faculty research / en Mason among nine schools selected to join the NSF’s network of I-Corps Hubs /news/2022-09/mason-among-nine-schools-selected-join-nsfs-network-i-corps-hubs <span>Mason among nine schools selected to join the NSF’s network of I-Corps Hubs </span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/251" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">John Hollis</span></span> <span>Mon, 09/19/2022 - 12:55</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><figure role="group" class="align-left"><div> <div class="field field--name-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img src="/sites/g/files/yyqcgq291/files/styles/small_content_image/public/2022-09/Logo%20Mid-South%20Region%20Hub.png?itok=aFA3jG9X" width="350" height="350" alt="Mason among nine schools selected to join the NSF’s network of I-Corps Hubs" loading="lazy" typeof="foaf:Image" /></div> </div> <figcaption>Mason is among the nine schools selected to join the new Mid-South Hub of the NSF’s I-Corps network. <em>Graphic provided</em></figcaption></figure><p>AV is among the nine partners selected by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to comprise a regional consortium of diverse universities whose aim is to provide experiential entrepreneurial training to academic researchers from all fields of science and engineering. </p> <p><span><span><span><span><span>“As Mason builds the next generation of diverse tech talent in Northern Virginia, this experiential entrepreneurship programming will catalyze new ‘lab to market’ initiatives within the recently announced Fuse at <a href="http://masonquare.gmu.edu/">Mason Square</a> (formerly Arlington Campus),” said <a href="https://provost.gmu.edu/about/organization-and-staff#Marshall" target="_blank"><span>Andre Marshall</span></a>, Mason’s vice president for research, innovation and economic impact.</span></span></span></span></span></p> <p>The newly formed Mid-South Hub of the NSF Innovation Corps (I-Corps) Hubs network will pair Mason with lead institution Vanderbilt University and other partner institutions, including the University of Kentucky, Jackson State University, Meharry Medical College, Tennessee State University, the University of Louisville, the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and the University of Virginia. </p> <p><span><span><span><span><span>“Each regional I-Corps Hub provides training essential in entrepreneurship and customer discovery, leading to new products, startups and jobs,” said Erwin Gianchandani, the NSF’s assistant director for technology, innovation and partnerships. “In this way, the I-Corps program will open up new economic opportunities throughout the United States.”</span></span></span> </span></span></p> <p>The nine I-Corps Hubs around the nation form the operational backbone of the National Innovation Network, a collaborative effort among universities, NSF-funded researchers, local and regional entrepreneurial communities and other federal agencies to help researchers convert their results to the marketplace. </p> <p>“Basically, in its essence, the I-Corps program provides experiential entrepreneurial training to researchers,” Marshall said. “It’s an experiential learning program focused on researchers.” </p> <p>The Mid-South Hub, which will launch in January 2023 with a five-year grant of $15 million, was one of five new hubs recently announced by NSF. Established in 2011, the I-Corps program helps the NSF identify universities that will find the most promising research faculty and students in the country doing research on highly technical fields like cybersecurity that hold the most promise to translate their discoveries into high-impact societal and commercial benefit. </p> <p><span><span><span><span><span>A top-tier research university, Mason is also a <a href="/news/2022-09/mason-now-top-10-public-university-diversity-innovation-and-cybersecurity-education-us">top 10 public university in cybersecurity</a> according to US News & World Report. "Working in collaboration with NSF and other universities, Mason will be leading commercial and government partnerships to increase discovery, solutions, new ventures, and economic development in Northern Virginia and Greater Washington Metropolitan area,” Marshall said.</span></span></span></span></span></p> <p><a href="/news/2021-11/invention-impact-i-corps-mason">The first five I-Corps Hubs were awarded in 2021</a>, with each hub expanding its reach this year by adding a new partner institution to their region. </p> <p>“This hub will accelerate the translation of groundbreaking university research outcomes into commercialized ventures that seed emergent, prosperous innovation ecosystems across the Midsouth,” said Vanderbilt’s Charleson Bell and Deanna Meador, the respective director and deputy director of entrepreneurship, biomedical innovation and I-Corps, in a joint statement. </p> <p>The I-Corps Hubs work collaboratively to build and sustain a diverse and inclusive innovation ecosystem throughout the U.S. </p> <p>“Mason is among the universities chosen because it is seen as rich in ‘deep-tech’ research activity, leaders in diversity and inclusion, and committed to translating university-based discoveries,” Marshall said, adding that many Mason faculty and students will participate in the Hub,  supported by the <a href="https://startup.gmu.edu/mason-enterprise-center">Mason Enterprise </a>network.