image title

Grad student's final project marks Pride Month with queer artists' showcase

Grad student's final project 'NQRML' will showcase 8 queer performing artists.
June 16, 2020

'NQRML' to highlight 8 local performers

June is Pride Month, a time to celebrate lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, and an Arizona State University graduate student has put together a virtual showcase of local queer artists to commemorate the month.

Dienae Hunter, a graduate student in the Herberger Institute’s Creative Enterprise and Cultural Leadership program, created “NQRMAL” as their final project to coincide with Pride Month.

Dienae Hunter

The show, which will be livestreamed on Facebook on Friday, June 19, includes eight local performers and is intended to highlight a variety of art forms, said Hunter, who curated the lineup with two performing artists who will emcee the show — Ty Muhammad and Emily Winkler.

“I wanted to make the sure the lineup represented a wide range of creative practices, so I had them reach out to their networks,” Hunter said.

“I wanted to gather a bunch of people I think are talented and show what they’re best at.”

The show will include Sean Avery, who integrates hip-hop, music, poetry and theater to explore black masculinity, as well as drag entertainers Quinnetta Rose, Frankie Fahrenheit and Alexander Stryke, burlesque artist Charlie Sharp, choreographer and dancer Kyara Nycole, and theater artist Sofia Fencken. There also will be a "surprise" performer.

Hunter originally began planning the show before the COVID-19 pandemic hit with the intention of scheduling it during Pride Month. Once they realized that the show could not be performed live, they shifted to a virtual format, which allowed the artists to expand the scope of their performances.

“There was a little bit of scrambling, but now it’s giving them a chance to try something new, like video editing and mixed media, which they couldn’t do if it was a regular, in-person live show,” they said.

Sean Avery

Hunter earned bachelor’s degrees in dance and environmental studies from ASU in 2018, and had been part of the Phoenix-area dance community since high school. Coming out as gay in their senior year of college refocused and energized Hunter to stay in the arts as a career path through a master’s degree in the Creative Enterprise and Cultural Leadership program. Currently they are a staff member at [nueBOX], a Valley based nonprofit that supports emerging artists, and would like to be a curator of live shows.

 “I’ve learned that it’s a weird time to be in the performing arts when we can’t gather in person, and how special an experience it is to go to a show in person,” Hunter said.

“I’ve also learned how important it is to expand your network of people because the artists we chose are people I’ve never met or seen in person but are so talented and I’m so excited to show them.”

“NQRML” will be streamed from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday, June 19, on Facebook Live. The show is free but will accept donations to benefit two groups: Black People’s Justice Fund - Metro Phoenix, and Feed Queer Families Phoenix.

Mary Beth Faller

Reporter , ASU Now

480-727-4503

New disability studies certificates bring fresh opportunities to ASU community

School of Social Transformation has established an undergraduate, graduate certificate in disability studies for fall 2020


June 16, 2020

Arizona State University's School of Social Transformation has established an undergraduate and a graduate certificate in disability studies that promotes a new understanding of contemporary culture, not only for the disabled, but for society as well. These programs will be accepting students for the fall 2020 semester.

These certificates provide a socially embedded, intersectional overview of this emerging discipline: its history, culture, politics, philosophy and key concepts; its impact on services and supports to people with dis/abilities; its importance in disability research; and its influence in the formation of public policies. Students travel along Palm Walk Download Full Image

ASU Now spoke with ASU’s Annamaria Oliverio, lecturer at the School of Social Transformation, Beth Blue Swadener, School of Social Transformation professor, and Terri Hlava, School of Social Transformation faculty associate, to learn a little more about these new certificates coming to ASU in fall 2020.

Question: What inspired the creation of these certificates?

Oliverio: It was more a matter of serendipity for me. Since 2012, I’ve been working in the community as a music therapist with clients who have diverse abilities, yet consistently revealed the many barriers they confronted in their everyday lives, disabling them from reaching their full potential. Meanwhile, in the School of Social Transformation, Dr. Mary-Margaret Fonow and Dr. Beth Blue Swadener were in the process of elevating awareness and early planning for certificates by hosting workshops, symposia and building curricula surrounding disability issues. Knowing about my music therapy background, Dr. Fonow asked if I was interested in designing and teaching a new undergraduate class on disability as well as creating two new certificates in disability studies. In collaboration with Dr. Swadener, who has long worked in disability advocacy and inclusive education, we decided to conduct meetings that included students, faculty, activists and leaders from the disability community in order to build a robust program that would include not only academic objectives, but also represent the diverse-ability communities’ needs. Dr. Terri Hlava and her dogs, Copper and Shay, came to our meetings, further providing their knowledge, expertise and lived experience. From diverse backgrounds, we coalesced, inspired each other and collaborated.       

Q: How are these certificates different from other disability studies certificates or degrees?

Oliverio: Our certificates are designed with ASU’s motto in mind that is, “we define ourselves by who we include not exclude.” Elective class options are not only interdisciplinary, but also universitywide, so that students from other fields of interest can learn and apply a disability studies approach to their related career from business to humanities, music to health care, engineering to design. Because we began this process of building the certificates by conducting meetings with diverse community members, students and faculty, asking what they would like to see and learn about in the program, the curriculum includes and reflects a richly diverse and applied perspective. Maintaining associations with local community organizations is essential as students in the program can choose to conduct applied projects or individualized studies that expose them directly to advocacy opportunities and policy initiatives. The disability community is as diverse as each individual. Our intent is to cast as broad a net as possible to capture and continue building upon the range of this diversity.    

Q: What skills will students acquire?

Oliverio/Swadener: The undergraduate disability studies certificate program promotes a new understanding of contemporary culture not only for persons with diverse abilities but also for their communities and society. The insidious ways in which ableism is structured into society and culture both globally and locally is a major focus. Students will acquire skills in understanding the dynamics of ableism — pertaining to visible and invisible disabilities across many aspects of society. They will also gain skills in research methods, critical policy and media analysis, teaching, advocacy, activism and much more. When you consider the opportunities for choosing electives for the universitywide certificates, skills could include those from nearly any discipline (subject to approval).

The disability-studies perspective challenges social constructions of disability through the voices of diversely-abled cultures who are disabled by barriers that exist in society. Students are critically challenged to reject simplistic definitions of disability as a restrictive, functional impairment that requires “fixing” or “curing.” It examines media portrayals, cultural stereotypes, institutional abuse, violent histories, offensive public policies and school inclusion/exclusions through the lived experiences and perspectives of people with disabilities and their families in the community. 

The graduate disability studies certificate program is designed for students who want to further deepen their understanding of structural ableism and intersectional perspective on disability in society. Students pursuing this certificate will become knowledgeable, flexible professionals, change agents, researchers, educators and advocates by critically addressing diverse intersectional experiences; quality of life and justice issues; field-based applications; policy and disability rights movements; and research for ongoing learning and writing. This program emphasizes the creation of new knowledge and consequent practical implications. Students will enhance their advanced degrees with research skills, concepts, methodologies and theoretical perspectives that support much-needed, creative research that they can apply within their own fields.

