|
Daniel Mark Fogel
President |
Dear Students, Faculty, and Staff:
Welcome to UVM for
the new academic year! Please join the
first-year undergraduate class at 6:00 p.m. on Sunday the 26th of
August for
Convocation at the Patrick Gym: music, an academic procession, a brief
film on
the things we love about UVM, ceremonial greetings, a talk by Ishmael
Beah
(author of A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, which our
new students
and many of the rest of us will have read), a parade paced by taiko
drummers to
the University Green, the Twilight Induction for the Class of 2011, and
the Green
Carpet Opening of the Davis Center (it would be a red carpet opening if UVM
weren’t launching the nation’s greenest, most environmentally
responsible student
union). To see how to get tickets to the free but capacity-limited
Convocation,
please go to http://www.uvm.edu/president/ceremonies/convocation/.
Ours is a vital community, and the triptych of Convocation, Induction,
and the
Ours is also a community that thinks—and cares—and acts. Seeking to lead by designing our University community as a model of sustainability, we must first and foremost be guided in our actions by thoughtful care for each other and for ourselves. Last fall we were shaken by the brutal murder of one of our own, reminding us that even here we are not exempt from the horrors of our world, and last spring we saw from afar, at Virginia Tech, an appalling tragedy in a community that must have had no thought that anything like that could happen there. In the spring of 2006, we issued a President’s Anti-Violence Initiative, with links to UVM’s many resources for community safety (see http://www.uvm.edu/president/?Page=antiviolence_initiative.html). This fall, we have appointed a President’s Commission on Social Change to intensify our work together on campus health and safety with the focus on gender violence, alcohol and drug abuse, and bias incidents. We can all work together to reduce these unacceptable behaviors in our community if we simply follow the call you will hear and see throughout the coming year around the campus: think, care, act. To our new students, especially, we send with our heartfelt welcome an urgent call to be active in taking good care of yourselves and of each other, just as we expect you to be active in pursuing your own intellectual and personal development here at UVM.
I want to take
this opportunity to report on several actions
we have taken, and milestones UVM has passed, since the end of the
spring
semester. In June, UVM joined 284 colleges and universities in
announcing
adherence to the
Among the milestones UVM has passed over the course of the summer, the close of the University’s second fund-raising campaign on June 30th at more than $20 million above the $250 million goal stands out as a powerful affirmation of the confidence some 60,000 donors have in the qualities and values that make our University so special. Last fall, we laid out on behalf of the UVM community a vision of the next stage in advancing those values, centered on our mission in preparing students to be accountable leaders dedicated to the global community and premised on a belief that being liberally educated means being able to draw on many different departments of knowledge to understand and solve complex problems (see Signatures of Excellence at http://www.uvm.edu/president/?Page=signatures/default.html&SM=submenu6.html). In the spring five groups of faculty and students will pilot the problem-based learning communities that we suggested might become one of UVM’s signatures of excellence. We are very grateful for the creativity, initiative, and hard work that our colleagues have invested in developing the following learning communities, each one comprising faculty and students who will pursue together, through the students’ concurrent registration in two or three courses in different fields of study, answers to challenging questions and approaches to solving important problems:
We urge interested students to consider participating in these learning communities when registration for the spring semester becomes available in November.
This fall sees the arrival of the largest first-year undergraduate and largest Graduate College classes in UVM’s history, the continuing expansion of our Residential Learning Community (RLC) program with the addition of the Health and Wellness RLC, and an exciting array of lectures and of cultural and athletic events: don’t miss, for example, the Aiken Lecture on October 1 by two-time Pulitzer Prize winning New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristoff, “The Promise and Price of Modernization in China”; the launch of the UVM Theatre season in late September with the production of the provocative coming-of-age drama Found a Peanut; world-class performers in UVM’s concert program, the Lane Series, from blue grass to viola (for the complete list see http://www.uvm.edu/Lane); and the kick-off of another round of winning seasons for UVM’s academically talented student-athletes (cheer them on at home openers for field hockey [August 30], men’s and women’s soccer [September 7 and August 31, respectively], women’s swimming [October 21], men’s and women’s basketball [November 24 and 17, respectively], and men’s and women’s hockey [October 7 and October 6, respectively]. Homecoming and Parents Weekend on October 5-7 will be the biggest ever, highlighted by the formal dedication of the Davis Center, the celebration of the success of The Campaign for the University of Vermont, lectures, panels on marketing and public relations to which students in all majors are invited, the traditional concert by UVM’s terrific a cappella groups, athletic contests, and much, much more. Already the year’s activities of UVM’s more than 150 student organizations are under way, and we urge all students—and above all the newcomers to UVM—to get involved.
For students
coming to UVM to undertake new courses of
study, whether as first-year undergraduates or as graduate or
professional
students, this fall semester marks a new phase full of high promise. To
them we
offer encouragement to make the most of every opportunity to fulfill
that
promise. We say the same thing to continuing students. And to our
colleagues on
the faculty and staff of The University of Vermont, we extend the
warmest
thanks for all you are doing to fulfill UVM’s promise as a truly
exceptional
place for learning and discovery.
Sincerely yours,
Daniel Mark Fogel
-- Gary L. Derr Ed.D. Chief of Staff & Executive Assistant to the President and Provost 347 Waterman Building University of Vermont Burlington, Vermont 05405 (802) 656-8937 (802) 656-1363 [log in to unmask]