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By JOHN WOOD Reporter Contributor
Maria S. Horne, associate professor of theatre and dance, and D.
Joseph Mook, professor and chair of the Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering, will receive 2005 Chancellor's Awards for
Internationalization to support new UB study abroad programs they are
developing for summer 2006. Horne's award is for a program titled
"Theatre, Cultures and Civilization in Romania," a four-week program
that is expected to be conducted in July 2006 for 12-15 undergraduate
and graduate students. The program in Romania will allow students to
participate in the world-renowned International Theatre Institute (ITI),
organized by the ITI-UNESCO Chair of Theatre and Culture of
Civilizations in Bucharest. Mook's program, titled "Intensive
Engineering Program in Thailand," will be based at Chiang Mai University
(CMU), UB's longstanding exchange partner institution and one of the
leading universities in Thailand. Some 15-20 engineering students are
expected to enroll in the six-week program in May-June 2006. Together
with local students at CMU, the UB students will attend English-language
engineering classes taught by Mook. "I am delighted that
Professor Horne and Professor Mook are to receive the Chancellor's Award
this year," said Stephen C. Dunnett, vice provost for international
education. "I congratulate them on these truly innovative programs. They
are a great addition to our study abroad offerings. I believe both
programs will attract a good number of students both from UB and from
other SUNY institutions." Sandra Flash, director of study abroad
programs, noted that UB is able to offer such an impressive portfolio of
exchange and study abroad programs thanks to such creative and dedicated
faculty members as Horne and Mook. "Our faculty's commitment to
developing and leading exciting new overseas programs has not only
greatly enhanced opportunities for students to gain critically important
international experiences, but also revolutionized our approach to study
abroad through the delivery of short-term, discipline-specific
programs," Flash said. The Chancellor's Award for
Internationalization was established last year by the SUNY Office of
International Programs (OIP) to support the development of short-term,
overseas academic projects in less commonly traveled countries. The
award includes a grant of $8,000, which is used to defray the costs of
developing and administering the programs, and thereby reducing the cost
charged to program participants. Twelve grants are awarded each
year. Last year, UB faculty received three awards, the highest number in
SUNY. With two awards in 2005, UB is again first among SUNY institutions
in terms of the number of awards received. The awards are part of
SUNY System Administration's long-range plan to internationalize the
State University. To that end, OIP created an annual peer-reviewed
competition to award grants system-wide for the development and
implementation of innovative, study-abroad projects. The program
in Romania, which will be conducted principally in Bucharest and Sinaia,
represents a unique opportunity for students to gain hands-on
experiences as participants and practitioners in performing arts
productions, working with counterparts from many other countries who
attend the ITI-UNESCO workshops. Participants will study the
complexity of the international theatre scene during intensive
international drama workshops presented by ITI master teachers.
Students also will discover the distinctive culture of the Balkans while
visiting Bucharest, Northern Moldavia, and Transylvania. Classes will be
in English, although students will be encouraged to familiarize
themselves with Romanian and other languages utilized by their
international peers. Prior to departure, students will take part
in a one-week orientation conducted online. Once in Romania, students
will embark on a one-week study tour of the performing arts in Romania
and neighboring countries. The final two weeks of the program will be
on-site at the International Drama Workshops in Sinaia, Romania.
Horne is an award-winning international master teacher, director,
actor, producer and performing arts judge. Her two main areas of
research are method acting and international performing arts. During the
past two decades, she has presented her artistic and academic work
throughout the United States and in more than 20 countries.
Founding director of the UB's International Artistic and Cultural
Exchange Program (IACE), Horne has fostered a better cultural
understanding at the university by presenting international artists of
multicultural background. Horne also provides UB students and faculty
with learning and cross-cultural research opportunities abroad by making
their participation possible at selected international festivals and
residencies. The engineering program in Thailand will afford
students the opportunity not only to take classes with their Thai
counterparts, but participate together in organized cultural and
recreational activities outside of class, and even live in the same
dormitory. Consequently, this program will provide an exceptionally rich
opportunity for students to develop a deep understanding of contemporary
Thailand and its people, while simultaneously earning credits in
required engineering courses. The program at Chiang Mai builds on
the highly successful short-term programs Mook has conducted in Europe.
In 2003 he launched an innovative engineering program in Troyes, France,
at the Universite de Technologie de Troyes (UTT), a program similar in
many ways to the one in Thailand. This program takes UB engineering
students immediately after the freshman year for an intensive, five-week
study program combining a required engineering course (statics) along
with a required general elective course on European history and culture.
Assistant dean for international education in the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, Mook has published and presented
frequently on international engineering education. His leadership in the
field was recognized by his election as the chair of the Executive
Committee of the Global Engineering Education Exchange (Global-E3), the
largest such organization for engineering student exchanges in the
world, which includes leading institutions in 19 nations, among them
some 35 US member institutions. Faculty and staff who would like
additional information about the Chancellor's Awards for
Internationalization or about developing new study abroad programs may
contact Flash at 645-3912.
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