Q: What career opportunities are available for students who decide to apply?

Oliverio: A disability studies certificate can benefit a number of diverse professions including, but certainly not limited to:

• Protection and advocacy, nonprofit agencies.
• Rehabilitation sciences (speech and hearing, kinesiology).
• Parent education, consulting and information centers.
• State and local disabilities agencies.
• Self-advocacy associations.
• Community and family support agencies.
• University or college offices for students, with disabilities and transition centers.
• Independent living centers.
• Senior research and training positions at university-affiliated programs, research and training centers, and private research and policy institutes.
• K-12 education.
• Human services.
• Social work.
• Health care.
• Assisted living centers.
• Gerontology institutes.

Q: Why is it important to have these types of certificates?

Hlava: The certificate program fills a niche for people who want a specific set of skills for their work, advocacy — including self-advocacy — or other interests that reflect intersectional perspectives linking dis/ability to race, class, gender, sexual orientation and other identities and experiences. While many ASU students are aware of civil rights and other social movements, fewer are aware of the rich history of the disability rights movement. Completed in only 15 credit hours, with many options for electives, students can acquire highly relevant knowledge and put it into practice quickly, making the experience affordable too.

Oliverio: Over the past eight years, students from different disciplines, as well as students within the School of Social Transformation, have expressed the desire to focus their work on the area of disability from a socially embedded, interdisciplinary approach in order to increase their marketability and desirability in the workplace including careers in government, law, advocacy, education, health and human welfare, social work and entrepreneurship.

Q: What benefits will the new certificates bring to the ASU community?

Swadener: Reflecting ASU’s mission to be inclusive, these certificate programs further enhance this goal and reflect national and international scholarship in this transdisciplinary field. The ASU community is very diverse; therefore, curriculum programs and degrees need to keep up with the academic and practical needs of our diverse university community. This includes both course offerings as well as pedagogical approaches. A theme drawn from earlier disability rights movements of “nothing about us without us” also pervades the program. The collaborative nature of these certificates across university campuses emulates the necessity for continued, sustainable, interdependent relationships fostered by individuals and organizations both from within and beyond the university environment.

Hlava: The certificates will bring students to the ASU community, and these students will be scholars who are interested in working with the largest minority in the world, the only minority that anyone can join at any time — through accident, injury, trauma, age, illness, poverty. This dynamic will enhance ASU’s diversity, and good comes from diversity on college campuses — good in terms of greater understanding and good in terms of lessening prejudice and increasing cooperation and collaboration.

Enrique Martin Palacios

Communications and Marketing Coordinator, School of Social Transformation, The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

480-965-6432

 
image title

'To Be Welcoming' curriculum offers tools to counteract bias

June 16, 2020

Free Starbucks online courses, developed at ASU, strive to foster empathy, understanding

Editor’s note:  This story is being highlighted in ASU Now’s year in review. Read more top stories from 2020.

The current protests over police killings and racial injustice has left many people with a hunger to learn more about inequality and to try to do better. America’s best-seller lists and TV shows are addressing the tragic results of racism.

Two years ago, Starbucks asked Arizona State University to develop an online curriculum for all Starbucks employees that is intended to drive reflection and conversation on the topic of bias. 

Now Starbucks is making those courses available to the public at no cost.

The curriculum, a set of 15 modules, is called “To Be Welcoming” and was rolled out in September 2019. 

The interactive courses were created by ASU faculty experts to share research and information that can help people to think about how they view the world and to consider how other people experience it. 

“We’re encouraging people to ask questions and as an educational institution, that’s the heart of what we do,” said Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy, director of the Center for Indian Education and President’s Professor in the School of Social Transformation. He led the project for ASU.

“The hope is for people to think about things from a perspective of curiosity and wonder, and try to understand how other people might feel and to be able to engage in conversations that aren’t always easy,” said Brayboy, who is special adviser to ASU President Michael Crow for American Indian affairs.

ASU and Starbucks have a long-standing partnership that began in 2014, with the inception of the Starbucks College Achievement Plan, a first-of-its-kind program with 100% tuition coverage for all U.S. retail Starbucks partners admitted to ASU to complete their first bachelor’s degree. As of May 2020, more than 4,500 Starbucks partners graduated through the program, with over 16,000 currently working toward their degree with ASU. 

In May 2018, Starbucks closed its doors across United States for an afternoon, so partners could participate in anti-bias training. The afternoon closure was in response to an incident in April that same year, when a Starbucks manager in Philadelphia called the police over two black men who were waiting in a store. That episode led to accusations of racism, which prompted the companywide training. But Starbucks decided to do more and reached out to ASU to create “To Be Welcoming.”

To Be Welcoming logo

Everyone who works at Starbucks can take “To Be Welcoming”, although it’s not required. Each module includes several sections with videos, interactive exercises, quizzes, a glossary and resources for further study. Everyone starts with the “foundational” course, which covers key elements of the curriculum that apply to all courses, and then may take the remaining 14 courses in any order.

The curriculum covers a wide range of biases that can be experienced by different groups of people: gender, race, age, disability, religion, nationality, sexuality, class, political culture, American Indian/Alaskan Native, Hispanic/Latino, black/African American, Arab/Middle Eastern and Asian American/Pacific Islander.

“The foundational course defines what dialogue is and some areas that prevent us from having it productively,” Brayboy said.

For example, “political correctness” is discussed as a term that often is used to avoid meaningful conversation about ways that groups of people are excluded or oppressed.

The topic of bias can be uncomfortable, said Ersula Ore, who reviewed and helped create the coursework on racism. Ore is the Lincoln Professor of Ethics in the School of Social Transformation and associate professor of African and African American studies and rhetoric at ASU.

“These are hard conversations to have,” she said. “Part of it is that students don’t know what to say and are scared to say anything because they don’t want to be ‘tripped up’ and ultimately perceived to be guilty of bias.

“My job as a reviewer was to anticipate the audience, and to consider the questions and issues that individuals might stumble over as they completed modules. For instance, What is a microaggression? What is the difference between the terms racism and prejudice?”

In one of the course videos, Ore discusses how past acts of racism are directly related to contemporary racism.

“There’s a level of detail you have to provide in order for the audience to be grounded, and I help them to make that connection,” she said.

The courses were reviewed several times. After the ASU faculty experts created the content, it was reviewed by other experts at ASU, and then sent to peer experts at other institutions. The goal was for the classes to be clear, concise and accessible to a broad range of people — and not written too academically.

It also was reviewed by faculty and administrators who are ideologically conservative, including Matt Salmon, vice president for government affairs at ASU.

“There’s a perception out there by a lot of conservatives that universities are monolithic in their thinking and that it’s just liberal ideology and there isn’t any tolerance for other viewpoints,” said Salmon, who is a former five-term U.S. congressman. 

“This process showed me that that’s just bunk. At this university, there’s a real desire not to just put out a product but to get it right.”

Salmon said the revision process was open and collaborative, much like the way people must confront sensitive issues of bias.

