Wednesday, May 30, 2012

USCB’s Continuing Education Department offers Course in "Survival Spanish"

Bluffton, SC –The University of South Carolina Beaufort’s Continuing Education department is offering a course in "Survival Spanish." Classes will be held June 11, 18, 25, July 2, and 9 on the Hilton Head Gateway campus located off Hwy 278 in Bluffton.



This 5 session course is a non-academic, non-grammar based class designed for people who want to learn practical, common phrases and questions. No prior knowledge of Spanish is required.  



Tuition is $130 and includes the course manual and two accompanying CD’s. 



To register for this course, please call Marilyn Arseneau at 208-8237 or email arseneau@uscb.edu before June 4.  Space is limited.  Payment can be made using credit card or check.


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

South Carolina Congressman Tim Scott visits USCB

Congressman Tim Scott and USCB graduate Bonnie Zolenas

Bluffton, SC –The University of South Carolina Beaufort welcomed South Carolina Congressman Tim Scott to the Hilton Head Gateway campus.  Congressman Scott expressed his support of USCB's role in the community as the only baccalaureate degree university in the four countny region. Job creation based on an educated workforce was the focus of his visit. 

Congressman Scott met with USCB graduate Bonnie Zolenas who came to USCB from Maryland and has permanently relocated to the Lowcountry.  He was given a commemorative t-shirt supporting the USCB Sand Shark baseball team who is currently playing in the NAIA College World Series in Lewiston, ID. 

Congressman Scott represents District 1 which will include Beaufort County effective November 2012. 

Drafted by Stefny Ankney, USCB Social Media Intern.                   

About Tim Scott

Prior to his election to Congress, Tim Scott was a successful small business owner and entrepreneur. Tim was elected to the SC House of Representatives in 2008 and was elected Chairman of the Freshman Caucus. Before serving in the State House, Tim served for 13 years on Charleston County Council. Tim graduated from Charleston Southern University in 1988, B.S. in Political Science, and was awarded the Distinguished Service Award and Alumnus of the Year award by CSU. His past Board Memberships include: CSU Board of Visitors, South Carolinians for Healthy Family Formation, Midland Park Ministries, The College of Charleston Business School Board of Governors, Roper St. Francis Hospital Foundation, Board of Trustees for Seacoast Church and Palmetto Family Council (a SC affiliate of Focus on the Family).


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Denita Badger at University of South Carolina Beaufort Is Named Newman Civic Fellow by Campus Compact


Campus Compact has honored 162 students from 32 states as 2012 Newman Civic Fellows. Among the honorees is Denita Badger of University of South Carolina Beaufort. The Newman Civic Fellows Awards recognize inspiring college student leaders who have worked to find solutions for challenges facing their communities.

Boston, MA - Campus Compact’s member college and university presidents from across the country have nominated 162 college student leaders for the 2012 class of Newman Civic Fellows. These students are demonstrating their personal commitment to creating lasting change for the better in their communities. Through service, community-based research, and through advocacy, the 2012 class of Newman Civic Fellows are making the most of their college experiences to better understand themselves and the root causes of some of the most pressing social issues that challenge us all.  

Denita Badger at University of South Carolina in Beaufort demonstrates the type of civic engagement that sets an example for others, shining a positive light in a time when negativity has dominated much national conversation. Denita Badger is a Human Services major at the University of South Carolina Beaufort.  By the end of this spring semester, Denita will have competed four Human Service internships  of over 120 hours each. She served two internships at the United Way of the Lowcountry. Another was coordinating a school readiness project, reading to pre-school students at Penn Center and coordinating early literacy services to 200 children. Her legacy service project is revising and updating the Human Services Directory for our region. Her commitment to civic engagement will continue after graduation when she joins the U.S. Air Force.

As a Newman Civic Fellow, Badger will join a network of Fellows around the country. Together — sharing ideas and tools through online networking — the Fellows will leverage an even greater capacity for service and change, and continue to set examples for their classmates and others. 

“These students represent the next generation of public problem solvers and civic leaders. They serve as national examples of the role that higher education can—and does—play in building a better world,” notes Campus Compact Board Chair James B. Dworkin, chancellor at Purdue University North Central.  

