Peter
Pan in Changing Camden
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Rutgers-Camden
Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice
Fall 2006 Newsletter
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Professor
Siegel Takes Over As Department Chair in January
After
six and one-half years in office, Professor Robert Wood is
stepping down as department Chair at the end of this semester.
He will be succeeded by Professor Jane
Siegel,
who will be returning from a research leave devoted to finishing
her much-anticipated book on the children and families of
incarcerated mothers, Disrupted Childhoods: Children of Women in Prison, to
be published by Rutgers University Press in its Childhood
Studies book series.
Professor
Siegel joined the Rutgers faculty in 2000. She holds a Ph.D.
in Criminology from the University of Pennsylvania and a B.A.
from Drew University. She has published numerous articles
on the long-term consequences of sexual abuse and on sexual
victimization. She teaches a broad array of courses in the
undergraduate and graduate criminal justice programs.
Professor
Wood feels that the high point of his tenure as chairperson
was the department's receipt in 2003 of the Rutgers
University Programmatic Excellence Award in Undergraduate
Education, which recognized the department's collective
effort to expand its program, build a skills-based curriculum
making effective use of instructional technology, and develop
a web-enhanced curriculum through innovative online resources.
Dr. Wood looks forward to a year-long sabbatical in the 2007-8
academic year to work on a book on globalization and travel.
Dr.
Humphries To Direct CJ During Dr. Meyer's Spring 07 Leave
Dr.
Meyer will be on research leave during the Spring 2007 semester.
During that time Dr. Humphries will be Acting Director of
the Criminal Justice Program.
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Spring 2007 Preregistration
Starts Nov. 6th
Read this before you register!
Preregistration
for the Spring 2007 Semester begins November
6th. All
students are strongly encouraged to see a departmental advisor
in planning their schedule. Sociology majors
may see any sociology or anthropology faculty members
they choose, or be assigned an advisor by the department
secretary, Sherry Pisacano. Criminal Justice uses an
advisor pool system; click
here for current advising hours.
Please note that there
will be no print schedule distributed. You will have
to rely on the online
schedule. The department would like to get your
feedback about this change. Dr. Wood encourages
students to email
him after they register to let him
know how they found this new system.
New
Options for Majors:
Introduction
to Latin American Studies (590:210) now fulfills the multicultural
requirement for the criminal justice major.
When
taught by Professor Goertzel, the course can also serve as
an elective for the sociology major (get Prof. Goertzel or
Wood to initial your sociology major worksheet). Dr. Goertzel
will be teaching the course the spring of 2007.
Newly-offered
Spring 2007 courses include: a new anthropology
special topics course on Immigration and Families
by Prof. Coe; a new sociology special topics course by Prof.
Hazzard-Donald entitled "The Red and the Black:
African Americans and American Indians in the North American
Environment;" and Punishment and Sentencing,
taught by Sherri Goldberg.
Winterim Courses New and Old
In Anthropology,
Prof. McCarty offers his North American Indians
course.
In Criminal
Justice, Prof. Meloy is teaching again her popular
Social Justice in Film course, while Prof.
Murphy will offer a course on Criminal Investigations.
In Sociology,
Prof. Wood is offering a new course on the Sociology
and Art of Travel for both experienced and would-be
travelers. Students planning to take Rutgers international
studies tours are particularly encouraged to take this course.
Prof. Asbury will be offering Contemporary Social
Problems.
Internship/Service Learning Opportunities:
Internships
and service learning placements provide valuable practical
experience and often serve to connect students with potential
employers.
Criminal
Justice Internship (see article below)
Service
Learning Internship in Health Literacy and Cultural Competency
for Camden's Healthcare Providers, offered as a three-credit
independent study either in sociology (Dr. Wood) or psychology
(Dr. Whitlow). Students will work as part of a larger team
of social work and health professionals and will participate
in focus groups with Camden families as consumers of the health
systems in Camden; the development of health education materials;
health education seminars for Camden families and health literacy
assessments. Students will be responsible for meeting with
their assigned clinical team on a bi-weekly basis. Training
and coordination will be provided by Angela
Connor, Senior Program Director, Center
for Children and Childhood Studies. Interested students
should email
or call Ms. Connor at (856) 225-6739 to set up an appointment
to discuss the internship and to make the necessary credit
arrangements.