“It will take open-mindedness and willingness to say things that might feel offensive,” he said.

“But if you tiptoe on eggshells, you’ll never get to the bottom of it.”

The coursework encourages personal reflection. For example, the foundational module includes a journaling exercise in which participants are asked to write about a time they felt personally affected by national hatred, or, if they never were affected that way, the reasons why not.

It was a challenge for ASU faculty members to boil down their broad expertise into modules that can be completed in less than an hour, according to Jessica Solyom, associate research professor in the School of Social Transformation at ASU, who studies diversity, belonging and justice. She co-curated the content with Brayboy.

“For example, we have 30 minutes to talk about American Indians and Alaskan Natives, but there are over 570 federally recognized tribes in the U.S. with an abundance of different indigenous languages, histories and challenges,” Solyom said.

“We would not have been doing right by the communities we were writing about if we didn’t acknowledge the diversity within the group and offer further opportunities for learning and engagement on that.”

So while the coursework in each module can be completed in less than an hour, students can access many more resources to thoroughly explore each topic.

One key component of “To Be Welcoming” leads learners to think beyond individual acts of racism, like what happened to the men in Philadelphia. The foundational module discusses a “bias quadrant” — bias by individuals that is conscious or unconscious and bias that is systemic, at the government or institutional level, that is conscious or unconscious.

“Often, when corporations talk about bias, they focus the conversations and the potential solutions at the individual level. But bias is so much more complex than that,” Solyom said.

“How do our individual-level biases contribute to systems that also silence or discriminate against particular communities or groups?”

Another important concept is intersectionality — how people’s lives are shaped by more than one identity. For example, black women have different experiences than white women and black men.

Mako Fitts Ward, a clinical assistant professor and faculty head of ASU’s African and African American Studies program, is an expert in the study of intersectionality.  

“The courses are grounded in an intersectional approach to engaging bias and microaggressions, in all of their forms. If you’re taking the course on gender you can’t only address gender with no discussion of how race, sexuality and other identity groups impact the experiences faced by different people,” said Ward, who worked closely with Marlon M. Bailey, an associate professor of women and gender studies, on the content. 

“The videos are an important aspect of the series. We wanted them to be inclusive and to reflect the voices and perspectives of women across all groups in terms of class, workplace experience, sexual identity, race, ethnicity and culture,” she said. 

The goal is for everyone to see themselves. 

“People will find content that allows them to see their own experiences represented and by people from different backgrounds who reflect those experiences,” Ward said.

Karen Taliaferro, an assistant professor in the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, reviewed and contributed to the course on national origin. She hopes that students reflect on what it means for Americans to be “one nation.”

“We are a unique country, historically speaking, because we were never made up of one ethnic group or immigrants from one nation only,” she said.

“So our country is very much what we Americans — coming from our rich array of ethnic and geographical backgrounds — make of it, together.”

Taliaferro wants students to see the inherent dignity and value of people they disagree with. And she’s hopeful. 

“I hope that they see some real good in our country that we can continue to build on,” she said.

“There is no denying that as a society, we face very real, and serious, challenges, but I think that those aspects of our country in which we can and should take real pride are often disguised behind headlines that tend to divide us. 

“I hope that this project will help us all build on those more promising aspects, and do so in ways that reflect empathy and respect for our neighbors.”

Learn more about the "To Be Welcoming" curriculum or take a course

Mary Beth Faller

Reporter , ASU Now

480-727-4503

 
image title

Experts worry pandemic could increase 'play inequity' in youth sports

Youth sports coaches need training on inclusion, bias, experts tell ASU panel.
June 16, 2020

ASU panel discusses how time away, high costs might lower participation

As Americans warily begin to reengage during the COVID-19 pandemic, parents are having to weigh the risks and benefits of returning their kids to team competition. A panel of experts sponsored by the Global Sport Institute at Arizona State University last week expressed concerns that the societal shutdown this spring may worsen inequities in the world of youth sports.

Eric Legg researches youth sports as an assistant professor in the School of Community Resources and Development at ASU. He sees two possibilities when youth sports start to resume.

“I’m hearing people talk that this is an opportunity for a reset, a chance to go back to localized, community-based sports, and that people won’t want to spend big money to travel,” he said.

“This is a chance to get back to the primary purpose of sports, which is to be life-skills development.”

But he sees another possibility.

“What I fear will happen is that it actually will exacerbate the haves and have-nots,” he said.

“The folks who have the resources to take the precautions continue on and those who don’t are left out.”

And it might be worse for girls, according to Ahada McCummings, national director for strategic partnerships for the Up2Us Sports organization. She said that girls already drop out of sports at twice the rate of boys, especially at ages 13 and 14.

“My pressing concern is that with the pandemic happening, and the protests happening, and all the stressors … girls will drop off at a higher rate,” she said.

“They’ve been gone and they’re not attached to their sports. Will they get to a point of, ‘I need to get back to my sport’ or will they say, ‘I have other stuff and I’m going that route’?”

A full return for all kids in youth leagues is likely not imminent across the country as many counties remain in at least partial shutdown. Also, a recent poll by the Global Sport Institute asked whether parents would allow their children to return to their organized sport, and 62% said they would not due to concerns of catching COVID-19, while 63% said that they wouldn't allow their child to return until there was a vaccine.

Bobby Dulle, general manager for the Phoenix Rising Football Club, said his organization’s youth soccer teams have started phasing in optional practices. He said the key is lots of communication and flexibility.

“Sometimes they have to go to different locations. Sometimes the parents can’t get out of the car,” he said.

Coaches wear masks, players don’t share balls or pinnies and the field is marked off in a 10-foot-by-10-foot grid to keep kids apart. After two weeks of individual work, the players are now practicing in groups of four.

“We can’t get too far ahead of ourselves,” he said. “We can’t say, ‘This is what it will look like in September.’”

Up2Us Sports has developed an online curriculum for coaches to keep girls engaged in sports, McCummings said, adding that while maintaining activity is important, the real value for girls is relationships.

“Their relationship to their teammates and more importantly, their relationship to their coach, matters," she said.

“Girls need to be part of a team culture that says, ‘My development matters as well. I may not be the best player, but I have the opportunity to participate and contribute,’” she said.

Youth coaches also need to be trained to deal with racism in the sport, the experts said.

Scott Brooks, director of research for the Global Sport Institute and moderator of the panel, studies “everyday racism” in sports, such as pushing young black football players away from trying out for quarterback.

“It’s looking at microaggresions and unequal applications of rules and standards,” he said. “Sometimes coaches come up with rules that only apply to particular people.”

That’s why the adults need to be deliberate about making sure that young players are reaping the benefits of youth sports, said Brooks, who also is an associate professor with the T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics.

“We can’t just pretend that throwing them on the field with balls automatically leads to good outcomes,” he said.

McCummings said that Up2Us Sports offers “trauma-informed” training for coaches.

