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Funded Projects Query Form
41 matches

Grant program: Humanities Connections Implementation*
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College of the Holy Cross (Worcester, MA 01610-2395)
Kendy Hess (Project Director: August 2022 to present)
Karen Teitel (Co Project Director: December 2022 to present)

AKB-291005-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$140,230 (approved)
$140,230 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2025

The Interdisciplinary Minor in Ethics, Society, and the Institution of Business

A two-year project to create a minor in ethics, society, and the institution of business

We seek to develop a broader, more encompassing vision of both business and business ethics that will help our students develop the knowledge, the skills, the vision, and the passion to help business move beyond doing less harm and become restorative. The humanities have an absolutely essential role to play in this project, but they must be brought to bear: for this work, a humanities education without business will be impotent while a business education without the humanities will be blind. Meeting the challenges of the world today will require a familiarity with the practices, values, and structures that define the institution of business; a deep sense of the history and potential of that institution and of the people who are so deeply enmeshed in its workings; and an unapologetic kind of radical hope that both personal and institutional transformation are possible. Our program makes a strong start on this project.

Niagara University (Niagara University, NY 14109-9809)
Paula Kot (Project Director: August 2022 to present)
James McCutcheon (Co Project Director: December 2022 to present)
Donna F. Thompson (Co Project Director: December 2022 to present)
Lisa V. Williams (Co Project Director: December 2022 to present)

AKB-291009-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$148,500 (approved)
$148,500 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2026

Implementing the Vincentian Social Justice General Education Minor

A three-year project to launch a minor in Vincentian social justice

Niagara University in Lewiston, NY, a liberal arts university in the Vincentian and Catholic traditions, requests a three-year implementation grant to launch a new Vincentian Social Justice General Education Minor (VSJ minor) that will provide Niagara’s undergraduates with choice and flexibility to integrate humanities-focused social justice courses, content, and experiential learning into their major area of study. By the end of the grant period, Niagara’s goal is to have 25 new or revised courses for the VSJ minor that serves 500 students annually (regardless of enrollment in minor), and then 10 students enrolled in the minor by the third year. Furthermore, implementation of the minor will include 30 faculty across 19 disciplines, including eight in the humanities.

Portland State University (Portland, OR 97207-0751)
Rachel Noorda (Project Director: August 2022 to April 2023)
Susan Kirtley (Project Director: April 2023 to April 2023)
Rachel Noorda (Project Director: April 2023 to present)
Kathi Inman Berens (Co Project Director: April 2023 to present)
Susan Kirtley (Co Project Director: April 2023 to present)

AKB-291011-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,951 (approved)
$149,951 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2026

Building a Humanities-Focused Minor in Creative Industries

A three-year curricular project to develop a new humanities-focused minor in creative industries, incorporating experiential learning with community partners

This project will develop a 7-course, interdisciplinary, and humanities-centered Creative Industries (CI) minor at Portland State University. Experiential learning with community partners is a key feature. Students apply humanities methods into industry frameworks, informed by a prototype developed over twenty years in PSU’s book publishing program.

University of Rhode Island (Kingston, RI 02881-1967)
Sigrid Berka (Project Director: August 2022 to present)

AKB-291016-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,889 (approved)
$149,889 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2025

A New Model for Integrated Humanities and Engineering Education

Implementation of a two-year course revision and development project to expand the scope of the existing International Engineering Program

The proposal introduces an integration of several courses between engineering and foreign languages as well as cultural studies, and proposes to create two new courses, one on intercultural competence and one in exploring science through literature and film, as well as implementing experiential learning opportunities for engineering and language students in RI diverse and Indigenous communities.

Purdue University (West Lafayette, IN 47907-2040)
Lori Czerwiokna (Project Director: September 2022 to present)
Kirsten Davis (Co Project Director: May 2023 to present)

AKB-291057-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,549 (approved)
$148,692 (awarded)

Grant period:
8/1/2023 – 7/31/2025

Integrating the Humanities and Global Engineering

Implementation of a two-year curricular revision to integrate humanistic method and inquiry into the engineering program

The project, Integrating the Humanities and Global Engineering, significantly expands the role of the humanities in engineering degree options and also offers new interdisciplinary learning opportunities to all students at Purdue University. We will raise the stature of the humanities at the local level of campus and community, as well as at the national and international level. The proposed humanistic-engineering approach will be implemented through a series of five courses that intersect with students’ international experiential learning activities and an invited speaker series. Through educating students to be critically thinking people who have greater appreciation for learning from cultural products (e.g., literature, film, arts) and local perspectives (e.g., via history, narrative), this project will shape the choices that students make as people and professionals, as well as the future of higher education.

Loyola University, Chicago (Chicago, IL 60611-2147)
Joseph Michael Vukov (Project Director: September 2022 to present)
Michael Burns (Co Project Director: May 2023 to present)

AKB-291069-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,363 (approved)
$149,363 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2025

Humanizing STEM Education: Navigating Future Challenges Through Integrated Instruction

Implementation of a three-year curricular revision project to develop an interdisciplinary and experiential model for the general education curriculum

In this Implementation Grant, the Loyola University Chicago team proposes to build off their pilot work—a set of co-taught Biology/Philosophy courses—to recruit and train additional faculty across STEM and humanities departments to develop at least four new interdisciplinary courses/course sets for Loyola undergraduate students.