CONTACT
Community Helplines offers helpline training
and volunteer opportunities that can be eligible for internship
credit. See Prof. Wood for details.
In addition,
the Career Center runs a College
of Arts and Sciences Internship Seminar
with placement each semester.
Quick
Access to Course Information:
Pre-Registration
Reminders:
All Sociology and CJ majors should take Methods and Techniques
of Social Research (920:301) as soon as possible.
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.
Sociological Theory, required for all sociology majors,
is only offered in the fall. Because Dr. Wood
will on leave in 2007-8, an evening version of the course
will be taught in fall 2007 by Prof. Patrick McCarty. Students
expecting to graduate in May 2007 who have not yet taken the
course should plan to take Prof. McCarty's course in the fall.
Dr. Goertzel's spring 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.
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Professor
Meloy Publishes Book on Sex Offenders
Professor
Michelle Meloy's book, Sex
Offenses and the Men Who Commit Them: An Assessment
of Sex Offenders on Probation, was recently
published by the Northeastern University Press. Based
on interviews with more than 150 convicted male sex
offenders, Dr. Meloy focuses on the catalysts, stigmas,
and effective deterrence of sexual violence. Rejecting
the commonly held belief that sex offending is solely
the result of offender psychopathology, Meloy demonstrates
how certain methods of police or community surveillance
undermine the ability of sex offender probationers
to effectively reestablish themselves as citizens,
and she proposes an empirically based public policy
response to sex offending.
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Frida
Kahlo consults with Prof. Goertzel about his study tour
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Profs. Goertzel and Meyer to Lead Study Tours to Mexico
Professor
Ted.
Goertzel, in conjunction with Prof. Jon'a Meyer, will be leading
a study tour to Mexico over the spring break in 2007. The
study tour will provide an introduction to the pre-Columbian
civilizations of Mexico and to modern artists who have incorporated
Mexican history and culture in their work. The week will be
divided between Mexico City and Guanajuato. In Mexico City
students will visit the Anthropology Museum, Diego Rivera's
murals, the Frida Kahlo Museum, the Templo Mayor and the Museum
of the City. Day trips will be made to the floating gardens
at Xochimilco and to the archeological site at San Juan Teotihuacan.
In Guanajuato students will visit the Diego Rivera museum,
with side trips to San Miguel de Allende and Dolores Hidalgo.
Several credit options are available, one linked to Dr. Goertzel's
spring Introduction to Latin American Studies course. Further
details are available at the study
tour website. Dr. Meyer will lead a criminal
justice study tour that will share the same basic itinerary,
but which will include visits to various criminal justice
institutions.
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CJ
Internships Available for Spring
The
criminal justice internship is designed to provide advanced
criminal justice undergraduates with applied criminal justice
experience, something that employers increasingly expect.
Interns observe experienced professionals making decisions
in a variety of settings and, when appropriate, participate
in the work of the agency. In the process, interns gain perspectives
on career goals, professional objectives, law and graduate
school opportunities and experience an environment where they
can apply the knowledge developed in criminal justice courses
to the realities of justice related agencies. Class attendance
and course work are also required.
Placements
options include: State level probation and parole departments;
Federal Pre-trial Services; Federal Public Defender's Office,
Investigations Division; Camden County Family Court; Camden
County Prosecutor's Office; Camden Country Public Defender's
Office; Center for Family Services, and Youth Residential
Facility, among others. Interested students should meet with
Dr. Meloy upon the commencement of spring registration to
discuss eligibility, placement options, and internship initiation.