“This is so important in black and brown communities,” she said. “We want coaches to be able to identify what trauma is and what those stressors are, and also work with students so we’re not just focusing on bad behavior but focusing on what they’re dealing with.”

Renata Simril, president and CEO of the LA84 Foundation, told the panel that her organization works to provide the health and socioemotional benefits of sports to kids in underserved communities. LA84 was founded with money left over from the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles and has trained more than 80,000 coaches.

“Our work is about helping to create the conditions for kids to succeed — positive mentoring, the opportunity to develop resiliency and grit, and making the connection between hard work and success using sports,” she said.

The LA84 Foundation’s #PlayEquity initiative helps to provide access to sports regardless of family income, said Simril, who played sports in middle school and at parks.

“Those opportunities aren’t a bygone conclusion now like they were for me,” she said. “There’s been a disinvestment in school-based sports.”

Legg said that research has shown that the rising cost of youth sports is driving inequity.

“The Aspen Institute shows that families report spending an average of $700 per child, per sport,” he said. “What this means is that for families with incomes over $150,000, there’s 40% participation, and for families with incomes of less than $25,000, you have 20% participation.”

The disinvestment in youth sports goes back decades, he said.

“It started in the 1980s, with this ‘government is bad, private enterprise is better,’ so we divested from youth sports in parks and recreation and community organizations, and into that gap rushed private organizations,” he said. “Many are doing great work. However, with that you get rising costs, and travel costs.”

Top image from Pixabay

Mary Beth Faller

Reporter , ASU Now

480-727-4503

 
image title

Living with a disability during a pandemic

About 4%-5% of ASU students have registered as disabled.
Disabilities can be both visible and invisible.
June 12, 2020

ASU experts, students on how the COVID-19 crisis is affecting members of the disabled community

Editor’s note:  This story is being highlighted in ASU Now’s year in review. Read more top stories from 2020.

Editor’s note: While this article attempts to shed light on how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting members of the disabled community, it is by no means intended to be comprehensive in representing everyone that includes.

Arizona State University sociologists agree: The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed a number of inequalities in our society related to race, gender, class, legal status and age. However, conspicuously missing from much of the media coverage on these issues are the stories of how the crisis is affecting the disabled community.

At ASU, the number of students registering with the Disability Resource Center has more than doubled in the last five years, with more than 5,600 students registered in 2019. However, at about 4% to 5% of the total population of students, that number is likely low; most statistics put the number of individuals who identify as someone with a disability in the United States at anywhere from 12% to 19%.

That’s a lot of stories going untold. And it can feel even more isolating when someone’s disability is “invisible,” something the Disability Resource Center recently addressed with the introduction of its Access Zone program, a series of training workshops designed to increase faculty and staff awareness of all disabilities, including invisible conditions like anxiety, dyslexia or autism.

Over the past couple of years, the number of students at ASU on the autism spectrum has increased from about 40 students to a couple hundred. College of Health Solutions Assistant Professor B. Blair Braden runs the Autism Brain Aging Laboratory at ASU and has been working with individuals with autism for about a decade. She said that one of the biggest ways the pandemic is likely affecting them is the disruption of their routine.

“Routine is very important to most autistic individuals,” she said. “It’s almost embedded in the diagnostic criteria. The theory is that it’s a coping strategy for managing anxiety. And right now, all of our routines have been completely turned upside down, which is hard enough for the average person, never mind someone who’s overall sense of well-being relies on it.”

Haley Tenore, a journalism and mass communication undergrad and president of the student club Autistics on Campus said when she found out campus was being closed for the rest of the spring semester, she began having panic attacks.

“I like school a lot because of the structure it gives me, and knowing exactly what I am doing every day of the week,” she said. “I remember when classes went online, I began struggling to wake up in time for my Zoom lectures and struggling to meet deadlines that I normally would remember.”

Tenore also reported having trouble maintaining social relationships during isolation, something Braden acknowledged is often another challenge for individuals with autism.

“The loss of social connection for a group who already struggles with social connection is probably going to have a big effect,” Braden said. “On the flip side, when you get into older autistic communities — teens and adults — a lot of them already have social networks established on the internet.”

That has been the case for W. P. Carey School of Business accounting senior and fellow Autistics on Campus member Ryan Arnold.

“I am currently Zooming with a bunch of friends and family members this week while I am off from school for the summer,” he told ASU Now in early May. Yet like Tenore, he said his level of anxiety has also increased over the uncertainty of the coronavirus situation.

According to Assistant Clinical Professor of psychology Matthew Meier, it’s not unusual for those who already experience anxiety and depression to be having an even harder time managing their conditions right now.

“If you already had anxiety or depression, this is really intensifying the symptoms,” Meier said. “If you’re already worried about germs, or tend to be worried about worst-case scenarios, then there’s so much fodder for you right now in the media and just in general. If you have depression and have struggled with isolation and lack of social connectedness or getting out of bed, it’s even worse for that as well. Because even if you do force yourself to get out of bed, there’s nowhere to go.”

He said two of the best things someone experiencing an increase in anxiety or depression can do are to try to stick to a routine and to reach out for help. Currently, Meier is supervising clinical psychology doctoral students who are providing telehealth to community members and students through ASU’s Clinical Psychology Center, a training facility for graduate students. It offers affordable services based on income, and students pay only $15 per session.

ASU student Adam SmithName changed to protect the student's identity, at his request. has experienced generalized anxiety for 10 years. When the pandemic took hold, he was in the process of completing two major papers and preparing for an exam. Immediately, he began to worry about his productivity, so he reached out to a counselor online.

“That has been really helpful,” he said. “Having someone to talk to about what productivity means during this pandemic. Maybe not doing something one day is productive because it can help you to become motivated again or just to relax. Self care is part of productivity.”

In addition to spikes in anxiety and depression in response to sudden crises, Meier said that psychologists also see spikes in intimate partner violence and substance use.

“In general, we know people use substances to cope with stress and anxiety, as well as to deal with boredom,” he said. “The majority of people can use recreationally and not have any problems. But when you don’t have to go to work the next day, it’s really easy to slowly increase your usage. In general, there’s enough structure in most people’s lives to correct that, but there’s such a lack of structure for everyone right now.”

But Meier feels that overall, the mental health field has done a good job of continuing to meet clients’ needs with the help of technology, and that includes resources available at ASU, such as Recovery Rising, which, along with a number of other tools provided by Live Well at ASU, have begun to offer programs via Zoom.

For some, though, technology doesn’t solve all their problems. ASU alumna Fernanda Navarrete has been deaf since she was 4 years old. Though she wears a cochlear implant that helps somewhat, she still struggles to hear well on the phone, and has missed messages about doctor appointments being rescheduled as a result.

School of International Letters and Cultures Lecturer Hannah Cheloha has worked as a sign language interpreter for 20 years and used to interpret classes for Navarrete when she was a student at Mesa Community College.

“I don’t want to speak for the deaf community, but one of the frustrations I’ve seen circulating on social media and online forums has to do with having a hard time understanding people wearing masks,” Cheloha said. “Sometimes people that are hearing aren’t very sympathetic about it.”