Through service-learning courses and other opportunities for community engagement, colleges are developing students’ public problem-solving skills, such as the ability to analyze community needs, the willingness to participate in public processes and debate, the commitment to raise awareness about challenges, and the ability to inspire others to become part of solutions.


“Dr. Frank Newman, a founder of Campus Compact, had a tremendous impact on American education and its role in the development of citizens who are eager and prepared to make a difference,” explains Campus Compact President Maureen Curley. “He dedicated his life to creating systemic change through education reform and this new group of Newman Civic Fellows would have inspired him. They are reflections and affirmations of his life’s work.”

Campus Compact is a national coalition of almost 1,200 college and university presidents—representing some 6 million+ students—who are committed to fulfilling the civic purposes of higher education, that is, to improve community life and to educate students for civic and social responsibility. For more information about the organization and the award, visit www.compact.org

Monday, May 21, 2012

USCB Faculty honored with Carolina Trustee Professorship Award


Beaufort/Bluffton, SC – For more than a decade, numerous University of South Carolina Beaufort faculty members have been honored with the Carolina Trustee Professorship award.  This year’s recipient is Babet Villena-Alvarez, Ph.D.



With a background in French and Spanish literature, Alvarez researches Language for Special/Specific Purposes (LSP).  She is the Chair of the Humanities and Fine Arts department and serves on 8 councils/committees on campus, in the community, and in her profession.  According to Alvarez, “Of the many committees I have chaired in the past, the most challenging and equally gratifying was when I was invited to lead the internal giving campaign for the USCB Family Fund last year. Our committee was able to encourage 62% more faculty and staff to participate as compared to the previous year.” 



Faculty at all 7 baccalaureate and regional campuses of the USC system are eligible for the Carolina Trustee Professorship Award.  In addition to Alvarez, the following USCB faculty have been recognized as Carolina Trustee Professors: Gordon Haist (2011), Carl Eby (2009), Lynn Mulkey (2004), and Ronald Harshbarger (2001).



Alvarez has been at USCB since 1994 and has no plans of going elsewhere.  “I am blessed to have a wonderful job in superb USCB campuses nestled among the South Carolina Sea Islands.” 



Tuesday, April 10, 2012

USCB student researchers Rebecca Rawson and Steven Vega work on deploying light traps for a study on correlating fish sound production during spawning and egg release in the May River. 

USCB to Present Student Research & Scholarship Day 

April 16, 2012

Bluffton, SC – Nearly 40 students attending The University of South Carolina Beaufort will be showcasing their quantitative and qualitative research projects to the public on April 16th in the Hargray building on USCB’s Hilton Head Gateway campus.

The students have worked closely with their faculty advisors on their chosen projects.    According to Joely Tweel, Psychology student, “Professors at USCB really care about your education.  I previously attended the University of Colorado where I was just a number.  At USCB, I have professors who know me, support my research endeavors, and even attend my psychology club meetings. Their dedication is second to none.”

Student research projects to be presented cover a vast array of topics, from literary analysis of William Shakespeare, Spanish literature, historical research about the Transcontinental Railroad, social psychological research regarding eyewitness accounts, and scientific research relating to the coastal ecology of our local Lowcountry water ways.

Student researcher Jamie Fletcher describes her experience throughout the process of research by stating that “my project began as an independent study and my advisor [Benjamin Nelson, Ph.D] helped me throughout my time at USCB to think about how language affects culture and vice versa.” Students participate in this event for the purpose of gaining further input from the public.  “It will benefit me because it will allow me to gain feedback about this topic from an American, English speaking point of view rather from a Spanish one” explains Fletcher.

John Palmour, an award winning researcher in the Carolinas, will be delivering the keynote address at 3:30pm. During his career, Palmour has authored and/or co-authored more than 300 publications and is a co-inventor on 47 U.S. patents and 158 corresponding foreign patents. He was awarded the Distinguished Engineering Alumnus Award by the College of Engineering at North Carolina State University in 2009.  Palmour is a founder of Cree, Inc., which was responsible for the specialized LED lighting for the Beijing Olympic Games.