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Prof. Bluebond Langner Returns from Research
Sabbatical
and from Center Directorship
Dr.
Myra Bluebond-Langner, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology,
has returned full-time to the department after a year's research
sabbatical and before that, five years of founding and directing
the Center for
Children and Childhood Studies. This semester she introduced
a new course, Childhood and Culture, and is resuming her central
role in our anthropology offerings. Prof. Bluebond-Langner was
recently invited to join the editorial board of Children
and Society and remains an advisor to Rosalyn Carter on
her national caregivers initiative. She continues to edit the
Rutgers University Press' Childhood
Studies series;
recent titles include Armies of the Young: Child Soldiers
in War and Terror, Viet Nam's Children in a Changing
World, Imagined Orphans: Poor Families, Child Welfare,
Contested Citizenship in London, and Girls in Trouble
with the Law. Further details available at the series
website.
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South Jersey Agricultural Tourism Study by Prof. Wood
Culminates in Day-Long Rutgers Farm Tour
Supported
by a Walter Rand Institute
for Public Affairs fellowship, Professor Robert Wood spent
the past year exploring the potential of visits to farms,
farmers' markets, and agricultural fairs to make farming in
the "Garden State" economically viable. New Jersey
has been losing about 10,000 acres of farmland to commercial
and residential development each year, and two years ago the
state's Secretary of Agriculture convened an advisory Agritourism
Council, which Prof. Wood was asked to join, to promote agricultural
tourism as one of a variety of tools to help keep farmers
in business. Dr. Wood's study, Farmland
Preservation and Agritourism in South Jersey: An Exploratory
Study, is available online. In June, Dr.
Wood led a tour of 15 Rutgers faculty, staff, students and
family members (including our department's youngest "member,"
Morgan Meloy) to two South Jersey farms that have pioneered
in the development of agritourism. The tour group toured the
dairy operation at Creamy
Acres Farm and then learned about the educational outreach
program at Duffield's
Farm. Further tour
photos...
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click
on images to enlarge

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Renovation of Johnson Park Nears Completion;
Website Explores its Place in Camden's Social History
Rutgers
students walking past the Walt Whitman Center along Cooper
Street between 2nd and 3rd may not have realized that
the building was part of one of Camden's most famous and
liveliest parks. Thanks to grants from the Camden Economic
Recovery Board and the state's Green Acres program, the
park has been completely renovated, with Rutgers-Camden
providing the project management. Sociology adjunct Professor Monika
Wood
has created a website
for Rutgers-Camden that explores the creation
of the park by Eldridge Johnson, the founder of RCA
and its place in Camden's history. The website includes reminiscences
of Camden residents about the park, as well as extensive photographs
documenting its rich architectural and historical legacy.
Across the street in back of the famous statue of Peter
Pan, an old RCA building awaits conversion into condominiums.
It's a great place to reflect on Camden's past and future.
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Degree Navigator: Despite a few glitches, a great new tool!
Degree
Navigator is a great new tool for checking your progress
toward fulfilling the requirements for your degree. It also
allows you to consider alternative "what if" scenerios
if you are thinking about switching majors or adding a minor.
Booklets with instructions about how to use Degree Navigator
are available in our student lounge. |

The Department's Non-Virtual Home

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Departmental Online Resources Continue to Expand
Recent
additions to the department's extensive website include streaming
video clips from her African fieldwork to accompany Prof.
Cati Coe's recently-published book,
Dilemmas
of Culture in African Schools: Nationalism, Youth and the Transformation
of Knowledge. The Down
Germantown Avenue film, designed to accompany Elijah
Anderson's Code of the Street, continues to attract
several requests from all over the country for the DVD version
each week. Of potential interest to future graduate students
is Prof. Jon'a Meyer's substantial expansion of the website
of the M.A. in Criminal Justice program. And we've provided
pictures and more information about our adjunct faculty on our
faculty webpage.
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 |
March 21, 2007 . Contact Robert Wood with comments or
questions.
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