</p> <p>Mason’s selection for the Mid-South Hub also struck a more personal chord for Marshall, as he was among the first teams to have participated in the program in 2012 before being named director of the NSF’s I-Corps program some years later and prior to coming to Mason. </p> <p>“We are going to be part of a national community of researchers and entrepreneurship experts that values the impact that basic research can have to the economy and to society through innovation and entrepreneurship,” Marshall said. </p> <p>Vanderbilt plans to host a summit with the Mid-South Hub universities in the near future to build the five-year vision for the hub’s inclusive innovation corridor.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/116" hreflang="en">Campus News</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/14076" hreflang="en">faculty research</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/1161" hreflang="en">National Science Foundation</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/726" hreflang="en">innovation</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/17356" hreflang="en">Strategic Direction</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Mon, 19 Sep 2022 16:55:11 +0000 John Hollis 96926 at Creating Art, Uplifting Communities: Nine CVPA Faculty Members Receive Purks Grants /news/2022-04/creating-art-uplifting-communities-nine-cvpa-faculty-members-receive-purks-grants <span>Creating Art, Uplifting Communities: Nine CVPA Faculty Members Receive Purks Grants</span> <span><span lang="" about="/user/801" typeof="schema:Person" property="schema:name" datatype="" xml:lang="">Emily Schneider</span></span> <span>Wed, 04/13/2022 - 11:50</span> <div class="layout layout--gmu layout--twocol-section layout--twocol-section--30-70"> <div class="layout__region region-first"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_associated_people" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-associated-people"> <h2>In This Story</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-associated-people field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">People Mentioned in This Story</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/jrosas" hreflang="en">Juana Medina</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/jsutters" hreflang="und">Justin Sutters</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/pkimbal" hreflang="und">Peter Kimball</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/rgillam" hreflang="en">Dr. Robert Gillam</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/mcooley" hreflang="und">Mark Cooley</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/salkassi" hreflang="und">Samirah Alkassim</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/eknoecke" hreflang="und">Dr. Edward Knoeckel</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/profiles/vellison" hreflang="en">Victoria Ellison</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="layout__region region-second"> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:body" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasebody"> <div class="field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Body</div> <div class="field__item"><p><span class="intro-text">The College of Visual and Performing Arts (CVPA) is proud to encourage the continued creative development and expansion of our faculty, offering them time and resources to pursue the interests that energize them beyond their classrooms. </span></p> <p><span><span><span>Established in 2018 by Robert Purks, a long time Arts at Mason Board member and supporter, The Robert K. Purks Faculty Enrichment Endowment provides perpetual support to further the research and creative activity of faculty in the College. Faculty across CVPA can apply annually for funds in support of projects that fuel or are fueled by their own creative ideas and artistic expression.</span></span></span></p> <p><span><span><span>For 2022, nine faculty members from the School of Art, the Film and Video Studies Program, and the Reva and Sid Dewberry Family School of Music will use their grants to explore projects and work that ranges across mediums and styles, connecting communities and sharing new ideas.</span></span></span></p> <p><strong><span><span><span>Read on to learn more about each faculty member and their projects, in their own words.</span></span></span></strong></p> <p><span><span><span><strong>Juana Medina, </strong>Assistant Professor in the School of Art, will integrate the stories, livelihoods, and cultural practices of Zapotec women of Teotitlán del Valle, Mexico into a children’s book centered on the community’s attainment of financial independence through mastering the art of Oaxaca rug weaving.