Juniata College (Huntingdon, PA 16652-2196)
Amanda M. Page (Project Director: September 2022 to present)
Territa Poole (Co Project Director: May 2023 to present)

AKB-291086-23
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,989 (approved)
$149,989 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2023 – 6/30/2026

Explorations of Rural Experience: Fostering Narrative Imagination and Civic Curiosity

a three-year project to establish a new minor focused on rural experience, including experiential learning opportunities in Pennsylvania and Alabama

Juniata College in Huntingdon, PA will implement the Explorations of Rural Experience: Fostering Narrative Imagination and Civic Curiosity minor. Grounded in Juniata’s local rural community, the minor will provide faculty with the opportunity to use interdisciplinary approaches to teach students how to tackle complex problems, such as rural poverty, in a way that blends the humanities emphasis on narrative, historical context, and story-telling with social science data-driven methods. We will create a space for faculty to collaborate on interdisciplinary curriculum development; support professional development; institutionalize experiential learning opportunities in Pennsylvania and in study away through partnerships in Alabama; launch core courses and electives for the minor; establish the Rural Community Reading Group; mount a symposium on the topic of rural poverty; create a digital humanities hub as a repository for student research projects; and establish a research assistantship.

Morningside University (Sioux City, IA 51106-1717)
Leslie Werden (Project Director: September 2021 to present)

AKB-285718-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$142,797 (approved)
$142,797 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 5/31/2025

Rooted: Integrated Humanities and Agriculture

A three-year project to implement an agricultural humanities minor.

Morningside University will use NEH funding to implement the Rooted: Integrated Humanities and Agriculture project to establish an agricultural humanities minor. This minor will focus on the interrelation of humanistic inquiry with agriculture and food studies and will be part of a new agricultural and humanities pathway. The university is located in Siouxland, the crossroads of Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota, where supplying the nation with food has been woven into the rural fabric for generations. Therefore, a central tenet of the minor will be a humanities-based exploration of rurality—what it means to live close to the land in rural communities and on working farms. Rooted will be relevant to the realities of the lives of rural students, and will use a place-based pedagogical framework that recognizes that students learn best when the knowledge they acquire in their courses is directly connected to the way of life, background, and culture that roots them to their physical homes.

Corporation of Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame (Notre Dame, IN 46556-5001)
Sarah Noonan (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Christopher Wedrychowicz (Co Project Director: April 2022 to present)
Laura Williamson-Ambrose (Co Project Director: April 2022 to present)

AKB-285752-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$149,001 (approved)
$149,001 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2022 – 6/30/2025

Community Networks and Narratives: Launching a Digital and Public Humanities Minor

The development of an interdisciplinary minor in digital and public humanities.

Through this grant, Saint Mary’s College will launch an integrated, 15-credit Digital and Public Humanities (DPH) minor that includes two required courses, six electives, and four elective modules. The minor will integrate project-based, experiential learning opportunities with internal and external partners, providing students with a hands-on model of how humanities research engages with and influences the world. The DPH minor will be the first at Saint Mary's College to integrate technology fields with the humanities in a formal curricular path. The minor also uses a new curricular format for interdisciplinary programs by creating module courses that enable students to develop competencies in data management, text mining, ethics, and project management in a focused, flexible format.

University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire (Eau Claire, WI 54701-4811)
Louisa Rice (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Julie A. Anderson (Co Project Director: May 2022 to present)

AKB-285769-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$150,000 (approved)
$150,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 5/31/2025

Implementing an Integrative Health Humanities Certificate Program

A three-year project to implement a health humanities certificate program.

The University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire will implement an Integrative Health Humanities Certificate that engages four humanities departments as well as departments of Psychology, Social Work, Biology, and the Institute for Health Sciences. Its integrated curriculum requires students to take a core course: Health Humanities, and engage in an experiential practice, including collaborative research and internship opportunities. Focusing on long-term sustainability we will 1) Develop new and revise existing courses, and create an interdisciplinary Advisory Board responsible for assessment 2) Expand on existing experiential learning opportunities and build a system to track student participation and 3) Create a public-facing website to house ongoing Health Humanities projects. Our program will enroll 25 students in year 1 and 75 annually by year 5. This certificate will play a crucial role in realizing the University’s goal of attaining national distinction in “health and wellbeing” by 2025.

Kansas Newman College (Wichita, KS 67213-2084)
Cheryl Golden (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Jamey Findling (Co Project Director: January 2022 to present)

AKB-285772-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$148,815 (approved)
$148,815 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 5/31/2025

Emphasis in Technology and Human Values (ETHV)

A three-year project to implement a “Technology and Human Values” certificate.

Contemporary advances in technology promise benefits for humanity across a seemingly limitless range of applications; they also pose serious challenges to our efforts to promote human flourishing and even to our understanding of what it means to be human. We interact with technologies that track our movements, map our faces, predict our choices. Tomorrow’s professionals must grasp not only the technical aspects of such tools, but also the implications these tools have for humanity. Newman University’s ETHV certificate program addresses these issues by making intentional connections between the humanities and the professional fields which deploy these new and emerging technologies. The ETHV purposefully integrates humanities content from our general education program into the degree requirements of professional majors. Our project implements ETHV certificate tracks for majors in criminal justice, business data analytics, biology, psychology, education, and social work.