All Research and Scholarship day activities are open to the general public and free of charge. For more information, please visit www.uscb.edu under University Events.
Keynote Speaker, John Palmour, Ph.D,

Schedule of Events:

8:30 – 10:00 am Literary Criticism Oral Presentations: Session 1 - Shakespeare
Hargray 156

10:15 – 11:45 am Literary Criticism Oral Presentations: Session 2 - The World
Hargray 156

12 pm Poster Presentations, Hargray Lobby

1:30 – 3:00 pm Literary Criticism Oral Presentations: Session 3 - 19th and 20th Century British
Hargray 156

1:30 – 3:30 pm Students Present at Posters for Questions
Hargray Lobby

3:30 – 4:30 pm Keynote Speaker: Dr. John Palmour
Hargray 156


This release has be drafted by Stefny Ankney, Social Media Intern.  


MEDIA CONTACT:  
Candace Brasseur
USCB Public Information Director
843-208-8030 
brasse@uscb.edu
 

Thursday, February 23, 2012

USCB‘s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute hosts rescued sea captain Richard Phillips

Hilton Head Island, SC –The University of South Carolina Beaufort’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute welcomes nationally renowned speaker, Sea Captain Richard Phillips, to Hilton Head Island. Captain Phillips will recount his 2009 Somalia pirate hostage experience and subsequent rescue by U.S. Navy SEALS. 

This event will take place at Hilton Head High School’s Visual Performing Arts Center on Saturday, March 3 from 10:00am to 11:30am.

Captain Phillips will be available to sign his novel, A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea.  Columbia Pictures has purchased the movie rights, with Tom Hanks slated to play the lead.

Tickets are $25. To purchase tickets in advance please call the OLLI office at 843-208-8247.  If space is still available, tickets can be purchased at the door the morning of the event.  All proceeds of ticket sales will go to the OLLI program at USCB.
 
Drafted by Stefny Ankney, USCB Social Media Intern
     

About OLLI

The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) is a university-affiliated, not-for-credit, program that has been in existence in the Lowcountry for over 20 years, currently serving more than 1,500 members. For more information, visit us as www.uscb.edu or call the OLLI offices at 843-208-8247 

Media Contact:
Andréa Sisino, Director
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
University of South Carolina Beaufort
843-208-8249, Sisino@uscb.edu

USCB students provide invaluable research to local event organizers






Hilton Head & Beaufort, SC- When people think of the Hilton Head Island region, beach going and vacations typically come to mind. But Hospitality Management students at the University of South Carolina Beaufort (USCB) know there is a lot more than sunbathing taking place. 

Lead by Hospitality Management Professor John Salazar, USCB student researchers have become an integral part of all major tourism events in the area.  Salazar and his research team can be found polling hundreds of out-of-town visitors and event participants, entering substantive data into their tablet computers, amongst the festivities. Student Ellen Jones says, “Conducting these surveys at local festivals has given me the real life experience of how information/data is collected, analyzed, and interpreted to provide solutions to the problems that event organizers encounter. To combine the classroom sessions with the real world training is the ultimate learning experience.”

The community impact is further felt after the event concludes when students present their findings to event organizers.  According to the Hilton Head Island Motoring Festival and Concours d’ Elegance President, Carolyn Vanagel, “ Dr. Salazar and  his student team have been critical to the success of our event.  We use their results to market our event to sponsors.  And without fail, these prospective sponsors note that no one else representing similar events has the same level of data demonstrating performance.  We are so fortunate to have this instrumental data, which drives the financial success of our event, because of Dr. Salazar.”

Certainly, USCB students gain market research and event management experience by working with Salazar.  However, their findings hold even greater significance throughout the region.  Based on their findings, community leaders can actually see which events have the biggest return on investment (ROI) of the use of Hilton Head Island accommodations taxes. The work has been cited by the Hilton Head Island Accommodations Tax Committee as extremely valuable whereas the committee has recommended to the elected officials to fund an ongoing festival and event ROI analysis program through collaborating with Salazar and the USCB Hospitality Management students.