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote">“As a children’s book author and illustrator, I'm committed to sharing stories that elicit understanding and increase our sense of empathy. I believe it is possible to do so by increasing fair and accurate representation of marginalized communities in books,” Medina said. “Featuring Vida Nueva’s weavers holds unique value: these individuals, once marginalized and isolated, came together and reclaimed their traditions, finding strength and sense of purpose, while becoming some of the top weavers in Oaxaca.”</figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Justin P. Sutters</strong>, Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the School of Art, is attending the highly competitive leadership training program “School for Art Leaders,” hosted by the National Art Education Association (NAEA) in Bentonville, Arkansas. During the year-long training program, Sutters and his cohort will engage in workshops, interactive activities, and reflection exercises with trained mentors to advance his skills as an arts educator.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“Personally, [the NAEA training] is a natural progression in my own development as I continue to take on more leadership within the University,” Sutters said. “Likewise, [the training] increases the visibility of our burgeoning Art Education program on the national level and adds credibility as a graduate program at a Research I Institution. This truly is an enriching opportunity for my development as an artist, educator, researcher, and leader."</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Peter Kimball</strong>, an adjunct faculty member within Film and Video Studies, is bringing his award-winning American Sign Language play “Millstone,” to the big screen, with the funds awarded from Purks financing on-set ASL interpreters and ASL coaches during the film’s pre-production.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“I am shooting the film version of [Millstone’s] script with an entirely deaf cast and entirely in American Sign Language,” Kimball said. “The story does not deal with deafness nor does it directly address the characters’ deafness at all. Instead, the characters simply happen to be deaf. I believe it is important to create art that does not only include people living with disabilities, but that also allows them to be whole, complicated individuals not defined by their disability.”</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Robert W. Gillam</strong>, Director of Music Technology in the Dewberry School of Music, is using his expertise and abilities as an electro-acoustic composer to research, write, and share music amplifying the benefits of National Parks.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“As a composer-in-residence I [will be] living at the National Park location for several weeks to a month, working with the park rangers to learn about the special features of the location while composing music based on my experiences there," Gillam said. “The residency [will] culminate in one or more public concerts at the park with the possibility of live-streaming the concert to an even wider audience. The [Purks] funds will be used to purchase a variety of sensors, connectors, contact microphones and cables to be used in the composition, performance and recording of electro-acoustic music.”</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>James Justin Plakas</strong>, an <span>Assistant Professor in Film and Video Studies and the School of Art, </span>is merging historic photographic processes with motion picture film to create his multimedia project "Camaro Lucinda." With a vision to make the film "colorful, comedic, and visually dynamic," Plakas’s converging of several image-capturing methods is in the pursuit of creating a new, unique, and surreal visual experience for viewers.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“The imagery [of ‘Camaro Lucinda’] will have a graphic quality and involve characters that exist in our world but in surreal scenarios,” Plakas said. “For example, a group of nuns playing tennis or a single clown on an overpass sandwiched by a wall of concrete and an endless blue sky. This work comments on the complicated aspects of representation in modern life. It is increasingly necessary for artists to engage in critical dialog that asks the viewer to scrutinize the media they consume and to question what they are seeing.”</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Victoria Ellison</strong>, an adjunct faculty member within the School of Art, is attending a workshop in the art of Nihonga—a traditional Japanese mineral painting technique. The workshop, taught in Washington State by authority Judith Kruger, will allow Ellison to expand her artistry and share one of Japan’s oldest art practices with Mason students.