Seton Hall University (South Orange, NJ 07079-2697)
Abe Zakhem (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Elizabeth A. McCrea (Co Project Director: January 2022 to present)

AKB-285808-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,957 (approved)
$149,957 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2022 – 7/31/2024

Business Humanities Minor

A two-year project to establish a minor in business humanities.

Seton Hall University’s (SHU) proposed interdisciplinary Business Humanities Minor and seven newly developed courses aims to overcome what has been identified and discussed by scholars for over a century, that the separation of the humanities from business is artificial and detrimental.

CCBC (Baltimore, MD 21237-3899)
Andrew Rusnak (Project Director: September 2021 to present)

AKB-285833-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,930 (approved)
$149,930 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 5/31/2024

Contextualizing Humanities Education for All

A three-year project incorporating humanities content into preprofessional courses.

Community colleges have come to be regarded as workforce development institutions and only secondarily as what they really are: important components of the higher education landscape. At the Community College of Baltimore County (CCBC), we believe the humanities are vital for teaching us how to be fully human within our era. Through the Contextualizing Humanities Education for All program, our team will infuse humanities ideas into non-humanities disciplines through faculty collaboration on cross-curriculum development, and workshops to introduce students to skills in written and oral communication, analytical thinking, collaboration, creative thinking, and problem-solving. Humanities and non-humanities faculty will collaborate to design a variety of paired courses, programs, and a Distinction in Humanities recognition to provide multiple touch points for exposing students to humanities concepts and helping them apply this mindset to the rest of their education and life.

Salisbury University (Salisbury, MD 21801-6860)
Timothy Stock (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Michele M. Schlehofer (Co Project Director: April 2022 to present)
Jennifer F. Nyland (Co Project Director: April 2022 to present)

AKB-285835-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$146,322 (approved)
$146,322 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 12/31/2024

Re-envisioning Ethics Access and Community Humanities (R.E.A.C.H.) Initiative: Integrating Community and Curricular Ethics

A two-year project to implement an integrated ethics curriculum.

The REACH Initiative is a collaboration between the departments of Philosophy, Psychology, and Biology at SU. The humanities are at the center of a reframing of the role and meaning of ethics in undergraduate education at our institution, state-assisted university with a public mission. We bring together, via a slate of new community-sourced resources focused on ethics, two major elements of institutional revision: (i) Curriculum change in the sciences via early exposure to public ethics, and (ii) Community-driven learning, where our immediate community has a say in defining areas of ethical concern. Our implementation will extend the REACH model to four targeted curricular areas: Biology, Honors First Year Seminars, Henson Science Honors and Social Work. We will utilize REACH planning phase outputs to generate resources for faculty implementation in the classroom, assess ethics learning outcomes, and create workshops and internships for our 200-member Community Ethics Network.

University of North Carolina, Asheville (Asheville, NC 28804-3251)
Ellen Holmes Pearson (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Victoria Bradbury (Co Project Director: April 2022 to present)

AKB-285837-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$149,637 (approved)
$149,637 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2022 – 5/31/2025

Digital Fluency and Experiential Learning: Promoting Digital Humanities in Undergraduate Research

The development of an interdisciplinary digital humanities undergraduate research track whose courses would feature community-engaged experiential learning.

The project team for “Digital Fluency and Experiential Learning: Promoting Digital Humanities in Undergraduate Research” will create a Digital Humanities Undergraduate Research (DHUR) track for UNC Asheville’s Undergraduate Research Program. DHUR courses will engage students in digital humanities through experiential learning and undergraduate research activities. The grant will facilitate faculty development efforts in order to increase the number of courses that employ humanistic inquiry and digital tools and to adapt and pilot courses for the DHUR track. These courses will incorporate practices such as community engagement, archival research, story mapping, oral history collection, and other forms of experiential learning. Students in DHUR courses will contribute to the crafting and dissemination of an inclusive online museum housing archival materials and interactive projects that illuminate the experiences of historically excluded people in Asheville and its environs.

Northeastern University (Boston, MA 02115-5005)
Sari Altschuler (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Christopher M. Parsons (Co Project Director: March 2022 to present)

AKB-285866-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,673 (approved)
$149,673 (awarded)

Grant period:
9/1/2022 – 8/31/2025

Humanities and the Digital Future of Health and Healthcare: A Curriculum

A three-year project to implement a half major in digital health humanities.

Early in the pandemic, a group of physicians declared that healthcare might not be prepared, but “the new reality is that virtual care has arrived.” COVID-19 has made healthcare more digital—and revealed how data-driven and digital it already was. We propose to implement a curriculum at Northeastern to prepare students to address the social and cultural aspects of this digital revolution and to be alert to the significant ethical issues it raises. Our digital health humanities curriculum will train students with diverse interdisciplinary skills for tomorrow’s jobs. Humanities, health, and computer science faculty will collaborate to design courses to grow our Health Humanities minor into a half major, which will pair with Health Science and Public Health to form two new combined majors with a focus in digital health. The grant will also support experiential learning opportunities for NU students in and beyond the university and open-access modules made freely available for all.

