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Partnership between Maupin and Spalding Paves Way for Educational Success

The relationship between the Spalding University College of Education and Milburn T. Maupin Elementary is a true partnership in every sense of the word. Since its inception, the College of Education’s faculty, administration and students have worked with the faculty at Maupin to promote academic development in struggling elementary school children through afterschool programs and career-oriented classroom activities that provide real-world application.

“The opportunities for this partnership to grow are limitless…. there are new creative ideas coming forth each and every time that we meet,” says Dr. Keepers, Dean of the College of Education.  “Our mission is to foster student engagement and develop students who will have a life-long love for learning.  At Maupin Elementary, this is definitely possible.”

The Spalding-Maupin partnership exposes Maupin students to a variety of programs related to academic and personal development. Students have designed and assembled hydroplanes, communicated with pen-pals and participated in activities to raise cultural awareness.

“What I have noticed in the three years that we have been [at Maupin] is a growth in the children, the faculty and the overall atmosphere of the whole school,” says Dr. H.A. Hasan, Associate Professor in the College of Education. “The energy has increased. For example, young children today tell me that they want to be surgeons, architects and math specialists. So, at a very early age they are looking on to their future. It’s amazing. When we started, we weren’t hearing that.”

This fall the Spalding University community collected backpacks for students in need, and this winter the university will host a book drive so that every student at Maupin will have a book to read over the holiday break.  According to Terri Davenport, Principal of Maupin, the partnership between Spalding and Maupin has helped her staff to break down the barriers—such as attendance, hunger, lack of school supplies—that stand in the way of a successful education for many of her students.

“The Spalding-Maupin partnership not only has an impact on our students but it has a direct impact on our staff as well,” Dr. Davenport says. “I have staff members that are Spalding graduates. They are prepared they are ready to meet and prepare our students for the future.”

Now, in its third year, the partnership has proven to be just as beneficial to Spalding’s College of Education and the development of its teacher candidates as it has been to the students of Maupin Elementary.

“Over the years, both the university and Maupin have grown in terms of our development, our commitment and our connectedness in preparing the teachers,” says Dr. Rita Greer, Director of the Doctoral Program in the College of Education. “Every college that prepares teachers is looking at the amount of field experience that students get and what they are doing to prepare [teachers candidates] not in the classroom of the university but in the classroom of a real school. We from [Spalding] get the opportunity to come [to Maupin] and actually work in a school that is moving forward, that is very innovative and that is willing to accept our students. We can’t prepare teachers in a vacuum, so working with our partner school gets our students out in to the real world in a very diverse setting.”

Those directly involved with the partnership understand that this type of collaboration has the potential to grow and impact the lives of both parties for years to come, paving the way for educational success of both the students at Maupin and the future educators at Spalding.

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Free Financial Planning Day

On October 8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Spalding University will be the host site for the Louisville Financial Planning Day—a public event where dozens of Louisville-area financial planners will offer free advice on budgeting, retirement planning, income taxes, investment strategies, and more.

The event will feature experts from the Financial Planning Association® and highly qualified Certified Financial Plannerâ„¢ professionals, all volunteering their time and expertise to work with local residents one-on-one to address important financial issues. In addition to personal conferencing, there will be a series of free, educational finance workshops.

Louisville Financial Planning Day is organized by City of Louisville in partnership with FPA Kentuckiana as part of a national Financial Planning Days initiative created by Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Financial Planning Association, Foundation for Financial Planning and the U.S. Conference of Mayors.

For more information or to register for free, please visit www.financialplanningdays.org/louisville

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Assistive and Augmentative Communication Devices Workshop

Spalding University is to be a teleconference site for an assistive and augmentative communication devices workshop hosted by Kosair Charities enTECH Center. This workshop will bring numerous people from various practice sites in our region on to the Spalding Campus. For more information, please visit

https://public.hdiuk.org/sites/seminars/iPad2/SitePages/Home.aspx

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1stGEN+ Brown Bag Sept 20th

What is 1stGEN+?

