Thursday, October 15, 2020

Honors and Other Distinctions

A number of distinct pathways to academic honors are available to students in the Department of Geography at Bridgewater State University. This post is intended to assist students and advisors in understanding the differences among them. The four major kinds of honors are Latin, Greek, Departmental, and Commonwealth. 

At the end of this post are some additional opportunities the Geography Department offers for learning with distinction!

Latin -- strong grades

This is perhaps the best known of all university honors -- whereby a Latin phrase appears on the final transcript and in the graduation commencement program according to the student's total grade-point average (GPA):
  • cum laude (GPA of 3.3 to 3.59)
  • magna cum laude (3.6 to 3.79)
  • summa cum laude (3.8 or higher)
Individual departments are not involved in this recognition. Important details are in the "Graduation With Honors" section of the Registrar's Awarding of Undergraduate Degrees page.

Greek -- our society

Geography students at BSU including majors, minors, and others with significant coursework in geography -- are eligible to join the Eta Nu chapter of Gamma Theta Upsilon. The international  honorary society for geographers, GTU was established in 1928; the Eta Nu chapter began in 1988. All of our full-time professors and many of our alumni are members. 

Membership in GTU is open to any student who demonstrates commitment to and excellence in geography by meeting these criteria:
  • At least 3 courses completed in geography
  • At least 3 semesters (or equivalent) of full-time student status
  • At least 3.3 GPA in Geography
Application forms are available from Dr. Hayes-Bohanan (jhayesboh@bridgew.edu) and induction celebration are held annually. Lifetime membership dues of $40 are paid at the time of initiation; a generous BSU alumnus currently pays this fee on behalf of Eta Nu inductees.

Departmental -- your project

In coordination with the BSU Honors Program, the Geography Department provides eligible geography students the opportunity to earn Departmental Honors by completing a thesis project and additional honors credits. The departmental honors designation requires 9 credits of honors work (typically over two semesters) and some advanced planning. The application process is completed with Dr. Hayes-Bohanan (jhayesboh@bridgew.edu) in his capacity as Honors Chair, and he also coordinates the acceptance of proposals and scheduling of thesis defense sessions. But any full-time professor in the department may serve as the thesis mentor.

Commonwealth Honors -- straight out of high school

The Geography Department participates in Commonwealth Honors by offering some of the courses that are open only to students in that campus-wide program. If you are reading this prior to BSU admission, please have a look at the program requirements. We look forward to having you in the 100- and 200-level geography courses for which you would be eligible.

Recently, these have included general introductory courses such as environmental and physical geography as well as more focused seminars and colloquia. Recent titles include Discovering Brockton, The Secret Life of Coffee, Detroit: Arts City, Historical Geography of Ireland, and New Orleans: Global City.

Lagniappe

These are the four basic pathways to distinction that use the word "honors," but geography students can enhance their academic programs in a number of other ways as well. Be sure to discuss these with your professors or advisors.
  1. Internship: Practical experience with an outside agency or company, in which a faculty supervisor helps the student to understand the connection between the work itself and the student's academic program.
  2. Directed Study: Extensive review of a particular area of geographic scholarship for which we do not offer a traditional course. 
  3. Research: The Adrian Tinsley Program provides a variety of opportunities that allow students to undertake research projects with the guidance and financial support of the program and under the academic direction of a faculty mentor. These always involve on-campus presentations of research results, and my also provide opportunities to present results at regional or national conferences. Research could also lead to a publication as an author or co-author. 
  4. Study Abroad: Our department offers short-term courses during summer or winter breaks, in which students travel with a faculty leader to study a geographic topic in another country. These are transformative experiences that can lead to profound personal and professional growth.
  5. Geography Club: Known informally as GeoBears, the geography club is open to any student with a strong interest in the field of geography. Regular meetings involve geography-related activities and games; special events include outings (or in 2020 virtual outings) to some of our region's rich assortments of special places and outreach events on campus. Participation in the club is an opportunity for extra learning, networking, and the development of leadership skills.