Regents of the University of Colorado, Boulder (Boulder, CO 80309-0001)
Jane M. Garrity (Project Director: September 2021 to present)
Eric Vance (Co Project Director: March 2022 to June 2023)
Robin Burke (Co Project Director: June 2022 to present)

AKB-285879-22
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$149,999 (approved)
$149,999 (awarded)

Grant period:
8/1/2022 – 7/31/2025

Humanities Core Competencies as Data Acumen: Integrating Humanities and Data Science

The development of eight new courses integrating humanities and data science through experiential learning.

We propose to expand the role of the humanities at the University of Colorado Boulder by developing a curricular initiative that combines the humanities and data science. Team members will design eight courses, each of which will promote experiential learning and foster engagement with humanistic questions in the context of quantitative inquiry. Key components of the project include, first, a two-year course design and development workshop facilitated by CU Boulder’s Center for Teaching and Learning. Second, we describe an ambitious plan for disseminating our findings and for fostering local and national conversations about best practices for teaching data science and the humanities. Our project aims to provide a model of cutting-edge pedagogical collaboration and an example of how the humanities can help equip twenty-first century learners with the intellectual resources they will need responsibly to inhabit a world being remade by data.

Texas Woman's University (Denton, TX 76204-5589)
Gretchen Busl (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Danielle Taylor Phillips-Cunningham (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)

AKB-279445-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[White paper][Grant products]

Totals:
$99,426 (approved)
$99,426 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 12/31/2022

Quakertown Stories

The development of interdisciplinary courses and civic engagement activities focused on the history of the African American community of Quakertown.

Quakertown Stories is an interdisciplinary curricular project with three major goals: 1) To foster civic engagement by creating a series of courses that implement place-based research assignments focused on Quakertown, a displaced freedmen community in Denton, TX; 2) To facilitate dialogue between the university and Denton community about Quakertown and how it has shaped present day Denton through panel discussions and a student-led public Town Hall; 3) To build on previous programs to establish an ongoing working group to support faculty in designing courses that integrate place-based research and other experiential learning opportunities into their classes.

Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville (Edwardsville, IL 62026-0001)
Jessica DeSpain (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Connie Frey Spurlock (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)
Jessica Harris (Co Project Director: May 2021 to present)

AKB-279457-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

CODES: Community-Oriented Digital Engagement Scholars

A three-year project to implement a general education pathway introducing underserved students to digital community engagement.

The Community-Oriented Digital Engagement Scholars (CODES) program will provide a general education track for underserved students at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) and Lewis and Clark Community College (L&C). Blending community engagement, digital methods, collaborative research, and transdisciplinary pedagogy, CODES enables students to bring their experiences and creativity to bear upon critical issues facing their communities. Designed for underserved students, including those who are first-generation, African American, Latinx, and/or Pell-eligible, CODES help students at the earliest stages of their college career understand the integral role of the humanities in transdisciplinary problem solving. While there are several models of community-engaged teaching at the general education level, few meaningfully incorporate digital methods and ethics into pedagogical design to address the need for an informed twenty-first century citizenry and workforce.

Auburn University (Auburn, AL 36849-0001)
Traci S. O'Brien (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Dean Hendrix (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)
Robert Karcher (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)

AKB-279460-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$99,056 (approved)
$99,056 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Building Lasting Bridges: German and Engineering

The development of five courses for a dual degree program in German and engineering.

The Project, “Building Lasting Bridges: German and Engineering at Auburn University,” seeks funding to create five innovative courses that strengthen the collaboration between humanities and STEM fields at Auburn University. Comprised of faculty from both German and Engineering, the collaborative team will build on the recently approved dual degree program in German and Engineering to develop four courses that support dual degree students in attaining high levels of linguistic, intercultural, and technical expertise. For the fifth course, the team will transform an already existing pre-engineering course to make intercultural competence central to student learning outcomes. By shifting its project development focus to an international context, the pilot version of this course will train hundreds of pre-engineering students in intercultural competence. As a result of this collaboration, students will learn to build bridges, both literally and figuratively.

Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ 85281-3670)
Suren Jayasuriya (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Edward Finn (Co Project Director: May 2021 to present)
Xin Wei Sha (Co Project Director: May 2021 to present)

AKB-279509-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products][Media coverage]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Artificial Intelligence in Digital Culture: Undergraduate Certificate Program in Intelligent Media and Society

The development of an interdisciplinary undergraduate curriculum on artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning.

This proposal aims to foster a transdisciplinary environment where humanities and STEM students can think critically, engage, and interact with technical and social constructions of machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms and systems. This grant will support the design of an undergraduate certificate program entitled “Intelligent Media and Society” at the School of Arts, Media and Engineering at Arizona State University. This certificate will focus on humanistic and socio-cultural engagement with AI with a core set of classes with complementary domain knowledge including Minds and Machines; Science Fiction, Creativity and Responsibility; and Algorithmic Reading. Implementation of this certificate program includes curriculum building, development of online modules, and community/partnership development for experiential learning opportunities.

Bellarmine College (Louisville, KY 40205-1863)
Jessica Hume (Project Director: September 2020 to present)

AKB-279297-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,999 (approved)
$99,999 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Health, Culture, and Compassion

The expansion of a health humanities minor to an interdisciplinary undergraduate major program.

