Whitman Stories
July 1, 2020
Paul Garrett Professor of Political Science Shampa Biswas Reflects on Value of Liberal Arts During Pandemic
She describes the new lecture series Whitman faculty developed for incoming students about COVID-19 through various academic lenses.
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June 24, 2020
Library Archives Collect Stories from the COVID-19 Era
As COVID-19 reshapes life around the globe, the Whitman College and Northwest Archives at Penrose Library wants to document how those changes have affected our greater community.
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June 24, 2020
Assistant Professor of Sociology Alvaro Santana-Acuña on How Márquez Resonates With Readers Today
Gabriel García Márquez's literary classic One Hundred Years of Solitude refers to a plauge of insomnia that descends on the fictional town of Macondo. Santana-Acuña compares the struggles characters in the novel face with the global fight against COVID-19.
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June 17, 2020
Seeing Double: Music Student Creates Self-Duet for Final Performance
Liam Dubay gained several new skills this spring. He learned to play the five-string Baroque cello, an instrument which Whitman College purchased last year. He also figured out how to splice together video so he could create a unique self-duet performance for his final project of the semester.
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June 16, 2020
Assistant Professor Xiaobo Yuan Bridges Anthropology and Religion at Whitman
Xiaobo Yuan first worked as an anthropologist as an undergraduate student while studying at Johns Hopkins University. Yuan received a research grant to do field work in coastal Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina. She was investigating how faith-based organizations, specifically Christian organizations, intervened in the aftermath of the hurricane.
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June 16, 2020
Associate Professor of Psychology Erin Pahlke Weighs in on Caregiver Conversations About Race
For Black caregivers who work with white families, the topic of race and racism may come up with children and sometimes their parents. One of the biggest hurdles when talking to white parents about race, especially for a Black nanny or babysitter, is addressing the myth that race isn’t something they need to acknowledge with their children. “A lot of white parents are steeped in colorblind ideology, and they really think their kid doesn’t notice race,” Pahlke explains.
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June 15, 2020
Faculty Turn to Student Consultants to Improve Classes
This spring, Suzanne Morrissey was one of a handful of faculty participating in the faculty-student consultant program, organized and offered through Whitman College’s Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL). Now entering its second year, the program connects faculty members with a student who will spend the semester evaluating a chosen course and giving direct feedback.
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June 12, 2020
Whitties Talk About Life on the Front Lines of COVID-19
When nurse practitioner Carolyn Korfiatis ’05 gets to work at her small rural hospital in Mammoth Lake, California, she goes through “the car wash.”
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June 12, 2020
Undergraduate Conference Showcases Student Research Online
Typically the Undergraduate Conference is a day of in-person presentations and poster sessions, where classes are canceled and the Whitman community interacts with student research. But when the college moved to online learning this spring in response to COVID-19, Keith Raether knew the conference format needed to change, too.
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June 11, 2020
Faculty Kathryn Frank Brings Passion for Inclusivity and Representation to Study of Comics
Comics aren’t just something Kathryn Frank enjoys reading in her free time. The newest faculty member in Whitman College’s Department of Film and Media Studies is a comics and new media forms specialist.
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June 11, 2020
Neuroscientist Nancy Day '05 Brings Research on Language Development in Birds to Psychology Department
Inside Maxey Hall’s newly constructed Avian Communication Lab, Assistant Professor Nancy Day ’05 is fitting songbirds with tiny headphones.
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June 7, 2020
Associate Professor of Psychology Pavel Blagov Finds Personality Traits Predict Social Distancing Behavior
In a new peer-reviewed study, Blagov found that psychopathic traits were linked to non-compliance with social distancing guidelines amid the coronavirus pandemic.
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