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Presenters & Abstracts: College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
Foundation and Development of Satellite Case Manager Position at Transitional Residential Treatment Facilities
- Dustin HaywoodSocial WorkGraduate Student
A foundation was needed for the Satellite Case Manager position at Transitional Residential Treatment Facilities. To address the issue, an employee guidebook was created to define the position and act as a training tool for new employees. Institutional knowledge, experience, and current literature guided the development of a Satellite Case Manager handbook that acts as a foundation for the position. An executive summary was also completed recommending next steps to increase collaboration with stakeholders , clearly define roles of Satellite Case Manager, and to expand the scope of the Satellite Case Manager to better meet the needs of clients and other stakeholders.
Freedom of Shirtspression
- Camille DionisioCommunicationUndergraduate Student
- Adam HayesCommunicationUndergraduate Student
- DaMon ThomasCommunicationUndergraduate Student
For our project, we each individually chose a Supreme Court case. We chose a specific case, turned it into a t-shirt design, and then brought it to life with our own twist to create a contemporary representation. Our research in turn, has given us our own freedom to express what we believe about certain issues. Adam looked at Cohen vs California, Camille looked at Tinker vs. Des Moines and DaMon looked at Morse vs Fredrick. We combined our ideas and experiences dealing with Freedom of Expression to summarize what we learned in the class and applied them to our t-shirts and current issues. "Don't Stress, Freely Express." Website: http://ash3852.wixsite.com/shirtspression
Freedom of Speech
Barbara Singleton, Sociology Undergraduate Student
College of Arts, Humanities & Social SciencesThis case research project explains the relevance of Bond v. Floyd in relation to senators and the Freedom of speech doctrine.
From Chaos to Collection: The Costco-Price Collection
- Jacqueline FarringtonGeography & AnthropologyUndergraduate Student
The Costco-Price Collection is an assortment of historic artifacts excavated in 1994 from the current Costco site and former city dump in Eureka, California. A portion (619 artifacts) was kept as a teaching collection in the Archaeology Research Laboratory at Humboldt State University, and has been used to educate students and encourage interest in California archaeology. This presentation will showcase the rehabilitation of this collection from its original inherited state in 2013 to its current incarnation as a useful and coherent resource through the three-year timeline.
From One Way to Our Ways: Instilling Indigenous Values in the Western Education System
- Naomi Rose DohertyAnthropologyUndergraduate Student
Data show that Indigenous students are underperforming academically in schools because Western based education is failing to adapt multicultural pedagogies into the curriculum. To explore this issue, I examined peer-reviewed literature and conducted interviews from local teachers and experts in the field of secondary education. Indigenous concepts of community based building exercises, oral and social communication, as well as storytelling challenged Western discipline based learning methods focused on isolated learning and individual success. Understanding why Western education is flawed gives insight to immediate and future goals of improving education as a multicultural based discipline.
From Plants to Portola: Geovisualization of the Pre-Colonial California Coast, Derived from Paleobotanical Data and Spanish Journals
- Ryan RegerGeographyUndergraduate Student
- Andrew GibbsGeographyUndergraduate Student
- Dr. Chelsea TealeGeographyFaculty
- Nicholas PerdueGeographyFaculty
This Geovisualization takes a broad look at the California Coast in a precolonial context including native plants, and land management practices used by the Ohlone tribe, in part by referencing Spanish journals from the Portola expedition, and in part by referencing existing Paleobotanical data. The location of primary interest is present day Pillar Point, just north of Half Moon Bay, from which Doctor Teale has previously collected Paleo-environmental data.
From Plants to Portola: Geovisualization of the Pre-Colonial California Coast, Derived from Paleobotanical Data and Spanish Journals
- Andrew GibbsGeographyUndergraduate Student
- Ryan RegerGeographyUndergraduate Student
- Chelsea TealeGeographyFaculty
- Nicholas PerdueGeographyFaculty
From Plants to Portola: Geovisualization of the Pre-Colonial California Coast, Derived from Paleobotanical Data and Spanish Journals
Garden Collaborative: Addressing Food Insecurity
- Sam WicksEnvironmental StudiesUndergraduate Student
My service learning project addresses the issue of food insecurity in Arcata. Through the benefits of community gardens, greater socio-economic development can be achieved. At Open Door Health and Wellness Garden, I am maintaining and managing the beds in the garden for spring harvest, for the people of Arcata, so they can have easier access to organically grown healthier foods. I am interested in support networks of community gardeners as resources to sustain locally grown organic food and the health benefits that community gardens offer.
Gardening for Change
- Ciera Townsley-McCormickEnvironmental StudiesUndergraduate Student
- Madi WhaleyEnvironmental StudiesUndergraduate Student
In Spring Semester 2017, we dove into a service learning project with Pacific Union School. We are contributing to the garden coordinator’s vision for an interdisciplinary, garden-based learning program that incorporates aspects of social and environmental justice. We have worked to create a reciprocal learning environment, such as described by authors in the Environmental Studies curriculum. We believe this is one step toward addressing the inequalities, environmental degradation, and corruption inherent in the global industrial food system. These injustices span issues such as race, class, gender, health, and the environment, which we have been exposed to throughout our journey at HSU.
Gender, Sexuality and Crime in the Queer Life Course
- Meredith WilliamsSociologyFaculty
- Joice ChangPoliticsFaculty
- Isaac TorresSociologyGraduate Student
- Rachel DeckardSociologyUndergraduate Student
- Jennifer GarciaSociologyUndergraduate Student
- Alexandria KoontzSociologyUndergraduate Student
- Emily PolicarpoSociologyUndergraduate Student
- Cesar RamirezSociologyUndergraduate Student
- Ashley WarrSociologyUndergraduate Student
In this study, we look at the offending of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) individuals over their life course. Growing research on criminal offenses finds LGB individuals offend more often than heterosexual individuals, due to different experiences within social institutions like family and school, but very little criminological research that includes transgender or gender non-conforming individuals as offenders. We aim to gather information about LGBTQ individuals’ experiences in social institutions, across the stages of their life course, to illuminate experiences that act as turning points in the queer life course toward and/or away from involvement in crime.