Dean Margaret Marsh and students at past poster session
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Rutgers-Camden
Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice
Spring 2007 Newsletter |
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Criminal Justice Student Organization Assists Camden Families
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The Criminal Justice Organization (CJO) has been having a busy year of speakers and drives to assist Camden families and organizations. A holiday food drive netted over 800 food items and almost $700 in cash. A more recent drive has assisted Dooley and Hogan Houses in Camden. Click here for further details and pictures.
Current officers of the CJO are: Cortney Lawrence (President), Kelly Sullivan (Vice-President), Sylvia Sherritze (Secretary), Kimberly Franqui (Treasurer) and George Wiesner (GAO representative). Prof. Jon'a Meyer is the faculty advisor. |
Further information about the CJO, which welcomes new members, is available at the CJO website, where a schedule of upcoming meetings and events may also be found.
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Fall 2007 Semester Pre-Registration
Starts April 1st
Read this before you register!
Pre-Registration
for the Fall 2007 Semester begins at 10:00 p.m. on April 1st. All
students are strongly encouraged to see their departmental advisor
in planning their schedule. Pre-Registration
Reminders:
All Sociology and CJ majors who have not yet taken Methods and Techniques
of Social Research (920:301) should register for one of the two sessions of the course offered in the fall. This course is a prerequisite for a number of upper-level
courses, and knowledge of MicroCase and the basics of data
analysis are increasingly expected in all upper-level courses. Note: the methods course also fulfills the second math
requirement in the CCAS curriculum.
Because Dr. Wood will be on research leave for the 2007-8 academic year, Sociological Theory
is being taught in the fall by Prof. McCarty in the evening. Students
expecting to graduate in May 2008 who have not yet taken Sociological Theory should be sure to take the course in the fall, since it will not be offered in the spring.
Criminal Justice students who will be graduating in May 2008 and have not yet taken Theories of Crime and Delinquency (920:313) MUST take the course in the fall semester. Dr. Meyer will be on leave in the spring and so the course will only be offered in the fall.
Dr. Goertzel's fall 2007 Communication class (920.341) counts
both as a sociology elective and as a "writing intensive"
course in the college curriculum.
Selected
Urban Studies courses can count as one elective in the sociology
major. Check
the sociology
major webpage for details.
Many of your questions about advising may be answered by consulting our department's Sociology
Advising Page and our Criminal
Justice Advising Page.
Newly-offered
Fall 2007 course: Globalization and the Media (920:347) is a new special topics course that will explore the role of the media (television, film, print media including Japanese manga, etc.) in processes of globalization and cultural change around the world. It will be taught by Rebecca Carlson, who is a Ph.D. student in anthropology at Temple University who holds both a M.A. in Visual Anthropology and a M.F.A. in Film and Media Arts. An accomplished filmmaker and web designer as well, her website provides interesting examples of her merger of anthropology and new media. The course will meet TuTh 3:00-4:20.
Newly-offered
Summer Session courses include Introduction to GIS Mapping and Analysis for Public Safety (second session) and Introduction to Forensics (third session). Prof. Michelle Meloy's popular Social Justice in film special topics course, introduced last summer, will again be offered as well (first session). See the online summer catalog for a full listing for anthropology, criminal justice, and sociology.
New Major Advising System In Effect: Since January, a new departmental advising system has been in effect. Both Criminal Justice and Sociology majors are now assigned an individual advisor. If you don't know who your advisor is, check the online list of advising assignments (excel file). If you don't find your name there, see department secretary Sherry Pisacano in the departmental office to get one assigned. Because they will be on leave, Profs. Wood's and Caputo's advisees will be reassigned to other faculty advisors in the fall.
Quick
Access to Course Information:
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Ninth-Annual Poster Session on Thursday, April 26th
Save the date!

The
ninth-annual Undergraduate Research Poster Session, co-sponsored
by the Department of Psychology and the Department of Sociology,
Anthropology and Criminal Justice, will be held on Thursday,
April 26th, between 12:30 and 1:20 p.m in the Multipurpose Room
of the Campus Center. A light lunch will be provided. All students and
other interested persons are invited.Rutgers-Camden
undergraduates who have carried out research in psychology, sociology,
anthropology or criminal justice, either as part of a course,
as an independent study, or on their own are invited to participate
in this event as a presenter. Presentations should be made on
free-standing poster boards and should provide a visual overview
of the research project, including a statement of the research
question and method employed to answer it, and summaries of data
and of research findings. Useful guidance for creating a poster presentation may be found at http://www.ncsu.edu/project/posters. Students planning to make a poster presentation (which looks great on your resume) should sign up with the title of your presentation at the poster session website.