Friday, June 5, 2020

Maps Tell Stories

BSU Geography Students in Action

The final project assignment for Dr. Boah Kim's spring 2020 course GEOG 413 Applications in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) served several purposes. Mainly, the experience of finding a problem to address, determining the data requirements, and developing an analysis model that successfully answers the original question. Students were expected to develop a project that applies analysis techniques.

Each project below is represented by a single snapshot from a much larger GIS Story page. Please click each title to see the narrative, maps, and other graphics contained in each of these projects.

As with all courses at Bridgewater State University and many colleges around the United States, this course began in the classroom, but final projects were completed under the complication of a sudden shift to online teaching and learning. We in the Department of Geography are very proud of what Dr. Kim and her students achieved!


MCAS and Special Education Graduation Rates
Samantha Cave
The Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System(MCAS) test and how it effects the graduation rates of students with disabilities


Middleborough Protected and Recreational Open Space
Joseph Osborne
Identifying local discrepancies in the MassGIS Protected and Recreational Open Space data and mapping accessibility to Open Space in the town


Food Deserts in Brockton, MA: A study in accessibility
Maria De La Fuente
Communities without local grocery stores and how demographics are related to food access


The Novel Coronavirus and Its Impact on Us
Justin Fitzgerald
The timeline of this new infectious disease and how it went from a local issue in Wuhan, China to an event affecting billions worldwide


Health & Recreation
Ally Osborne
The accessibility of natural environments and scenic landscapes throughout Massachusetts are compared to identify counties where public health would benefit from more accessible public parks


Save the Turtles, Save the World
Jesse Scopa
New threats to the recovery of  Diamondback Terrapins, the only brackish water turtle in North America


Changing Ethnic Demographic of Boston
Kosi Obi
How gentrification has impacted the demographics of Boston

Lagniappe

For centuries, geographers have used maps to tell stories and now we can use tools specifically developed to help craft those stories and share them widely. The first story of this kind that Dr. Hayes-Bohanan found was about a region with a very fraught geography in which he lived for seven years before coming to Bridgewater. Envisioning the Embattled Borderlands by Krista Schlyer is a powerful exploration of an endangered place that is often named and rarely understood.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

City Champions

by Dr. James Hayes-Bohanan

Geography asks three questions: Where is it? Why is it there? and So what?

Photo: Brian Benson
The "it" can be just about anything, as Commonwealth Honors students in our department's Discovering Brockton First-Year Seminar discovered in the Fall 2019 semester. In this case, the inquiry into human and physical geography was at the scale of a nearby gateway city that we could visit during each week's class session.

The students met the university requirement for a writing-intensive seminar by continuing the physical field trips with written reactions. This creative group of students never failed to impress me with the wide variety of cogent insights they reached from a single shared experience.

I was very pleased when Brian Benson, one of the university's communications staff, asked to join us for one of our weekly outings. We agreed that a visit to Old Colony Planning Council was in order. Not only do the professional in this agency know a lot about the city and its surrounding communities, but many of them are geographers who have studied in our department. It was the perfect culmination of our semester's learning, and Benson's City Champions article gave a wider audience a glimpse of geography in action.

COVID19 note: I will spend the summer planning this course for Fall 2020 with most of the same field experiences plus a few I had use in earlier versions of the course and some new ones. I will be making contingency plans for online or social-distance versions of each activity.

Lagniappe

I was reminded to post this when I received the inaugural edition of  the OCPC newsletter. It begins with a focus on regionalization, a term to which I have given considerable attention since moving to Massachusetts, a state with 351 independent cities and towns; an unknown number of school districts; and an abiding commitment to illusions of local control. It has been more than a decade ago that I made a strong case for formal regionalization in areas other than planning, and I had the good fortune to share my ideas with then-governor Deval Patrick. He agreed strongly, but found the fiefdoms by which water, police, fire, library, highway, school, and other services are delivered to be extremely resistant to change. The success of regional planning remains a rare exception, but even in that case, the cooperation across town lines is largely voluntary.