1stGEN stands for first generation students … any student whose parents have not graduated from college.

+ is for anyone else who wants to be a part of the group! Everyone is welcomed!!

Grab your lunch and come join us.

Everyone is invited … Students, Faculty, Staff

When:  Tuesday,Sept 20 from

11:40 am—12:20 pm

Where:  Mansion East, room 302

For more info: 873-4164

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2011 Fall Reading Programs for Children and Adults

Programs in Louisville, Covington, Bowling Green, Lexington, and Owensboro

For an enjoyable activity with lifelong benefits, we
recommend one of our eight different reading skills
programs designed and taught by instructors from the
Institute of Reading Development. Programs are offered as a community
service by Spalding University, Academic Resource Center, a non-profit
organization.

For information, or to enroll online, please select an age group below:

  • 4-Year-Olds and Kindergarteners
  • 1st Graders
  • 2nd Graders
  • 3rd Graders
  • 4th or 5th Graders
  • 6th, 7th, or 8th Graders
  • 9th, 10th, or 11th Graders
  • 12th Graders, College Students, or Adults
  • To speak with a program coordinator, or enroll by phone, call (800) 964-8888
    Louisville, Covington, Lexington – [8 AM-10 PM Mon.-Thurs. , 8 AM-9 PM Fri., 10 AM-4 PM Sat.]
    Bowling Green, Owensboro – [7 AM-9 PM Mon.-Thurs., 7 AM-8 PM Fri., 9 AM-3 PM Sat.]
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    Poet Randall Horton Joins the MFA in Writing Faculty

    Poet Randall Horton will join the faculty of the Spalding University brief-residency Master of Fine Arts in Writing Program as a guest during the program’s Fall 2011 residency, November 11-20. During the ten-day residency, he will co-lead a poetry workshop for MFA students, participate on a panel on the topic of ekphrastic poetry with other faculty members, and give a 10-minute reading during a session of faculty readings. The faculty reading session is open to the public; time, date and location will be announced in October and posted on the Spalding MFA website, /mfa.

    As a guest faculty member, Mr. Horton will also deliver a lecture titled “Cultural Memory and The Black Radical Tradition,” exploring a poetics that operates from a position of blackness or the black radical tradition. Using Derrida’s critique of différance and difference and his concept of trace, this lecture will demonstrate how language can resist the dominant narrative of life and literature through the play of language. In the course of this exploration, Mr. Horton will explicate the solo improvisations of Bobby Timmons and Lee Morgan of Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers in the song Monin. The lecture is open to enrolled Spalding MFA students.

    Randall Horton has an MFA in Poetry from Chicago State University and a Ph.D. in creative writing from SUNY Albany. He is assistant professor of English at the University of New Haven.  He is the author of two collections of poems: The Definition of Place and The Lingua Franca of Ninth Street, both from Main Street Rag. He is the recipient of the Gwendolyn Brooks Poetry Award, the Bea Gonzalez Poetry Award, and most recently a National Endowment of the Arts Fellowship in Literature.  His creative and critical work has appeared in Callaloo, Crab Orchard Review, and The Packingtown Review. He is a Cave Canem Fellow, a member of the Affrilachian Poets, and a member of The Symphony: The House that Etheridge Built.

    Spalding University’s four-semester, brief-residency Master of Fine Arts in Writing Program combines superb instruction with unparalleled flexibility and offers studies in fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, writing for children and young adults, screenwriting, and playwriting. At the beginning of each semester, students and faculty study together at a 10-day residency in Louisville or abroad, after which students return home to work with their expert mentors in guided independent study that provides an intense, individually tailored approach and one-on-one instruction.

    Spalding University was established in 1814 and is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The MFA Program is a member of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP). The MFA program began in 2001 and has 363 alumni and 155 students. Its students and alums have published or produced more than 200 books/plays/films.

    For more information about the Fall 2011 residency or the Spalding University MFA in Writing Program, please email mfa@spalding.edu, call (800) 896-8941, ext 4400, or visit /mfa.

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