Through critical thinking and analysis in the fields of literature, writing, bioethics, spirituality, fine arts, social sciences, anthropology, politics, and law, the program will allow students to explore health from person- and society-centered perspectives. Funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) will allow for expansion of the current HCC minor to an interdisciplinary major with three tracks: Narrative Health and Medical Humanities (NHMH); Health Disparities and Health Equity (HDHE); and Aging and End-of-Life Studies (AEoLS).

D'Youville College (Buffalo, NY 14201-1084)
Gina Camodeca (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Renee Cadzow (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)

AKB-279324-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,857 (approved)
$99,857 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Implementation of a Health Humanities Pathway Program

The implementation of an interdisciplinary major in health humanities for undergraduates.

D’Youville College (DYC) proposes to implement an interdisciplinary major in Health Humanities by creating six core courses with robust experiential-learning components. DYC created the major, which stems from a new general-education curriculum and a piloted series of topics courses, to strengthen the humanities by means of interdisciplinary programs. The major responds to the College’s belief that, to serve their communities most effectively, healthcare providers must have a firm understanding of how and why different belief systems, cultural biases, ethnic origins, family structures, and other culturally determined factors influence how people experience illness. It also responds to DYC’s mission and its position as an important provider of healthcare professionals in a highly diverse city with a focus on healthcare. As part of implementing the new major, DYU will launch a speaker series and faculty workshops and significantly enhance its collaboration with community organizations.

St. John Fisher College (Rochester, NY 14618-3597)
Oliver Lothar Griffin (Project Director: September 2020 to present)
Kimberly Chichester (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)

AKB-279352-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Rochester: Mapping Place, Space, and Identity

Implementation of a five-course sequence that brings the lens of place to the history of Rochester, New York.

St. John Fisher College (SJFC) proposes “Rochester: Mapping Place, Space, and Identity.” This three-year implementation project will feature interdisciplinary collaboration between humanities faculty from history, American studies, and religious studies and non-humanities faculty from biology, chemistry, sociology, and data science. Participating faculty members will engage in collective learning and develop a series of five new courses for SJFC’s core curriculum focused on topics related to greater Rochester’s history, culture, and environment that will engage students from their freshmen to senior year. Through experiential learning activities designed for and embedded in each of the five courses, participating faculty and students will develop content for a web-based “deep map” of the Rochester region, which will include historical primary documents, media coverage, and Census and other data to create an interactive view of Rochester from the 19th century to the present.

Georgetown University (Washington, DC 20057-0001)
Lakshmi Krishnan (Project Director: September 2020 to January 2022)
Nicoletta Pireddu (Project Director: January 2022 to January 2023)
Lakshmi Krishnan (Project Director: January 2023 to present)
Nicoletta Pireddu (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)
Daniel Marchalik (Co Project Director: April 2021 to present)

AKB-279365-21
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$90,640 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2021 – 5/31/2024

Implementing a Collaborative Medical Humanities Minor

The implementation of an interdisciplinary medical humanities minor for undergraduates.

This proposal aims to implement a collaborative, cross-campus Medical Humanities Minor at Georgetown and to expand the Medical Humanities Initiative (funded by a NEH Humanities Connections Planning Grant). Funded outcomes will be an interdisciplinary Medical Humanities undergraduate minor featuring Main/Medical faculty team-taught courses, experiential learning, and researched Capstone, as well as a cross-campus Medical Humanities Program with Student Research Fellowships, Medical Humanities Colloquium (open to the public), open-access Medical Humanities digital platform, and an international Medical Humanities Symposium. We aim to cultivate meaningful partnerships across campuses, equip students with a breadth of humanistic tools, contribute to scholarship in the field of medical humanities, enhance the well-being of pre-health students, and change the patient/clinician encounter from a grassroots level, by shaping the training of health care professionals at a critical stage.

Vermont College (Northfield, VT 05663-1035)
Amy Woodbury Tease (Project Director: September 2019 to present)
Tara Kulkarni (Co Project Director: March 2020 to present)

AKB-270107-20
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2020 – 5/31/2024

Building a Humanities-Centered Interdisciplinary Curriculum to Foster Citizen Scholars

A three-year project to implement a new team-taught curriculum integrating humanities with the sciences and professional fields.

The Norwich Humanities Initiative (NHI) is a multi-year project at Norwich University to support a new team-taught curriculum focused on the integration of the humanities with the sciences and professional fields. The NHI was created with funding from a NEH Humanities Connections Planning Grant with the goal to expand opportunities for students to engage in interdisciplinary conversations and activities that demonstrate the impact of the humanities across disciplines. Our project will expand the NHI curriculum through new course development with embedded undergraduate research and experiential learning opportunities and cultivate the development of citizen scholars, or people who bring a critically informed understanding of the world to their life and work through humanistic practices of teamwork, leadership, creativity, and critical thinking. In short, this project will centralize the role of the humanities at Norwich University and prepare our students for life, work, and citizenship.

University of Dayton (Dayton, OH 45469-0001)
Minnita Daniel-Cox (Project Director: September 2019 to present)
Ju Shen (Co Project Director: March 2020 to present)
Jennifer Speed (Co Project Director: March 2020 to present)

AKB-270197-20
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,992 (approved)
$84,557 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2020 – 6/30/2023

Paul Laurence Dunbar: Life, Works, and Legacy

A three-year interdisciplinary curricular implementation grant focused on the life, works, and legacy of writer Paul Laurence Dunbar.

