Currently Accolades: Presented for September 21, 2020

Woman presents at a podium.

 

Every week during the academic year, Currently celebrates faculty and staff accomplishments, including appearances on panels, presentations, recent publications or performances, and research grants.

  1. Sherry Buchanan, library, and Maika J. Yeigh, curriculum and instruction faculty, presented “Publishing During the Pandemic: Strengthening Relationships, Removing Barriers, Reaching New Heights” at the Pacific Northwest Library Association virtual conference in August.
  2. Berrin Erdogan, business faculty, was a panelist at the “HR Division All Consortia: Meet the Editor Session” and at the “OB Division Doctoral Consortium” during the Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management in August. 
  3. Jon Holt, world languages and literatures faculty, presented a talk titled “Golden Kamuy: A Wild Look at Japanese History and Culture through Manga” at Encorepreneur Café in Portland on Sept. 3.
  4. Ted Khoury, business faculty, presented “Confronting Permanent Temporariness With Enterprise and the Refugee Condition” and “An Anchor or a Lifebuoy? Incubators as Spaces of Learning and Identity Building” at a sub-plenary session at the European Group of Organizational Studies (EGOS) annual conference from July 2-4.
  5. Susan Kirtley, English faculty, co-led a virtual workshop titled “Teaching and Learning with Comics” for San Diego Comic-Con this July.
  6. Joel Owens, business faculty, gave a talk  titled “Generational Differences in Ethics and Moral Decision Making for CPAs” to the Oregon Society of CPAs on June 16.
  7. Sonja Taylor, university studies faculty, and Candyce Reynolds, education leadership and policy faculty, co-authored a presentation titled “Making Your Own ePortfolio: If you Build It, You Can Teach It” for the virtual annual meeting of the Association for Authentic, Experiential & Evidence-based Learning. 
  8. Hyeyoung Woo, sociology faculty, gave an invited talk titled “Health and Well-being of Adolescents from Multicultural Families in South Korea” at the Virtual Summer Colloquium Series at University of Pennsylvania’s James Joo-Jin Kim Program in Korean Studies.