Navarrete confirmed that impression: “I do have trouble with lip reading and masks,” she said via email. “I just have to remind (people) to talk slow so I can completely understand.”

Cheloha suggested communicating via smartphone by typing out what you’re trying to say without having to remove your mask, or even just writing it on a piece of paper. And remember to be patient.

“I would say that there definitely needs to be more patience and understanding,” Navarrete agreed.

Another issue for the deaf community is captions. Navarrete has had trouble with YouTube videos specifically, as not all of them have captions. The same is sometimes true for local and national news media.

“Every single day there’s news coming out with new announcements and sometimes the captions are nonexistent or not accurate,” Cheloha said. “So people don’t have access to information that could be lifesaving. Also, interpreters at press conferences are sometimes too far in the background or off the screen completely.”

Similar issues exist in the blind community, as reported by The New Yorker in an April 28 article that relayed concerns about the tactile nature of a communication system such as Braille in a world where touch is suddenly taboo.

And then there are those with mobility issues, immunocompromised individuals and countless others whose daily struggles during this time are known only to them. Taking all this into consideration, ASU professors and linguists Matthew Prior and Patricia Friedrich argue we also need to be reflecting on our use of language when discussing these issues.

“Our conversations are full of language where we use difference and disability to raise some people up and put others down,” Prior said. “For example, we might say, ‘Are you deaf or something?’ to point out someone’s failure to understand … Often when people use such language, they do so metaphorically or figuratively, not literally or intending to mock people with physical and mental disabilities. Nevertheless, it always conveys negative meanings. And to those whose bodies, minds, identities and experiences are reduced to insults and jokes, ableist language is yet another reminder of the social stigma and invisibility they negotiate daily.”

Friedrich — who along with Associate Professor Theresa Devine and Professor Majia Nadesan, launched a new disabilities studies degree program last fall — encouraged empathy and innovation in the name of a more equitable outcome for everyone.

“Awareness of these challenges should cause us to ensure we take care of one another and try to create space and innovative ways of interaction,” she said.

Top photo courtesy of iStock

Resources

 
image title

ASU supports #ShutDownSTEM

June 10, 2020

University deans' statement: Grassroots effort is a powerful call to action to eradicate anti-black racism in academia and STEM

Editor’s note:  This story is being highlighted in ASU Now’s year in review. Read more top stories from 2020.

Discrimination knows no boundaries. Unfortunately, the fields of STEM are no exception. STEM fields have been plagued by structural and systemic forces that have been highlighted by recent events. For us, these forces result in discrimination, blocked opportunities, silenced voices and narrow perspectives within our disciplines that ultimately limit our progress as a society. We are at a critical juncture where we must address and rectify the issues of systemic discrimination and social injustice. This is salient not only in public life and law enforcement, which are currently drawing much needed attention, but as it relates to STEM fields as well.

Arizona State University acknowledges and supports #ShutDownSTEM, a grassroots effort of transitioning “to a lifelong commitment of actions to eradicate anti-black racism in academia and STEM.” That is a powerful and important call to action, and one that resonates at ASU because of our charter and that our university measures itself “not by whom it excludes, but by whom it includes and how they succeed.” This includes people of all races, ethnicities, abilities, genders and sexual orientations; anyone with capability who desires to pursue and succeed in their field of choice.

Because of that focus, we have made much progress in STEM fields at ASU. Since the 2008-2009 academic year, the number of students receiving STEM degrees has increased 166%. Although a positive indicator, we need to do more. Among our growing body of STEM students, specific segments remain underrepresented. In fall 2019, for example, of the total number of students enrolled in STEM disciplines, 3.9% identified as black students, 37.4% as female students and 33.1% as other underrepresented students.

Many studies have shown there is no shortage of diversity among students enrolling in STEM programs. In this case, the issue is retention. A common reason black students and other underrepresented students leave STEM majors is they do not feel welcomed, seen and supported. This is damaging to STEM fields, our institutions and society at large. We need to play a more active role in full inclusion of black and other underrepresented STEM students. Students need to feel a sense of community and belonging; they need to believe that faculty care about their success. They need us to be allies.

Today, June 10, is #ShutDownSTEM and an opportunity for all of us in STEM disciplines and academia in general to take time to focus on eliminating anti-black racism. We would like to encourage our community to participate through self-education, listening, reflection and discussion with colleagues and students. A suggested set of resources that can bring those issues to life can be found below. We welcome ideas that emerge from these conversations so that we can advance them together.

STEM fields present plenty of challenges in terms of the curricula, concepts and ideas that require mastery. STEM with walls around it is nearly impossible to surmount. Let’s make sure we work together to eliminate racial inequities and support black students, faculty and staff to pursue their dreams and their goals wherever they may lie. All of us, our disciplines and the world will be better for it.

— co-signed by deans Kyle Squires, Duane Roen, Nancy Gonzales, Todd Sandrin, Steven Tepper, Pat Kenney, Chris Boone, Pardis Mahdavi, Elizabeth Wentz, Judith Karshmer, Deborah Helitzer, Carole Basile, Amy Hillman, Mark Jacobs, Jonathan Koppell and Sanjeev Khagram, director Dave Guston, vice provost Sukhwant Jhaj and university librarian Jim O'Donnell 

Resources

  • LaShyra Nolan's article “This is what I want to tell my white professors when they ask, ‘How are you today?’” on HuffPost.
  • Bryan Dewsbury and Mays Imad's virtual book club on Ibram X. Kendi's book "How to Be an Antiracist" and how to enact its principles in teaching.
  • Jamilah Pitts' article "Don’t say nothing" on the Teaching Tolerance website
  • Five things educators can do to address bias in their school (written with K-12 in mind, but the recommendations also apply to college teaching) on the NEA EdJustice website
  • "Avoiding unrecognized racist implications arising from teaching genetics," by Mike Klymkowsky, on the Bioliteracy website
  • "What black faculty need from our white and Asian allies," by Nina T. Harawa, on Inside Higher Ed
  • "Race matters," by David Asai, on Cell Press
  • "White privilege: Unpacking the invisible knapsack," by Peggy McIntosh, on the American College Personnel Association website
  • "The American nightmare," by Ibram X. Kendi, in The Atlantic
  • "75 things white people can do for racial justice," by Corinne Shutack, on Medium.
  • "Scientists push against barriers to diversity in the field sciences," by John Pickrell, on Science
  • ASU’s Advance Program on equity, inclusion, diversity and belonging.

Photo by iStock

 
image title

Is defunding the police a good idea?

June 8, 2020

ASU expert says taking a closer look at police budgets and emphasizing community-based programming is sound thinking

“Defund the police” has been a popular rallying cry at recent protests across the nation.

Originated by the Black Lives Matter movement and police reform activists, the slogan was introduced to the public last week and is quickly picking up steam with politicians, city councils and mayors throughout the country.

But what does it really mean? Do away with the police altogether? Severely slash their budgets? Or using police funds to set up or bolster existing social programs revolving around education, prevention and community-based activities? And is it a good idea or an overreaction?