As a result, this collaborative research between Salazar’s students and county-wide events has been spreading quickly, with event managers from Houston, Greenville, and North Carolina contacting Salazar about replicating his efforts in their regions.  “It’s exciting to see student research be applied to real world concerns and that various hospitality and tourism organizations recognize the value of the work. That is something I have always wanted to achieve for the students as university professor.”

Various events USCB Hospitality Management students provide research for:
·         The RBC Heritage Golf Tournament
·         Hilton Head Island Motoring Festival and Concours d’ Elegance
·         Hilton Head Island Wine Festival
·         Taste of Beaufort Shrimp Festival
·         Hilton Head Island Recreation Center Festivals
·         Hilton Head Island Italian Festival
·         MCAS Air Show
·         Hilton Head Island Public Art Exposition


MEDIA CONTACT:                                                                                                              
Candace Brasseur
USCB Public Information Director
843-208-8030 
brasse@uscb.edu

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Internationally acclaimed Brooklyn Rider Quartet to perform at USCB Festival Series


Beaufort, SC-  University of South Carolina Beaufort welcomes the internationally acclaimed Brooklyn Rider Quartet for their first performance in Beaufort on Feb 19. The quartet will join artistic director and cellist Edward Arron in performing music by Purcell, Boccherini, Beethoven, and Sollima, to name a few.

The USCB Center for the Arts on 801 Carteret Street in Beaufort will open at 4pm, and the quartet will start performing at 5pm.  Tickets start at $40 and can be purchased at the door the day of the event, or in advance by calling 843-208-8246. For more information, please see www.uscb.edu/festivalseries.

About the Brooklyn Rider Quartet

The Brooklyn Rider Quartet is comprised of Johnny Gandelsman-violin, Colin Jacobsen-violin, Nicholas Cords-viola, and Eric Jacobsen-cello. They combine a wildly eclectic repertoire with a gripping performance style that is attracting legions of fans and drawing critical acclaim from classical, world and rock critics. NPR credits Brooklyn Rider with “recreating the 300-year-old form of string quartet as a vital and creative 21st-century ensemble." The musicians play in concert halls and clubs, in venues as varied as Joe's Pub in New York City, the San Francisco Jazz Festival, Todai-ji Temple in Japan, the Library of Congress and the South By Southwest Festival. Through creative programming and global collaborations, Brooklyn Rider illuminates music for its audiences in ways that are “stunningly imaginative” (Lucid Culture).

MEDIA CONTACT:                                                                                                              
Candace Brasseur
USCB Public Information Director
843-208-8030 
brasse@uscb.edu


Monday, January 30, 2012

USCB Colony Heads to New Orleans

It was a great night, January 23rd 2012, at Belfair Plantation Clubhouse where 25 USCB students welcomed local club managers and friends to the first annual Fundraising Wine Dinner. The students, led by Othel Plowden, colony president, prepared a four-course plated wine-paired dinner in order to raise money to travel to New Orleans for National Conference. “The students have worked tirelessly to make this a great evening,” quipped faculty advisor, Dr. Sean Barth.

The event was great indeed. The students were able to get a majority of local private residential clubs involved. In addition, there were a couple of vendors present and also some support from the university and friends. All in all the students served the dinner to 85 guests and rose close to $6000. What is more surprising is how generous all the donors were. From US Foods and Belfair, to Sea Pines Country Club, Crew Wineries, and Beringer, the students were able to keep their costs below $500 in order to keep the majority of the money for their travel.  “I am very excited for the students,” says Barth, “they worked so hard to make this evening very special. Othel made this night special. He really took ahold of and ran with the idea. He came up with the menu and then made it come to life, and I am very proud of his accomplishments.” 

The money raised will allow the student’s to attend National Conference again this year. “Without the support of the local club community, experiences like this would not be possible for most of our students,” said Barth. “We just do not have the resources at this time, but the students were dedicated and found a way to make it happen.” Please view the video below to see how the night went. 



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Pulitzer Prize Nominee to host workshop series on Photoshop at USCB



February 24, March 30 & April 20


Beaufort, SC –Award winning digital photographer, Phil Dunn will be presenting a three part series on Photoshop.  All workshops in this series will be hosted on Saturdays from 9am until 4pm on the Historic Beaufort campus, in room #111 in the Sandstone building. 