The University of Dayton and partners seek support from NEH to develop new curriculum and place-based experiential learning opportunities for undergraduate students from all backgrounds around the theme of Paul Laurence Dunbar, the Dayton native and preeminent African American writer. We will develop of a set of linked courses that can explore the breadth of Dunbar’s life, context, works, and influence. These include courses from multiple fields that will incorporate significant humanities subject material, pedagogy, and habits of inquiry, as well as humanities courses that will integrate other disciplines. UD will introduce digital humanities tools and methods of inquiry to students and educators as a means of broadening engagement with the humanities. The project will also develop new experiential learning opportunities that make use of extant, but hard-to-discover Dunbar sources and artifacts, and create connections with the places associated with his life and works.

Doane College (Crete, NE 68333-2426)
Kathleen Hanggi (Project Director: September 2019 to August 2022)
Jared List (Project Director: August 2022 to present)

AKB-270210-20
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2020 – 5/31/2024

Implementing a Certificate in Integrated Humanities

A three-year project to implement a new general education certificate program in integrated humanities for psychology and biology majors.

Doane University proposes a $100K Humanities Connections Implementation Grant to implement a new Certificate in Integrated Humanities Program (CIHP). Faculty from the Departments of English, Biology, and Psychology will lead implementation of the CIHP which will be designed for students of any undergraduate major, but particularly in areas of health and social services. The objective of this proposal is to develop three pathways towards certification within the general education core by the end of the grant period – Opioids & Addiction, Fear in the Present Age, and Medicine in America – that will take a multidisciplinary approach to explore a contemporary issue. Each pathway will include three components: (1) two new and innovative eight-week courses called short courses; (2) two revised sections of complementary introductory courses from the undergraduate core curriculum; and (3) a capstone course designed to synthesize the knowledge, values, and skills acquired within each pathway.

Vanderbilt University (Nashville, TN 37240-0001)
Holly Tucker (Project Director: September 2019 to present)
Steven Arlyn Wernke (Co Project Director: March 2020 to present)
Elizabeth S. Meadows (Co Project Director: March 2020 to present)
Matthew Worsnick (Co Project Director: June 2022 to present)

AKB-270212-20
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,932 (approved)
$99,932 (awarded)

Grant period:
9/1/2020 – 8/31/2023

An Experiential, Place-Based Curriculum for Historic Preservation and Humanities-Centered Land Use

A two-year interdisciplinary curricular project to implement an experiential place-based curriculum in the applied humanities, including historic preservation and human-centered land use.

We propose a two-semester, experiential undergraduate curriculum designed to introduce students to a wide range of careers in applied Humanities. Using Vanderbilt University’s historic Vaughn Home (1875) as a “lab,” students will gain hands-on experience with archival and archeological research, historic reservation, museum curation, human-centered land use and design, digital humanities, and public affairs. This proposal is submitted jointly by faculty in Anthropology, Engineering, Managerial Studies, English, and History in full partnership with administrative staff from the Division of Administration, the Division of Communications, University Archives/Special Collections, the Center for Digital Humanities, and the Center for Teaching at Vanderbilt University.

Albertus Magnus College (New Haven, CT 06511-1224)
Matthew Waggoner (Project Director: October 2018 to present)
Ross Allen Edwards (Co Project Director: March 2019 to present)

AKB-265587-19
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,244 (approved)
$99,244 (awarded)

Grant period:
5/1/2019 – 4/30/2024

An Urban Studies Minor

A three-year curriculum development project to create an urban studies minor program.

To address the challenges facing cities today, benefit students pursuing careers in non-humanities fields, and expand the reach of the humanities throughout its curriculum, Albertus Magnus College proposes a three-year NEH Humanities Connections implementation project to establish a new interdisciplinary minor in urban studies. This project will include (1) collaborative development of three new interdisciplinary courses, (2) revision of two existing courses, (3) creation of experiential learning activities tied to required courses for the minor, and (4) implementation of innovative pedagogical methods such as cross-disciplinary team teaching. By infusing the humanities with other disciplines in an examination of urban life, the minor in urban studies will enhance the curriculum for students pursuing careers in a wide range of fields, particularly those that include the largest number of majors at Albertus: sociology and business.

Southern Illinois University (Carbondale, IL 62901-4302)
Mont Allen (Project Director: October 2018 to present)
Ken Anderson (Co Project Director: March 2019 to present)

AKB-265638-19
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$88,812 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2019 – 5/31/2024

Ancient Practices: An Interdisciplinary Minor

Creation of a new interdisciplinary minor, Ancient Practices.

The proposers, an interdisciplinary team of humanists and STEM faculty, will create a new interdisciplinary minor called Ancient Practices designed to attract and engage STEM and other non-humanities undergraduates. This unique degree opportunity is built around the concept of integrating both humanities and STEM content into studies of the ancient world. The combination of these disciplines allows content dealing with classical and other ancient civilizations to be presented in the context of the core interests of other-than-humanities majors. This has been found to be an effective strategy for attracting these students into classes dealing with content that has been at foundation of studies of the humanities for centuries. This allows facility to engage students that might not otherwise be drawn to these classes and to instill in them the skills and habits of mind associated with humanistic studies.

