 .
Better
Late Than Never |
Rutgers-Camden
Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminal Justice
Fall
2004 Newsletter |
| |
DEPARTMENT
MOVES TO NEW QUARTERS AT
405-7 COOPER STREET
405-7
Cooper Street
from the campus side
Our New Home
(paint job coming) |
Friday,
October 29th was moving day for the Department of Sociology,
Anthropology and Criminal Justice, as it settled into vastly-improved
quarters in the combined buildings that used to be 405 and
407 Cooper Street. A porch and a new main entrance in the
back--and landscaping yet to come--will bring the building
into the main campus courtyard. Not ready yet but soon to
come are a lounge and computer lab for students. We want
our new home will be a welcoming and useful space for our
students. The new building will remain a construction worksite
for a while yet, but by the end of the semester everything
should be completed. |
Learning
to navigate the building may take a little time, since we are
on two floors and the layout is not linear. Check with our departmental
secretary, Sherry Pisacano, just inside the door on the left if
you need directions. Here is the new office roster:
Department
Office
Sherry Pisacano |
Room
108 |
Myra
Bluebond-Langner, Director
Center
for Children & Childhood Studies |
Room
204 |
| Gail
Caputo |
Room
115 |
| Cati
Coe |
Room
214 |
| Sheila
Cosminsky |
Room
203 |
| Ted
Goertzel |
Room
110 |
| Katrina
Hazzard-Donald |
Room
102 |
| Drew
Humphries, CJ Director |
Room
116 |
| Jon'a
Meyer |
Room
207 |
| Michelle
Meloy |
Room
205 |
| Jane
Siegel |
Room
109 |
| Robert
Wood, Dept. Chair |
Room
211 |
| Adjunct
Faculty Offices |
Rooms
103,104,206 |
We
plan to have an open house either later in the semester or early
in the spring semester. But feel free to come visit in the meantime!
Remember, the entrance is from the campus side, not the
Cooper Street side.
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Dr.
Caputo Publishes New Book on Intermediate Sanctions
Dr.
Gail Caputo's new book, Intermediate
Sanctions in Corrections, published in its Crime and
Criminal Justice book series by University of North Texas Press,
is a path-breaking study of the new area of intermediate sanctions,
which fall between imprisonment on the one hand and parole and
probation on the other hand. Including such things as community
service, boot camps, intensive supervision programs, home confinement
and electronic monitoring, halfway houses, day reporting, fines,
and restitution, intermediate sanctions provide a potentially
more just and effective way of dealing with many legal infractions.
Dr. Caputo's previous research has focused on shoplifting, and
she has been involved in both the conception and study of alternative
sentencing programs.
|
Dr. Caputo's New Book
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Department
Web Site Showcased in New Online Journal
The
new online journal Innovate
includes 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.
The
departmental web site is organized around its Departmental
Homepage
and its Web-Enhanced
Curriculum Homepage, as outlined below. If you have
Windows Media Player 9 (available on all campus lab computers),
you may watch and listen to a "screen
movie" tour of the web site (you'll need to bring
your own headphones if you use the lab). Several methods and MicroCase-related
tutorials have been added to the Online
Research Tutorials and Videos web page, along with
a streaming video by Dr. Coe on
"Turning an Event into Field notes: A Ghanaian Example."
The Department's Web-Enhanced Curriculum was an important factor
in its receipt of the university's Programmatic Excellence Award
in 2003. Check it out! It's there for you to use! Comments and
suggestions welcome.
| 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
|
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 28, 2005 . Contact Robert Wood
with comments or questions. |