging technologies and tools for students and faculty across all disciplines. 3D printing, robotics, and electronics work using Arduinos and simple breadboard kits are just some of the many exciting things happening at ThinkLab.
The innovations and—yes, I’ll say it—disruptions, emerging from UMW exemplify some of the best practices in developing communities of learners, fostering collaboration, encouraging writing and reflection and developing curiosity about the world. Channeling George Kuh, Randall Bass emphasizes that such “high-impact practices” lead to “meaningful learning gains” as well as “high retention and persistence rates” because they encourage these specific behaviors:
- Investing time and effort
- Interacting with faculty and peers about substantive matters
- Experiencing diversity
- Responding to more frequent feedback
- Reflecting and integrating learning
- Discovering relevance of learning through real-world application
In an age when universities are pushing faculty ever harder to develop monetizable intellectual property, it’s refreshing to see faculty doubling down on using relatively inexpensive technologies to improve student learning. UMW is a case in point: it’s a modestly funded, small state university that, thanks to all the active minds (and periodic strategic hires) at DTLT and on the faculty, has become a major hub of innovation in higher education.
HR News: Employee Appreciation Day, Service Awards
UMW’s Employee Appreciation Day will be held Monday, May 13 from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The University Awards Ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m. in George Washington Hall’s Dodd Auditorium. The ceremony will recognize the recipients of the Charles Coleman Memorial Service Award, the Hurley Presidential Commendation and the Staff Advisory Council’s Larry Atkins Awards. During the ceremony, Professor of Psychology Chris Kilmartin will present a lecture, “Look in the Mirror: It Will Cause You to Reflect.”
After the ceremony, all employees are invited to a picnic luncheon on Ball Circle from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. As a reminder, the university will close at 3 p.m. on Monday, May 13.
Service Award Recipients
Congratulations to our service award recipients for the month of May: http://adminfinance.umw.edu/hr/files/2011/08/May-13-Service-Award-Recipients.pdf.
Students Presented at Kemp Symposium & Joined Lambda Iota Tau
On Thursday, April 25, the Department of English, Linguistics, and Communication inducted 17 people into the Eta Chapter of Lambda Iota Tau, the international honor society for students of literature. Inductees are majors in English who had completed at least 12 credit hours in literature and with a GPA of at least 3.5 in those credit hours.
Inductees included: Ana Rebecca Bice, Taylor Rae Chadman, Colleen D. Clark, Theresa Davidson, Danielle Paige DeSimone, Chelsea J. Dicus, Ellen R. Dreher, Michaela P. Godfrey, Catherine S. Kellogg, Gabrielle Kuhn, Catherine R. LeBouton, Danica Leninsky, Joseph Samuel Deitell Pugach, Charlotte Rodina, Bryanne Elise Salazar, Brittany Anne Vitner, and Amanda K. Wikle.
Danny Tweedy, Assistant Professor of English, gave the Taddesse Adera Memorial Address.
The induction ceremony was part of the Ninth Annual William Kemp Symposium for Majors in English, Linguistics, and Communication at which approximately 100 students in upper-division courses in English, linguistics, and communication presented original research and creative works. This year’s symposium featured 18 panel sessions and ran April 25 and 26.
Business Services eUpdate – May 2013
May 2013 Updates and Announcements
- Procurement Services
- SPCC News
- Vacation Reminder (to manage sign-off)
- Violations & Consequences
- Clean Sweep!
- eVA Search
- IT Purchases now FY14
- Fall Purchases – plan now!
- Contract Activity
- Surplus Items Available Online
- SPCC News
- Parking
- Chandler Lot Closure
- Scheduled Lot Maintenance
- Bookstore
- Fac/Staff Discount Day!
- EagleOne
VACATION INFO
SPCC cardholders and supervisor reviewers are responsible for contacting Procurement Services before taking a leave of absence; ie vacation, sabbatical. The PA will work with individuals and their departments, to ensure that card activity is accounted for and signed off prior to leave of absence.
For assistance with SPCC, please contact Melissa Myers @ 1057.
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SPCC VIOLATIONS & CONSEQUENCES
The SPCC Violations & Consequences have been revised. Please visit the website to view the updated information: SPCC Violations & Consequences
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CLEAN SWEEP!
You did it again! … No transactions were swept for April 2013. Thank you all for your timely action in coding and signing-off on transactions.
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eVA SEARCH
Please view the following document in order to see step-by-step instructions on how to view multiple vendor locations within the same eVA search.
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eVA Problems?
If you are experiencing problems with eVA, please contact Pacifique Munezero in Procurement Services at x1127.
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IT PURCHASES NOW FY14
IT Purchases being entered now will hit the FY14 budget.
http://adminfinance.umw.edu/tess/files/2012/03/FY13-year-end-memo.pdf
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FALL PURCHASES – THINK AHEAD
If you have already identified equipment, services or possible contracts that will be needed for the Fall 2013 semester, please contact Procurement Services. The purchasing staff can assist in planning and ensuring that orders/contracts are ready in a timely manner.
Procurement Services or x1127
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CONTRACT ACTIVITY
- Campus wide Janitorial Contract – Intent to Award Contract has been posted
- Background Checks – A new contract will be available for use later this month.