Susquehanna University (Selinsgrove, PA 17870-1164)
Betsy Verhoeven (Project Director: October 2018 to present)
Nicholas J. Clark (Co Project Director: March 2019 to present)
Emma Fleck (Co Project Director: March 2019 to present)

AKB-265731-19
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$83,820 (approved)
$83,820 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2019 – 5/31/2022

Promoting Civic Discourse in a Polarizing World

A two-year curriculum development project that would create two interdisciplinary courses integrating rhetoric, political science, and marketing.

Susquehanna University proposes to launch "Promoting Civic Discourse in a Polarized World" as part of the National Endowment for the Humanities’ (NEH) Humanities Connections program. This implementation project brings together Professors Betsy Verhoeven (Humanities: Rhetoric and Composition, a subdivision of English), Nicholas Clark (Political Science), and Emma Fleck (Marketing and Communications) to develop a cohort of two linked and team-taught courses enrolling approximately 100 students. Both courses share a project-based lab experience, which will feature student-led projects from both classes, designed to promote civic and respectful discourse to the broader public. These projects and curriculum materials will be disseminated via a public-facing website. In addition, an estimated 50 faculty members from Susquehanna (as well as other local schools) will participate in faculty development workshops that promote the pedagogical model and content of the project.

University of South Florida (Tampa, FL 33620-9951)
Benjamin Scott Young (Project Director: October 2018 to July 2023)
Catherine Wilkins (Co Project Director: April 2019 to July 2023)

AKB-265735-19
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$98,483 (approved)
$88,783 (awarded)

Grant period:
5/1/2019 – 4/30/2022

Medical Humanities in a Global Context

Implementation of a new general education pathway in the Honors College that would integrate the humanities into the institution’s medical and global programs.

The Honors College at the University of South Florida proposes to develop ten new, and seven revised, interdisciplinary courses as part of a new program entitled “Medical Humanities in a Global Context.” These integrated interdisciplinary courses will offer students a pathway through the USF Honors College curriculum and aims to cultivate more critical, holistic, and experiential perspectives on health and human experience.

Misericordia University (Dallas, PA 18612-7752)
Amanda Caleb (Project Director: October 2017 to present)
Thomas Hajkowski (Co Project Director: April 2019 to present)

AKB-260414-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,985 (approved)
$99,985 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2018 – 5/31/2022

Revising a Medical and Health Humanities Degree Program

Revision of a curriculum for a degree program in medical humanities.

Expansion of the Medical and Health Humanities degree program curriculum to create a multidisciplinary program with embedded experiential learning that challenges students to understand how the Humanities inform and shape concepts of health, and to apply their academic knowledge to practice in a meaningful and lasting manner.

Medaille College (Buffalo, NY 14214-2695)
Daniel Kotzin (Project Director: October 2017 to present)

AKB-260415-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[White paper][Grant products]

Totals:
$99,941 (approved)
$99,941 (awarded)

Grant period:
8/27/2018 – 5/31/2022

Applied Ethics in Criminal Justice

The development of curriculum integrating applied ethics study into a criminal justice major.

Criminal justice professionals face serious problems and controversies on a daily basis that require not only subject matter expertise in criminal justice, but also the broad set of skills cultivated by the humanities and ethical philosophy. To address timely societal issues of critical importance and to better prepare the next generation of criminal justice professionals, Medaille College proposes Applied Ethics in Criminal Justice, a three-year implementation project to pilot a model for integrating the humanities discipline of philosophy in deep ways into the social sciences in undergraduate education. This interdisciplinary project involves faculty members from Medaille’s Departments of Social Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies, and it will include creating one new course, revising two existing courses, linking two courses in a learning community, and incorporating experiential learning into students’ coursework.

University of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh, PA 15260-6133)
Nancy Condee (Project Director: October 2017 to present)
Ruth Mostern (Co Project Director: April 2019 to present)

AKB-260426-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[White paper][Grant products]

Totals:
$99,898 (approved)
$99,898 (awarded)

Grant period:
5/1/2018 – 4/30/2021

Water in Central Asia: Tributaries of Change

A sequence of three courses focused on the past, present, and future of water in Central Asia for students in the social sciences, business, engineering, and the humanities.

The University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Russian and East European Studies (REES) and Asian Studies Center (ASC) propose a project to strengthen interdisciplinary connections among Pitt faculty and students across the humanities, social sciences, and pre-professional programs in business and engineering. Led by Dr. Nancy Condee (REES Director/Slavic Languages and Literatures) and Dr. Ruth Mostern (World History Center Director/ASC affiliate), the project faculty team will develop three new undergraduate courses on the theme of “Water in Central Asia.” This course sequence will incorporate high-impact experiential learning activities, including mentored research projects and virtual peer-to-peer exchanges with students at Nazarbayev University in Kazakhstan. The courses will be taught in spring 2019 through spring 2020 and then incorporated into Pitt’s regular curriculum and into two existing student credential programs, as well as a planned new Central Asian Studies Certificate.

SUNY Research Foundation, Binghamton (Binghamton, NY 13902-4400)
Pamela Smart (Project Director: October 2017 to present)
Valerie Imbruce (Co Project Director: April 2018 to present)

AKB-260492-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
7/1/2018 – 6/30/2023

Situating Chemical Elements in the Human World to Innovate Undergraduate Education

Creation of a general education course, three freshman research seminars, and an interactive app that focus on physical material from the multiple perspectives of science and humanities disciplines.