Kevin Robinson, a lecturer in Arizona State University's School of Criminology and Criminal Justice and a retired police officer, spoke to ASU about the idea.

Man in suit holding microphone

Kevin Robinson

Question: Out of the George Floyd protests has emerged a call to “defund the police.” What is your initial knee-jerk response to that?

Answer: My initial response to such a rallying cry is that it’s misguided: a better, more appropriate term would be “re-allocation” of portions/segments of police department budgets. Realistically speaking, the tightening of a police department’s budget is not a bad idea. A thorough review of what it is spending its money on is always warranted. Program effectiveness should be the determining factor as to whether or not a program continues into the following budget year/cycle. Programs that are effective in helping to attain the overall department’s mission should be renewed; if a program is lacking in its overall effectiveness, it should be curtailed.  

Q: You managed a half-billion-dollar budget for the Phoenix Police Department for three years. How tight are those budgets and what should the public know?

A: Most budgets are fairly tight because of all of the fixed costs. The largest portion of any police department budget are its personnel costs. Consider the equipment that it takes to outfit a police officer, the constant training that's required to reduce liability, and besides an officer's salary there are the fringe benefits that must be contractually maintained. We, the Phoenix Police Department/city of Phoenix, used a blend between a line item budget and a zero-based budget, which allowed for flexibility in some situations and a more rigid adherence to the budget in other. Another “fixed” cost that exists that people don't always think about, but is very costly, is vehicle maintenance. Consider the following; an average patrol car in an average police department logs about 65,000 miles per year, then consider wear and tear on the tires, oil changes, battery replacements and any other miscellaneous problems that might occur in a vehicle that's used 16 to 18 hours a day, seven days a week. It gets very expensive, and that's just for the vehicles.

Q: What did you think of Los Angeles’ recent decision to cut $150 million from its $3 billion police department budget to divert to social programs? 

A: L.A.’s decision to cut up to $150 million from the LAPD budget will require a thorough vetting of each and every program, unit, bureau and division within the department. It’s not that it can’t be done, it’s just that something will have to give in order for the city to make such an adjustment. Based on what I read about the proposal, the police chief is pushing back, explaining that he believes everything in their budget is vital. Ultimately, if the decision is made to take that out of the LAPD budget, the chief and his staff will have to figure out where to make the adjustments. Possibilities would probably include, but are not limited to, the reduction of the flight hours of its helicopter fleet, reduce hiring by a certain percentage for the upcoming year(s), discontinue investigating traffic accidents that don’t result in serious injury, or discontinue responding to residential burglar alarms. Each of these possibilities would free up monies or manpower — less work, less officers are needed — that could go towards the stated $150 million dollars. Like I said, it can be accomplished, but at what price?

Q: Do social programs aimed at youth and adults in reducing criminality work, and do they go hand-in-hand with police work?

A: Studies have shown, and my personal experience has demonstrated, that effective social programs can reduce criminality in adults and juveniles. One example, after-school programs have proven to be successful in keeping young people out of trouble by offering an alternative, usually a safe, supervised environment during the hours that juveniles are likely to commit or become a victim of a violent crime. It’s about giving a vulnerable population positive options.

Anecdotally speaking, the Phoenix Police Department had a Police Activities League (PAL) program for years in several low-income areas. The Police Department partnered with the city Parks and Recreation Department, school districts and businesses to deliver this alternative. Kids in these neighborhoods had a place to go to after school, get tutoring, help with schoolwork, in some cases get a healthy meal and engage in various activities while interacting with police officers in a positive environment. In the areas and times that these programs were in existence, we experienced a downward trend in juvenile-related crime and victimization while these programs were in place and fully operational.

Q: What is the impact going to be on communities if police departments are defunded going forward?

A: The impact will be notable, if not profound. Dependent upon the size of the “defund” and what is eliminated, because that’s what will have to be done, decisions will have to be made which services will cease to be the responsibility of law enforcement. Crimes are usually committed by individuals who weigh the possibility of getting caught — when the likelihood of getting arrested is high, the likelihood of the crime being committed is low. So, conversely, if there is a low likelihood of apprehension there will be more crimes committed — more people victimized.

Q: What would your suggestion be in regard to incorporating social programs with police work?

A: My suggestion to incorporating social programs with police work — the more the better. What most social programs offer is an alternative, and if early intervention is a way to reduce/eliminate crime, it should be the goal of every police department in the country to engage further in such programs.

Top photo by iStock/Getty Images

Reporter , ASU Now

480-727-5176

 
image title

Coaching through calamity

June 5, 2020

5 black coaches discuss leadership in troubled times at Global Sport Institute panel

Coaches around the country were already comforting student-athletes who saw their seasons cut short when recent killings of black people and the subsequent protests over systemic racism in America added to their anguish. Five black coaches described how they have been guiding their teams through several difficult weeks at a June 5 panel titled, “Coaching in the New Normal,” sponsored by the Global Sport Institute at Arizona State University.

Lou Richie, the boys’ basketball coach at Bishop O’Dowd High School in Oakland, California, consoled his players through multiple tragedies. The team had won 18 games in a row and were two games away from winning the state championship when the state shut down. Then, the sister of one of the players died by suicide. 

“We had to bring them together and show care and love,” he said. “How do you mourn during COVID-19?”

The team held an end-of-the-year meeting on Zoom last week.

“It was very healing and therapeutic for us to see each other,” he said, noting that the players told him they wanted to join the protests after their meeting.

“I wanted everybody to stay social-distanced and to stay safe, but I tell them all the time to have an intentional strategy,” he said.

Coaching in the New Normal Zoom panel

The Global Sport Institute webinar series presented "Coaching in the New Normal" on Friday, June 5. The institute's director of research, Scott Brooks (top left), moderated the panel that featured (clockwise from top middle) Venessa Jacobs, head volleyball coach at Southern University; Kerrick Jackson, head baseball coach at Southern University; Lou Richie, Bishop O'Dowd High School boys' basketball coach; Geoff Arnold, assistant coach for men's basketball at Rider University; and Dawn Staley, South Carolina women's basketball coach. Screenshot by Charlie Leight/ASU Now

Some of the coaches said that it was important for their players to express their feelings to each other on Zoom and to think twice about posting on social media.

Venessa Jacobs, the head volleyball coach at Southern University, said her student-athletes are angry about the death of George Floyd, the man killed last month by a police officer in Minneapolis. The outrage over Floyd’s death prompted local protests that have spread nationwide.

“My job is to listen to them. I’ve always taught them that what you put on social media, you can’t get back,” she said.

“I want them to express themselves when they’re angry in a safe circle.”

Like Richie, she encouraged safe and peaceful protesting.

“I tell them, ‘You have a purpose in life and your passion will lead you to that purpose.’”

Dawn Staley, head coach of the University of South Carolina women’s basketball team, said she prepares her students for reactions they might face.

“Their knee-jerk reaction is to post something on social media, and I’m OK with them using their voice, but sometimes young people don’t understand,” she said.