- Promotional Items – Awarded: Contact Pacifique Munezero
- Athletic Hotel – Awarded
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SURPLUS ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLINE
The University of Mary Washington, offers surplus property for sale to other state agencies and local governments which may be purchased from www.govdeals.com. State employees are eligible to purchase surplus property in an amount less than $500
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CHANDLER LOT CLOSURE
The Chandler Lot will be going offline later this month to support construction of the new Campus Center. A new surface parking lot on Thornton Street will be available for use in August.
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SCHEDULED LOT MAINTENANCE
Please view the following memo for scheduled lot closures occurring during the week of May 6 – May 10, there may be changes due to weather:
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FAC/STAFF DISCOUNT DAY!
The UMW Bookstore will offer 20% off the purchase of regularly priced clothing and insignia items* during Employee Appreciation Day. (*Some exceptions apply)
Store hours on May 13, 2013 are:
- 9:00 a.m. – 10:15 a.m.
- 1:45 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Get your UMW gear early, and wear Eagle Pride throughout the day!
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OFF-CAMPUS MERCHANTS AVAILABLE ALL SUMMER
Our office-campus merchant partners accept EagleOne all summer long.
http://adminfinance.umw.edu/eagleone/eagleone-off-campus-2
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Please contact Business Services for information and assistance at x1576.
Erma A. Baker CPPO, VCO
Assistant Vice President for Business Services and CPO
University of Mary Washington
1301 College Avenue
Fredericksburg, Virginia 22401
540-654-2043
Yoga in the Garden at the James Monroe Museum
Join us on Saturday, May 11, from 8 to 9 a.m. to get energized for your weekend with outdoor yoga! Ren Fields and other teachers from Healing Arts Yoga will offer drop-in classes for all ages and skill levels. This program allows the James Monroe Museum to participate in First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! initiative, and we’re excited to be joining the list of museums and galleries that encourage healthy living through programs and exhibits.
Classes are $12/person. We recommend bringing a yoga mat.
Read the Free Lance-Star article about this program here.
We hope you will join us!
Board of Visitors Announces Faculty Promotions, Tenures
At its April 19 meeting, the Board of Visitors granted final approval for promotion and/or tenure for the following faculty members.
“I am certain that you will join with me in congratulating them on reaching these important milestones in their academic careers,” said Ian D.C. Newbould, interim provost.
UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
Promotion and Tenure
Laurie B. Abeel, Associate Professor in the Department of Foundations, Leadership, and Special Populations granted tenure.
Surupa Gupta, Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Affairs granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Jane L. Huffman, Associate Professor in the Department of Foundations, Leadership, and Special Populations granted tenure.
Rosemary K. Jesionowski, Assistant Professor in the Department of Art and Art History granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Emile J. Lester, Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Affairs granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Miriam N. Liss, promoted from Associate Professor of Psychology to the rank of Professor.
Jeffrey W. McClurken, promoted from Associate Professor of History to the rank of Professor.
Clarence W. Tweedy, Assistant Professor in the Department of English, Linguistics, and Communication granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Ronald A. Zacharski, Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Xiaofeng Zhao, Assistant Professor in the College of Business granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor.
Strategic Resource Allocation Process Underway
A message from President Hurley:
As you may know, the Strategic Resource Allocation project that I announced earlier is now underway. Both the Academic and Support task forces have organized and are moving forward in conducting their important work. Although much of the work of these groups must be confidential in nature, everyone involved is committed to providing as much communication about the process as is appropriate and to creating opportunities for input from throughout the UMW community. Therefore, a new website has been created to foster this type of information sharing. In order to access the website, there is a link to the site posted on the President’s Office page.
Best wishes for a great summer.
Richard V. Hurley
President
Status of Amendments to the Honor Constitution
The University of Mary Washington Board of Visitors considered four procedural changes to the Honor Constitution recommended by students and approved three at the April 19 meeting. The recommended changes are listed below. Number three, the definition of stealing, was not endorsed by the BOV.
“On behalf of the Fredericksburg Campus Honor Council, I would like to thank all those students who participated by voting and express our appreciation to Dr. David Rettinger for his assistance in the process,” said Alice O’Brien, president of the Fredericksburg Campus Honor Council. “Honor is a way of life at the University of Mary Washington, and we take pride in the fact that the Board of Visitors of the University delegates to the students the authority to operate and maintain the honor system. Your acceptance of and participation in the honor system is vital to its continued success and relevance to the community.”
1. Change to Honor Suspension: This sanction was amended so that suspension would no longer be retroactive. The new sanction of suspension can be applied to the current or future semester(s).
2. Procedure for handling multiple Honor Code violations: This new procedure clarifies that cases are heard through completion, in the order they are received by the Honor Council.
3. Stealing. Changes throughout to indicate that, for purposes of making an honor accusation, “stealing” is limited to an academic context.
4. Clarifying official beginning of an honor case: Addition to Article II, Section 1.F – the official start of an honor proceeding begins with first contact either by the accuser or by the Honor Council.
CED Students Present Research

University of Mary Washington Sophomore Jack Anderson, Junior Josh Bollinger, and Senior Shayda Rezazad presented their semester’s work on researching the small business economy of Stafford, Va. at the Center for Economic Development on April 25 to Economic Development Executives from Stafford and Spotsylvania Counties. Pictured from left are Brian J. Baker, executive director for entrepreneurship and business development at the University of Mary Washington Center for Economic Development, Rezazad, Bollinger and Anderson.