Materials Matter is a collaborative project of colleagues in Classical and Near Eastern Studies, Art and Design, Art History, Physics, Materials Science and Engineering, and Binghamton University’s Undergraduate Research Center, along with partners at the Corning Museum of Glass. We propose to reposition the humanities within the curriculum by teaching emerging research in the humanities to STEM students and, reciprocally, the latest science to humanities students. We will expand upon a pilot course to scale out in two directions: intensive freshmen research seminars and a general education course. Both will focus on materials, like glass or pigments, and explore the relationship between chemical elements and culture using humanities research methodologies alongside quantitative scientific methods, integrated through a coherent visual design and interactive app. A museum exhibition and summer research scholarship will present further opportunities for engagement.

Le Moyne College (Syracuse, NY 13214-1301)
Irene Liu (Project Director: October 2017 to December 2022)

AKB-260502-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$96,852 (awarded)

Grant period:
5/1/2018 – 4/30/2022

Ethics, Values, and Professional Life

The development of a new interdisciplinary minor focusing on ethics, values, and professional life.

This initiative, Ethics, Values and Professional Life (EVPL), aims to foster collaboration between philosophy and pre-professional departments to support the coordination and development of curricular and co-curricular ethics programming at Le Moyne College. The aim of this grant is to establish a new philosophy minor in professional ethics. Its goal is to help students engage in questions of personal values, ultimate meaning, vocation, and professional ethics. Courses will address normative ethics, applied ethics, moral psychology and social justice as they appear in real life. EVPL will be developed and executed by a team from all three schools of the College to further integrate the humanities across campus and will be integrated in our Manresa vocational program, providing opportunities to use the rigorous modes of thinking found in philosophy in concrete, relevant ways.

FIT (New York, NY 10001-5992)
Daniel Levinson Wilk (Project Director: October 2017 to present)
Kyunghee Pyun (Co Project Director: March 2018 to present)

AKB-260507-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$100,000 (approved)
$100,000 (awarded)

Grant period:
9/1/2018 – 8/31/2021

Teaching Business and Labor History to Art and Design Students

The development of interdisciplinary curriculum integrating business and labor history into professional art and design study.

Through a partnership among History faculty, and Art and Design faculty, "Teaching Business and Labor History to Art and Design Students" will develop curricula intended to educate students about the business and labor history of the art and design professions. Content will explore how this history impacts present-day industry, careers and professional decision-making. Key project elements will include Art-and-Design faculty professional development conducted by History professors; collaborative curricular development; two conferences; and the creation of a resource website. The initiative addresses an expressed need from Art-and-Design faculty and students for a more complete understanding of the historical influences that have shaped art- and design-business management, the creative process, technology and production. The initiative will help ensure that Art and Design students are well-equipped for the professional demands of the 21st Century.

University of Massachusetts, Boston (Boston, MA 02125-3300)
Rajini Srikanth (Project Director: October 2017 to present)

AKB-260531-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

[Grant products]

Totals:
$99,774 (approved)
$99,774 (awarded)

Grant period:
6/1/2018 – 12/31/2023

Living with the Urban Ocean

A three-course sequence in environmental humanities focused on Boston Harbor and surrounding areas.

"Living with the Urban Ocean: Inquiring, Imagining, Embracing" brings together the humanities and environmental sciences with a focus on Boston Harbor, the Boston Harbor Islands, and the surrounding coastal communities that many of our students call home. The three-course cluster, the core of an Environmental Humanities minor, incorporates humanities approaches and experiential learning, with the goal of increasing students' appreciation for and engagement with the harbor ecosystem, and awareness of the role of humanities in addressing environmental issues. Courses, co-taught by humanities and environmental science faculty, will begin with a survey that considers the relationship between humans and nature through diverse cultural and historical lenses; continue with a focus on the history, sociocultural context, and environmental significance of Boston Harbor and its islands; and end with a capstone driven by engagement with environmental challenges faced by coastal communities.

Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ 85281-3670)
Mark Von Hagen (Project Director: October 2017 to September 2019)
Nancy L. Dallett (Project Director: September 2019 to February 2020)
Manuel Aviles Santiago (Project Director: February 2020 to present)
Nancy L. Dallett (Co Project Director: April 2018 to September 2019)

AKB-260545-18
Humanities Connections Implementation
Education Programs

Totals:
$99,843 (approved)
$99,843 (awarded)

Grant period:
5/1/2018 – 10/31/2022

Veterans, Society, and Service

An undergraduate certificate in the study of Veterans, Society, and Service.

Arizona State University will offer an inaugural certificate in the study of Veterans, Society, and Service. Housed in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the undergraduate certificate will focus on Veterans as part of and reflections of society, but also apart from society during their service and transition back to civilian life; it will contribute to both studying and diminishing the gap between military and civilian cultures; finally, the certificate will explore what civilian society and Veterans can learn from one another about the nature of national service. This innovative program is based on socially and academically responsible interdisciplinary scholarship combining history, literature, ethics, psychology, sociology, and understanding the arts. The implementation grant will position ASU to go beyond the “Veteran Friendly” moniker at universities to seed further civilian-military engagement and build academic weight to the study of Veterans in an international context.