“We’re in the South with a predominantly black team. We’re in South Carolina, which has a rich history of racism. I told them to understand that people may not agree and align with your voice so you have to be ready for a response that is not in your favor. You have to arm yourself with the knowledge about what you’re voicing so you can clap back.”

Staley faced that backlash herself after writing about her heartbreak over the killings of black people in the Players Tribune, saying she said she understood the anger behind the rioting. 

“Some people took that one sentence,” she said. “You have someone on a radio show who dedicated a whole segment to, ‘I Disagree with Dawn,’ and I wasn’t invited on the show to defend that.”

Geoff Arnold, the assistant coach for men’s basketball at Rider University in New Jersey, encourages his student-athletes to learn history along with current events.

“We had our players learn about George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery,” he said.

“I’m 55 years old, so I’ve seen this time and time and time again. I gave them a perspective of where I’m from.”

He also warned about social media.

“We asked the guys, ‘Before you do anything, run it through us,’ because they don’t understand the kickback on what can happen. Athletes are getting scholarships rescinded.”

Kerrick Jackson is the head baseball coach at Southern University in Louisiana, a historically black university that has both white and black players on the team. He said that the white players get the value of a different perspective.

“For the first time in their lives they will be in the minority, and they will be a minority by choice,” he said. “As black folks, we’ve always been the minority and not by choice.”

He also teaches his black players what it means to be an educated black man.

“To me, it’s the most amazing dichotomy in our society,” he said.

“On one half of the room, they’re the most feared, as a black male with an education. And on the other half of the room, they’re the most awe-inspiring, as a black male with an education. My job is to make sure we teach them to navigate that.”

The coaches said that listening to black people and hiring them at all levels would help address anti-black racism in sports. 

“Relationships can be superficial. You have to have hard conversations,” Staley said.

“If you’re not going to hire black people at the university, at least hear the ones you have. It’s not that I think that it’s a racist environment, it’s just that they don’t know.”

Top photo by iStock

Mary Beth Faller

Reporter , ASU Now

480-727-4503

Helping shape the future of ocean science

School for the Future of Innovation in Society associate professor appointed to National Academies’ Ocean Studies Board


June 3, 2020

Lekelia “Kiki” Jenkins has always loved nature. She grew up on the East Coast and spent her summers fishing and crabbing in the Chesapeake Bay. That passion led her to a career in ocean studies and marine conservation. Now she will contribute her knowledge as part of a prestigious organization. Jenkins has been appointed to the Ocean Studies Board (OSB) of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM). 

“I'm really looking forward to working with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine,” said Jenkins, associate professor and Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology doctoral program chair in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society. “Every time I've engaged with NASEM in the past, it's been stimulating, important work that was also a lot of fun. I'm very excited to be in this position to learn and grow.” Kiki Jenkins Kiki Jenkins in front of the whale fin statues at Pacific Science Center in Seattle. Courtesy Lyda Hill Philanthropies Download Full Image

The Ocean Studies Board researches the science, policies and infrastructure necessary to manage and conserve coastal and marine environments and their resources. They have studied the ocean's role in the global climate system, and technological and infrastructural needs for ocean research.

“Reports from OSB have driven policy changes,” said Jenkins. “Working on the Ocean Studies Board will be a great way to stay abreast of the latest and most crucial ocean science questions and findings, and will help shape the future of ocean science in the United States.”

One of the areas where Jenkins will be able to contribute her expertise is in fisheries science, management and policy. Fisheries have been the subject of much of her research. Jenkins has served in the National Marine Fisheries Service’s Office of International Affairs. She has worked to develop solutions for sustainable fisheries and study the best practices for fisheries learning exchanges. Jenkins’ research has helped change regulations, including on the Pacific coast, allowing fishers to switch to more sustainable fishing gear without having to purchase a new license. Her work has also helped people identify the most innovative fishers to partner with to try to create and invent new bycatch reduction technologies. 

woman and man speaking on a dock with boats in the background

Jenkins has served in the National Marine Fisheries Service’s Office of International Affairs helping to develop solutions for sustainable fisheries and study the best practices for fisheries learning exchanges. Photo courtesy Lekelia Jenkins


With her vast background of work, her social science expertise and her interdisciplinary training, Jenkins will help the Ocean Studies Board serve the needs of the country. She is also looking forward to bringing more diversity to the board.

“Being an African American woman, my diversity on the board is important,” said Jenkins. “Ocean sciences and ocean studies, like many science fields, have quite a ways to go in terms of diversity. I see this as an important step forward for diversity in STEM fields, and an important step forward for my career to be in the echelons of this high level of science in our country.”

Ashley Richards

Communications Specialist , School for the Future of Innovation in Society

480-727-8828

ASU Grand Challenges Scholars ready to face a changing world


June 3, 2020

In the middle of a global pandemic, it’s clear the world is intensely interconnected. If we’re going to address global challenges, we need engineers who can see the big picture, collaborate across disciplines and work on diverse teams to find solutions.

For students who want to take on such ambitious goals, the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering offers the Grand Challenges Scholars Program, known as GCSP. Endorsed by the National Academy of Engineering, or NAE, and Arizona State University, the program provides the tools and unrivaled experiences students need to become agents of change. A student in the Grand Challenges Scholars Program at ASU wears a t-shirt that says “Challenge Accepted.” Students in the Arizona State University Grand Challenges Scholars Program prepare to address global concerns through competencies that impart an ability to see the big picture, consider all aspects of a problem and create value for society. In the spring of 2020, eight new Grand Challenges Scholars graduated to begin tackling global challenges in health, sustainability, education and more. Photo by Connor McKee/ASU Download Full Image

“The challenges we face as a global society are complex; it is important for engineers to look beyond the technical and recognize other types of people and information they must work with to effectively address them,” said Amy Trowbridge, GCSP director.

To become an NAE Grand Challenges Scholar, students must demonstrate five competencies through research or a creative project, multidisciplinary learning, entrepreneurship, multicultural experience and a service-learning project. Completing these requirements imparts an ability to see the big picture, to consider all aspects of a problem and to create value for society.

Upon completion, ASU Grand Challenges Scholars earn national recognition from the National Academy of Engineering and join an international community of scholars dedicated to solving grand challenges.

While tackling the requirements can seem daunting to first- and second-year students who begin the program, those who finish this great accomplishment gain the benefits of unique and rewarding experiences — conducting research, developing startup ventures, mentoring younger students, entering design competitions, studying abroad, attending conferences — and graduate with a sense of preparedness to address big issues.

Trowbridge says she is proud of the breadth and depth of experience the eight Spring 2020 Grand Challenges Scholars have gained and the impacts they've had on others.

“What is really impressive about these graduates and their accomplishments is their focus on making a difference in the world,” Trowbridge said. “Each of these students is focused on using engineering to improve lives and society, and all of them have already had a great impact on others through engineering service projects and mentoring.”

In the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, NAE Grand Challenges Scholars are positioned to help address many facets of this crisis.