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Kristin Curtis
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Masterton Awardees Announced
Congratulations to Kristin
Curtis and Linda Anderson, who have been chosen to receive the 2007 Masterton Awards in Criminal Justice and Sociology respectively. The awards, which honor the first chair of the department, George Masterton, are given each year to high GPA students "for academic achievement, significant contributions to the University and larger communities, and intellectual promise." The awards will be formally given at the Honors Convocation on May 8th.
Kristin
Curtis is a double major in Criminal Justice
and Sociology who has maintained a 3.9 GPA and been on
the Dean's List every semester. She has
worked as a research assistant for Professors Bluebond-Langner
and Meloy, and as a teaching assistant for Prof. Siegel.
She will be entering a graduate program in criminology in
the fall. Linda
Anderson is
a Sociology major with a 4.0 average who has also been on the
Dean's List every semester. She is also enrolled in the
Teacher Preparation Program and will be doing her student
teaching this fall at the C.B. Lamb Elementary School in Wrightstown.
In her previous life, she earned an Associate's Degree
in Horticultural Technology and worked in the nursery
and greenhouse industry.
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Linda Anderson |
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African American Culture Returns to Warmdaddys
Red/Black Class Travels to Museum of the American Indian
Students
of Prof. Katrina Hazzard-Donald have been experiencing what
they study. For the third year, her African American Culture
class in the fall spent an exciting evening at the blues
club, Warmdaddys,
at its new location in on South Columbus Blvd. in Philadelphia. Tony Lynn Washington was the featured guest performer. Dr. Hazzard-Donald observed: "I could observe students come to life when they were able to directly experience what they had been reading about."
In April, her special topics class, The Red and the Black:
American Indians and African Americans in the North American
Enviornment will be visiting the National
Museum of the American Indian in Washington DC--a first
for the campus. Funding from the African American Studies program,
the Dean's and Provost's offices, and the department, made
these unique and valuable experiences possible.
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The Department's Non-Virtual Home

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Departmental Website Offers Unique Features
To Help Students Do Well
If
you're not yet familiar with it, we recommend exploring our
website, which provides a broad array of resources to assist
you in finding the information you need and in doing well in
your courses. As the illustration below shows, the website is
divided into two sections, the departmental homepage and the
web-enhanced curriculum, each with its own set of resource links.
Check it out! There are resources to help you do
well in your courses!
| Departmental Homepage
Online Syllabi & Course Web sites
Masters Program in Criminal Justice
Current Newsletter
Faculty
Major Requirements
Minor Requirements
Course Schedule
Departmental Mailing List
Masterton Award
Advising FAQs
Poster Session Album
Faculty Resources |
Web-Enhanced
Curriculum Homepage
Online Syllabi & Course Web sites
Masters Program in Criminal Justice
Current Newsletter
Plagiarism Policy and Guidelines
Citation Guidelines
Table and Graph Format
Library Resources Online
MicroCase Resources
Online Research Tutorials and Videos
Virtual Tours
Recommended Web sites
Writing in the Discipline
Student Research Opportunities
Streaming Audio and Video Project
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You
can learn more about our web-enhanced curriculum in the online
journal, Innovate,
which included an article about our department in its first
issue by Prof. Wood, entitled "Scaling Up: From Web-Enhanced Courses to a Web-Enhanced
Curriculum." To access it, you must
register for free at the Innovate site (just unclick the box
about promotions if you don't want to receive them). It's a
good way to learn about how the department is using technology
to enhance teaching and learning and what its website has to
offer you.
Dept.
E-Mailings: Periodic department mailings about events and departmental news are
sent to all sociology and criminal justice majors. To receive
them, be sure that you have declared sociology or cj as your
major and be sure that the email address you wish to
use is registered at the Rutgers student directory.
The list is more fully described at the department's E-Mailing
List web page |
October 24, 2007 . Contact Robert Wood with comments or
questions.
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