A&S
Getty College of
Arts & Sciences
n ewsl etter
ART AND DESIGN BIOLOGICAL AND ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY COMMUNICATION AND MEDIA STUDIES THEATRE ARTS EDUCATION ENGLISH HISTORY, POLITICS AND JUSTICE HUMAN PERFORMANCE AND SPORT SCIENCES MATHEMATICS AND STATISTICS MODERN LANGUAGES MUSIC NURSING PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY TECHNOLOGICAL STUDIES
ROAD WARRIORS
PROFESSIONAL WISDOM
ONU National Choir Tour
Visiting writer series
LIFEWORKS
THE HEART OF A TEACHER
A holistic treatment to help heal troubled teens.
Good teachers save lives
EXTRA ORDINARY Extra-disciplinary seminar focuses on globalization
A teacher’s heart overcomes obstacles and finds ways to touch the hearts and minds of each and every student.
Reading Series brings working writers to campus IT’S A FACT: You can learn a lot from a professional. And, as part of the Ohio Northern University experience, not enough can be said about the influence these professionals can have on the development of young minds.
The ONU Department of Education and Center for Teacher Education hosted “The Heart of a Teacher” speaker event on Aug. 27, 2013.
Creative writing is no exception.
Two ONU alumni and outstanding teachers shared their incredible journeys toward teaching excellence and offered strategies for creating safe and nurturing classrooms where each student can succeed.
“Creative writing is an art, and contact with professional artists is an important part of student learning in this field, so the department knew we had to bring writers in,” says Lisa Robeson, professor and chair of ONU’s Department of English.
However, as the needs of students changed, the department recognized the need to expand the scope of these writer visits. So, last year, the department invited to campus five writers from various disciplines as part of college’s first “official” Reading Series. Tadd Adcox (fiction), Simone Muench (poetry), Tobias Buckell (science fiction author), Carol Drinkwater (an internationally known actress, novelist and memoir writer Continued pg. 2
ROAD WARRIORS What did you do over summer vacation?
But rarely do students have an experience like the members of the University Singers had this summer on the ONU National Choir Tour.
Stephanie Carr, BA ’05, teaches middle school students in an urban school in Nashville, Tenn., where 70 percent of her students don’t speak English at home and 93 percent live in poverty. She was named Teacher of the Year in 2013 at her school.
IN GOOD HANDS
Carr became inspired to teach at an urban school after hearing Erin Continued pg. 3 Bryan Homyak, BSN ’10, holds the most fragile of human life in his hands. A neonatal nurse at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center, he cares for the “smallest, sickest and newest lives in the hospital.” Homyak’s patients range from preemies weighing less than a pound to infants recovering from major heart surgery. He feels invigorated, yet humbled, by the profound responsibility he’s been given to help these babies survive. “You have to be vigilant and you have to be right 100 percent of the time,” he says. “It’s a challenging but fantastic career, and I feel lucky to be doing it.” Growing up, Homyak never pictured himself as a nurse. He admired his mom and grandmother, both nurses in the Cleveland area, but felt he was
For many Ohio Northern University students, summer is a time of rest and relaxation. For others, it’s time to gain real-world experience through an internship or summer job. Some even choose to forego any notion of downtime by enrolling in summer classes or studying abroad.
EXTRA ORDINARY
better suited for a career in public relations or show business. At ONU, Homyak majored in public relations until he experienced an enlightening moment while caring for his grandfather, who was dying from Alzheimer’s. One Saturday evening, after tucking his grandfather into bed, Homyak was struck by the thought that many elderly people didn’t have a grandson to care for them. He realized what a privilege it was to be able to serve others. He transferred into ONU’s nursing program a few weeks later. Homyak joined the second class to graduate from ONU’s nursing program. His fellow nursing students and professors formed a close-knit family,
New extra-disciplinary seminars add a global perspective to a Northern education.
he says. With a minor in dance, he found another supportive family at ONU in the performing arts. “I really have two passions – nursing and dancing,” he says. “And I sincerely believe I wouldn’t have been able to pursue both of them at any other institution but ONU.” After graduating, Homyak worked for a short while in a geriatric unit before landing his dream job in the Level III NICU at Hillcrest Hospital, a division of Cleveland Clinic. After a few years, he became a traveling neonatal nurse, a unique option that allows him to live in the city of his choice (currently Los Angeles) and make a high salary. Continued pg. 2
Of all the words to enter into our lexicon over the past decade, none is more macro than globalization. The word is used in virtually every sphere of our society — economics, politics, consumption, human rights, the environment, war and peace, the arts, and, most certainly, education.
The numbers alone are staggering: Almost 8,000 miles. 38 students. 38 days. 31 performances. 26 states. For five weeks, a collection of ONU’s most talented students traveled the highways and byways of America, performing choral concerts at churches and schools and introducing people along the way to Ohio Northern University. They also made the kinds of memories that last a lifetime.
Last year, Ohio Northern University introduced a new general education requirement to provide students with an educational experience outside their majors. The program, called the extradisciplinary seminar, is designed so that all the courses focus on a common theme. The theme was globalization, the process by which everyday life is influenced by conditions, events and ideas around the world as a result of increased interconnectivity.
“We met so many amazing people, saw so many really incredible sights, and
An extra-disciplinary seminar offered through the Department of Communication
Continued pg. 3
Pg. 3
THE HEART OF A TEACHER
PROFESSIONAL WISDOM
In the past, the department typically would bring in one established writer (including some very famous writers, such as Edward Albee and Joyce Carol Oates) in the fall as a campus-wide event. In addition, the English department would host a smaller event featuring a poet in the spring.
Class 1 Notes
Continued pg. 2
LIFEWORKS Most small communities don’t extend much help – or hope – for teens in trouble with the law. In Kenton, Ohio, however, juvenile delinquents receive a chance to grab a brighter future. Kenton is one of only 37 communities across the country to implement a positive model of support called “Reclaiming Futures.” Ohio Northern University, through the Getty College of Arts & Sciences, is assisting Hardin County officials with this grant-funded program that brings together educators, law officers, court officials, health care providers and the clergy to improve juvenile justice. The Hardin County Juvenile Court secured funding for the model program through a $1.2 million grant from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency, and The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Grant funding began in 2010 and will continue through 2015. Teens who end up in front of a judge typically struggle with the interrelated problems of substance abuse, mental illness, behavior issues and family discord, says Dr. Keith Durkin, ONU professor of sociology. “Reclaiming Futures focuses on treatment, not on retribution,” he explains. “Instead of punishing kids and putting a bad label on them and their families, it takes a holistic approach to changing their lives.” Continued pg. 3
Join us on Facebook! Ohio Northern University Getty College of Arts & Sciences
www.onu.edu/as