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“I’ve experimented with creating Nihonga paints, but find now advanced training, such as Kruger teaches, essential,” Ellison said. “I teach color and contemporary art to students from broad disciplines in the sciences and humanities, and diverse cultural practice is a critical component of my teaching. Studying Nihonga also addresses color science, mineralogy, contemporary paint manufacture, and its environmental impact. Studying Nihonga will enable my future research in the country where it’s been taught for 1,000 years, as well as opportunities for research back at Mason.”</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Samirah Alkassim</strong>, Assistant Professor in Film Theory, Film and Video Studies, is traveling to Jordan in pursuit of research for her upcoming book “A Journey of Screens in 21<sup>st</sup> Century Arab Film and Media,” (Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2023). Exploring Jordan’s visual media over the last two decades, Alkassim will be visiting Jordan’s Department of the National Library, the Cinema Section of the Abdul Hameed Shoman Foundation, and the library of Darat Funun to  access their archives of film, film makers, and film history.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“One of the eight chapters [of ‘A Journey of Screens’] focuses on Jordanian cinema, its cinematic and televisual past and present,” Alkassim said. “Aiming to fill in the lack of scholarship on Jordanian cinema, this chapter advances the book’s general study of an array of media –auteur cinema, television series, documentaries and short films –in the context of the changing media-scapes of the last twenty years, as evidence of a “new” modernity that is simultaneously old, commonplace, and provocative.”</span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Mark Cooley</strong>, an Associate Professor within the School of Art, is using the Purks Faculty Enrichment Fund to support the distribution of his documentary "Fighting Indians," which premiered in November at the American Indian Film Institute. The film chronicles the last school in Maine - the homogenously white Skowhegan High School, known as "the home of the Indians" - as they fight to keep their mascot prior to the historic legislation banning Native American mascots in the State's public schools.  </span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“This landmark legislation marks the fulfillment of a decades-long struggle on the part of the Tribal Nations of Maine to educate the public on the harms of Native American mascotry,” Cooley said. “This is the story of a small New England community forced to reckon with its identity, its colonial history, and future relationship with its indigenous neighbors. It is a story of a small town divided against the backdrop of a nation divided where the 'mascot debate' exposes centuries-old abuses while asking if reconciliation is possible.” </span></span></span></figure><p><span><span><span><strong>Edward Knoeckel</strong>, adjunct Professor within the Reva and Sid Dewberry Family School of Music, is utilizing the Purks Faculty Enrichment Fund to implement problem-based learning (PBL) methodologies in a Music for Non-Majors course. With the objective to enhance students' learning experiences beyond traditional teacher-based approaches, Knoeckel will be spearheading a pilot study to analyze the effect of implementing the PBL learning style in a music appreciation course at Mason.</span></span></span></p> <figure class="quote"><span><span><span>“PBL is an approach that maximizes student engagement with course content through group-based problems which motivate formative learning experiences,” Knoeckel said. “This approach is broadly used in the STEM fields, however, there is still a gap in understanding the effectiveness of PBL across disciplines in the arts. Through the course of this funded research, I will see how PBL affects critical and creative thinking as well as self-regulated learning and collaboration skills by transforming the traditional music learning conditions into a PBL treatment for a music appreciation course.”</span></span></span></figure></div> </div> </div> <div data-block-plugin-id="field_block:node:news_release:field_content_topics" class="block block-layout-builder block-field-blocknodenews-releasefield-content-topics"> <h2>Topics</h2> <div class="field field--name-field-content-topics field--type-entity-reference field--label-visually_hidden"> <div class="field__label visually-hidden">Topics</div> <div class="field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/6481" hreflang="en">grants</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/14076" hreflang="en">faculty research</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/146" hreflang="en">College of Visual and Performing Arts (CVPA)</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/2156" hreflang="en">Arts</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7131" hreflang="en">Dewberry School of Music</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/taxonomy/term/7171" hreflang="en">Tech Talent Investment Pipeline (TTIP)</a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> Wed, 13 Apr 2022 15:50:44 +0000 Emily Schneider 68581 at