by Currently
September 21st 2020
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Every week during the academic year, Currently celebrates faculty and staff accomplishments, including appearances on panels, presentations, recent publications or performances, and research grants.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- Susan Kirtley, English faculty, co-led a virtual workshop titled “Teaching and Learning with Comics” for San Diego Comic-Con this July.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.