“One of the important traits that Grand Challenges Scholars Program students gain through their experiences is adaptability, which is absolutely necessary to work effectively in our changing world,” Trowbridge said.

NAE GCSP leaders recently put out a call for engineering action on the COVID-19 pandemic to Grand Challenges Scholars, and students from ASU and around the country are taking up the call to make a difference.

New and continuing GCSP students will emerge with skills even more valuable in a world facing an interconnected, international issue spanning many of the 14 NAE Grand Challenges and affecting all aspects of society. All are problems a well-rounded engineer can tackle.

Applying interdisciplinary skills in research

Pursuing interdisciplinary research was enlightening for chemical engineering and microbiology graduate Ava Karanjia. She was invited to join GCSP after being accepted to ASU, and she was eager to jump into research and other opportunities the program provides.

“Through GCSP I learned that I have diverse interests — there is not just one area that I enjoy or want to pursue,” Karanjia said. “I really want to stay interdisciplinary and work in the overlap between science and engineering.”

Karanjia conducted research during all four of her undergraduate years. Her interdisciplinary focus was on developing breath-based diagnostics to monitor and track chronic bacterial lung infections in the lab of Professor Heather Bean in the ASU School of Life Sciences.

Karanjia’s research built not only her knowledge of the connections between microbiology and chemical engineering, but she also had the opportunity to earn travel funding and present her results at 19 local, state and national conferences.

Karanjia’s most memorable experience presenting her research was at the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, or AIChE, Annual Student Conference in 2018. At first, she was scared about bringing a different type of research to the event. But one of the main themes of the conference was “Microbes at Biomedical Interfaces.”

“There were so many projects that combined these two areas,” Karanjia said. “I really enjoyed my time at the conference and winning first place in my division. It was validating to be recognized for work that fuses my expertise in microbiology and chemical engineering.”

Karanjia’s research has earned three first place awards at national conferences — two at AIChE conferences, and one at a Society of Women Engineers conference. Her efforts also led to co-authoring two research articles submitted for review to peer-reviewed journals.

Learning better science communication through entrepreneurship

When Esther Sim was getting ready to start her biomedical engineering studies at ASU, she had a very narrow idea of what engineers do. When she was invited to join GCSP and read the program’s goals, she was fascinated to learn that an engineer could have a “widespread, global impact and solve social issues.”

By pursuing activities related to the program’s entrepreneurship competency, she learned skills in creating connections between science, communication and the value of entrepreneurship outside of startup ventures.

As president of the ASU Biomedical Engineering Society professional student organization, Sim worked with the group’s leadership team to expand the entrepreneurial opportunities for students. One of those came at the BMES-Medtronic Design Competition.

“I was immediately drawn to the idea of creating an ASU team to compete in this national competition,” Sim said. “A few other biomedical engineering friends and I ended up coming together to work on a solution for the competition theme, digital imaging.”

Sim and her teammates spent months developing a mobile app, “Know Your Skin,” which crowdsourced melanoma and skin cancer images and used an algorithm they developed to detect lesions.

“We were very surprised and excited to hear that we had become one of the four national finalists for the competition,” Sim said.

As a finalist, Sim’s team pitched their app to a panel of Medtronic engineers and professional BMES members, ultimately winning second place in the national competition.

“This competition allowed me to develop skills that I know will be invaluable in starting my research career,” Sim said. “I encourage anyone, regardless of age or career path, to learn more about entrepreneurship and enter competitions such as this one.”

Traveling around the world to gain a new perspective in medicine

Dean Spyres approached college open to all opportunities that came his way. That attitude led him to join GCSP.

Spyres, an engineering graduate, took on a unique experience to complete his multicultural competency. During a visit to Taiwan with his girlfriend’s family, he was able to shadow a Taiwanese orthopedic surgeon for several weeks.

Through the experience, Spyres saw firsthand the differences and similarities between the Taiwanese medical system and the U.S. system. He learned about the holistic side of health care, how medicine plays a role in the local culture, and he connected with local medical professionals who explained their reasons for choosing their careers.

“The life lessons from this experience will be valuable in my future career as a physician because I have a better understanding of how cultural backgrounds can influence a patient’s decisions regarding their care,” Spyres said. “I’m more cognizant of how different cultures view medicine and I think requiring an experience like this in GCSP is really beneficial.”

That experience and others he had in the program helped Spyres think of challenges on a larger scale and look for connections between what he learned as an engineering student and the broader concerns facing the world.

Helping the next generation get a head start

Besides making chemical engineering graduate Maeve Kennedy a more well-rounded and socially aware engineer, GCSP taught her the importance of giving back to the community.

During her first and second years at ASU, she went on monthly visits to Phoenix Children’s Hospital to teach children in the psychiatric ward about engineering through fun, educational activities.

Before each visit, she worked with other engineering students to devise hands-on projects, including building water filtration systems and creating parachutes and paper boats. Despite their simplicity, the projects demonstrated complex engineering theories in an easy way for kids to understand.

“Volunteering at Phoenix Children’s Hospital helped me learn how to communicate on different levels,” Kennedy said. “Talking about engineering with a 7-year-old is very different from talking about engineering with my college peers.”

The experience also showed her how important it is to introduce children to the possibilities of engineering at an early age.

Creating a network of ambitious engineers

GCSP brings together a community of students who all want to solve large-scale issues in the world.

As students progress through the GCSP requirements, they also transition from learner to mentor for young aspiring scholars and prospective engineering students.

“Through GCSP I became interested in mentoring incoming and current students in the program, helping them find opportunities and sharing my journey in the program,” Spyres said.

Scholars often give back to the next generation of ASU Grand Challenges Scholars through the GCSP Summer Institute, at which incoming GCSP students tour labs, learn about the Fulton Schools and work on activities to better understand the NAE Grand Challenges. Kennedy served as counselor in the summer program.

“I really appreciated the opportunity to mentor incoming scholars and introduce them to all that ASU engineering and GCSP have to offer,” Kennedy said. “I’m still in touch with many of the counselors and campers.”

Spyres recalls meeting other Grand Challenges Scholars from across the country at the NAE GCSP annual meeting in Washington, D.C.

“This conference was my first opportunity to meet GCSP students from other institutions and talk with them about some of the similarities and differences between ASU and their school, as well as the projects they were working on,” Spyres said. “Going to the conference and learning about new things people are doing really motivated me to have a positive outlook on the future and imagine where humanity could be in several decades.”

Scholars also have the opportunity to attend international events like the Global Grand Challenges Summit. Sim attended this event in 2019 in London as one of two representatives from ASU. The event, hosted by the Royal Academy of Engineering, brought together students, engineers, world leaders, researchers, entrepreneurs and faculty members from China, the United Kingdom and the U.S. to connect, network and collaborate on solving the grand challenges.

“This was one of the best experiences I had during my four years at ASU,” Sim said, “and I could not have done it without involvement in GCSP.”

Monique Clement

Communications specialist, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

480-727-1958

Pages