The series begins on February 24th with An Introduction to Photoshop CS5:  Building a Workflow in Camera Raw, enabling participants to master the seven steps necessary to optimize the quality of every image.  In this session, students will become accomplished with Adobe’s Camera Raw interface.

The second workshop in this series, Mastering Tools, Layers, Selections and Curves in CS5, will be held on Mar 30th.  This session will focus on acquiring the skills to use basic and advanced features in Adobe Photoshop, and how to manipulate images after optimization.

The final workshop, High Dynamic Range Photography, is scheduled for Apr 20th.  The focus of this session will be extending your camera’s ability to respond to a wider range of light.  Students will practice using Photoshop to stimulate HDR by double processing images and delve into true HDR imagery by combining a range of exposures into one HDR image.

Palmetto Frieze by Phil Dunn
“Moderately priced digital cameras make it possible for individuals to document the world around them in exciting ways,” explains Dunn.  “The challenge is optimizing the image before and after it’s been captured. This series will teach pre- and post-capture workflow that will allow them to realize their photographic vision.”

In order to participate in this workshop series, participants must possess a digital camera with at least a 10-megapixel sensor.  Cost to attend these workshops is $275 for the entire series or $100 per session.

To register, please contact Erica Breton with USCB Continuing Education at 843-521-4112 or bretone@uscb.edu.  For more information about Phil Dunn or to view his digital artwork please visit, www.phildunnart.com.
  
 Drafted by Stefny Ankney, USCB Social Media Intern


Brella by Phil Dunn
About Phil Dunn

Chicago born and raised, Phillip C. Dunn received his bachelor of fine arts degree from the University of Illinois in Urbana, studied photography and design at the Institute of Design, Illinois Institute of Technology, and received his doctorate in art education from Ball State University. During his career, Dr. Dunn has taught art at all grade levels from kindergarten through graduate school, and recently retired as chair and distinguished professor of art at the University of South Carolina Art.

Some of his accomplishments and awards include being named: the Thomas A. Hatfield Life Time Achievment in Art Education Award Winner, Louise Fry Scudder Professor of Art, Mac Arthur Goodwin Award winner for excellence in Art Education, National Art Educator of the Year, Senior Program Officer of the Getty Institute for Educators on the Visual Arts in Los Angeles, both South Carolina and Southeastern Regional Art Educator of the Year, and Mary J. Rouse Award winner as the nation's outstanding young art educator. The author of numerous books and articles, his publications include the Pulitzer‑nominated, Lillian Smith Book Award winner, A True Likeness: The Black South of Richard Samuel Roberts, 1920‑1936, Promoting School Art: A Practical Approach, and Creating Curriculum in Art.

At USC, Phil chaired the Department of Art. The Department, comprised of four areas: Art Education, Art History, Media Arts and Studio Art boasted over 800 undergraduate and graduate majors. As a member of the faculty he taught a variety of offerings including photography and digitally based courses that dealt with multidisciplinary approaches to curriculum construction, the educational uses of interactive hypermedia, program administration and management, and teaching methodologies for art educators. Professor Dunn’s summer technology workshops for art teachers garnered over $700,000 in outside funding and trained over 400 South Carolina art teachers in how to incorporate technology into public school art programs.

As his university career as an administrator and art education scholar neared its end, Dr. Dunn returned to his calling as a landscape photographer. During the past several years his landscapes and digital photomontages have been exhibited in numerous group and one-person shows including: Montage, Six Decades of Leadership, Mirror Image, and a large (forty piece) one-person show entitled Images from the Digital Domain at the LaGrange Art Museum. He has also completed major commissions for the University of South Carolina, the McCausland Brain Imaging Center, the USC Technology Incubator, and SCANA.

Most recently, Dr. Dunn served as artist in residence at the University of South Carolina – Beaufort.  He is now working on a new body of work based on the Carolina low country, consulting with art faculty, administration, staff and other educational stakeholders on growing USCB’s studio art program, and offering digital photography workshops to South Carolina K-12 art teachers and the public at large.

MEDIA CONTACT:                                                                                                  
Candace Brasseur
USCB Public Information Director
843-208-8030