‘Education in Film’ Red Carpet Premiere
Jefferson 218Students in Professor Eric DeMeulenaere's Education in Film class invite you to attend the Red Carpet Premiere of five short films developed to disrupt dominant narratives.
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Students in Professor Eric DeMeulenaere's Education in Film class invite you to attend the Red Carpet Premiere of five short films developed to disrupt dominant narratives.
This virtual info session will give an overview of the Steinbrecher Fellowship Program, which provides five to seven awards a year for Clark undergraduates to pursue original ideas, creative research, public service, or enrichment projects.
International students are invited to take a guided tour of Goddard Library and find out about all the resources the library offers to students.
Calling all Clark University arts and humanities faculty! Bring one of your syllabi as well as your stories of teaching successes and challenges to share, and join us for an open-ended and collegial conversation about teaching strategies and experiences. Lunch will be provided. Reply requested at the link below: RSVP: Arts & Humanities Faculty Pedagogy […]
The Higgins School is excited to invite Clark faculty to a planning session for a new faculty research collaborative around the topic “Alternative Futures.” Curious what this will be? We are too! The idea emerged from faculty discussions last semester, and a core group of faculty will be meeting to help define the group and […]
Faculty and staff are invited to join a conversation about ChatGPT and its impact on the curriculum.
Group work can be challenging — come learn some tips and tricks for success with group assignments.
In this virtual lecture, Professor Ursula Heise (UCLA) will explore recent climate change narratives from different parts of the world – including North America, South America, and South East Asia – and the ways in which they negotiate the tension between large-scale disasters and the new normalcy of everyday life under conditions of climate change.
Jameliah Inga Shorter-Bourhanou (College of the Holy Cross) examines Kant’s discussion of enslavement and colonialism in his essay, “Toward Perpetual Peace” (1795). Clark University's Cara Berg Powers offers commentary.
We're already halfway into the semester and it's almost time to start thinking about courses for next semester. As the advising period begins March 20th, the Department of Computer Science […]