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Reynolds College Blog

Archives for September 2024

RCASH sees record participation in Education Abroad programs for 2023-24

September 27, 2024 by Lynn M. Lansdown

Group standing outside Buckingham Palace

During the 2023-24 academic year, the Judith Enyeart Reynolds College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (RCASH) witnessed a record number of student participation in Missouri State University’s Education Abroad program.

According to a report issued by Elizabeth Strong, Director of Education Abroad, out of a total of 428 MSU students enrolled in an education abroad program, 181 came from RCASH. The vast majority of those trips were faculty directed.

Strong noted that this number represented a “significant increase” from 107 the previous year, the combined participation of the former colleges of Arts and Letters (COAL) and Humanities and Public Affairs (CHPA) that now make up RCASH.

In addition, of all RCASH undergraduate students graduating in 2023-24, 28% participated in an education abroad program, representing nearly one third of all RCASH undergraduates for the academic year.

Filed Under: Community Engagement, Cultural Competence, Ethical Leadership, RCASH Highlights Tagged With: Education Abroad, Elizabeth Strong, Public Affairs

Dr. William Meadows participates in D-Day anniversary in France

September 23, 2024 by Damilola R. Oyedeji

Group of people on beach in prayer

In June, Dr. William Meadows, alongside 18 members of the Comanche Indian Veterans Association, visited France to celebrate the 80th Anniversary of D-Day and join in a ceremony on Utah Beach to honor the Comanche Code Talkers.

Meadows is a professor of anthropology and Native American studies in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Gerontology at Missouri State University. He was recently appointed to the editorial board of the American Indian Quarterly.

Meadows discusses unique role of Native Americans in war

Speaker at projection screen presents to audience
Meadows presenting on Native American code talkers during the Battle For Normandy Conference at Chateau d’Audrieu near Tilly, France.

Meadows presented “Native American Code Talkers in Europe in World War II” at a conference during the celebration.

Code talkers were Native Americans in the United States Armed Forces. They used their tribal languages to send secure military messages during World Wars I and II, Meadows explained. This was faster than existing coding technology and gave the American forces a unique advantage.

The conference, an annual observance to commemorate D-Day, took place at the Chateau d’Audrieu, located in the heart of the Normandy countryside.

“D-Day describes the Allied invasion at Normandy in 1944 to liberate western Europe and bring an end to the Nazi Reich and the European Theater of WW II,” Meadows said.

In his speech, he noted that many people remain unaware of the unique role Native Americans played in both world wars.

“Despite the American government’s attempts to suppress their languages, Native Americans used these very languages to send secure military messages that saved countless lives,” Meadows said.

“The French are more aware of the war and its impacts on their home villages and families because the invasion occurred in villages throughout Normandy,” Meadows continued. “Many express gratitude to Americans, British and Canadians whose ancestors liberated them. They’re also increasingly learning about the presence and role of the code talkers.”

Large group of people pose for photo on beach
Members of the Comanche Indian Veterans Association with their French hosts and students from Tilly, France, at Utah Beach.

[Read more…] about Dr. William Meadows participates in D-Day anniversary in France

Filed Under: Cultural Competence, Faculty Accomplishments, Faculty Research Tagged With: Department of Sociology Anthropology and Gerontology, Public Affairs, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, William C. Meadows

Remembering Dr. Donald Holliday, 1939-2024

September 22, 2024 by Lynn M. Lansdown

Photo of Dr. Holliday talking to colleagues

Emeritus Professor Dr. Donald R. Holliday, who taught in the Department of English for over 30 years, passed away Aug. 24, 2024, in Nixa, Missouri.

Holliday was born Sept. 17, 1939, in Pinetop, Missouri, to Admiral Schley and Eva Mabel (Drane) Holliday. In his self-written obituary, Holliday described a hard-scrabble childhood on the family’s small tobacco farm.

After graduating from Hollister High School, Holliday enlisted in the U.S. Navy. One of his first assignments in the Navy was as an aviation boatswain’s mate to a guided missile cruiser during the Cuban missile crisis.

Holliday received full military honors at his burial in Gobblers Knob Cemetery, Hollister, Missouri, Sept. 7.

“First educational loves – learning and teaching”

Holliday began teaching at Missouri State in 1966 after having earned his master’s in English from University of Arkansas. He was granted educational leave to complete his PhD at the University of Minnesota. Holliday retired from MSU in 2001.

During his tenure at MSU, Holliday not only taught but also served as head of the English department in the 1980s, then as Assistant Dean of the College of Arts and Letters for two years.

But in his obituary, Holliday wrote that his “first educational loves [were] learning and teaching.”

In particular, he was most proud of having developed the English department’s course on Mark Twain. The course “filled every semester it was taught, to overloads,” he wrote.

Holliday believed Twain was the most important writer in American literature “because, a century before any other notable writer took up the subject, Mark Twain tried to show Americans the stupidity and blindness not only of slavery, but of white superiority itself.”

Career focused on the Ozarks

Throughout his academic career, Holliday placed special emphasis on the Ozarks. In 1975, he helped create MSU’s Ozarks Studies program. Along with Drs. Robert Gilmore and Robert Flanders, Holliday also coedited the OzarksWatch Magazine, then became its editor from 1993-2001.

“I am especially grateful for his knowledge of and love for the Ozarks and his leadership in establishing our formal program in Ozarks Studies,” said emeritus professor of English Dr. Kris Sutliff, who worked alongside Holliday in the 1980s and 1990s.

Even his dissertation topic was about the Ozarks. In fact, professor of history and Noel Boyd Professor of Ozarks Studies Dr. Brooks Blevins could not help but marvel at how Holliday arrived at that topic, which researched an early Ozarks pioneer family – the Hollidays.

“Who else besides Don Holliday would have ventured up north to graduate school…and proceeded to convince his professors to let him write a dissertation about his own family?” Blevins said. “Now, this may have been right up there with the best sales jobs ever pulled off by someone from Taney County.”

“This was at the height of 1970s fascination with the Ozarks,” Blevins continued, “and the Hollidays of Pinetop must have seemed every bit as exotic and colorful as ‘The Beverly Hillbillies’ to a set of Minnesota professors.”

Describing the dissertation as one of the best he had ever read, Blevins said it inspired him to include the Holliday family in his own work, the three-volume “A History of the Ozarks.”

“Don was a master storyteller, speaker and teacher, possessed of a combination of elite scholarly training, downhome horse sense and dry, store-porch wit,” Blevins said. [Read more…] about Remembering Dr. Donald Holliday, 1939-2024

Filed Under: Remembrance Tagged With: Brooks Blevins, Department of English, John Turner, Kris Sutliff, Lori Rogers, Ozarks Studies, OzarksWatch Magazine, School of Communication, W.D. Blackmon

Missouri State University Chorale releases “Radiance Untethered”

September 20, 2024 by Lynn M. Lansdown

People in a recording studio

The Missouri State University Chorale announces the release of their latest album, “Radiance Untethered: The Choral Music of John Wykoff.”

“This album not only showcases the unique music of John Wykoff but also the talent and enthusiasm that our students have for creating impactful musical experiences,” said Dr. Cameron LaBarr, Clif and Gail Smart professor in music and director of choral studies.

Album cover portraying artistic colorful landscape
Click album cover to purchase from GIA Publications.

The choir recorded the album over three days in the Goshen Music Center in Goshen, Indiana, during their May Tour in 2023. The center has produced several award-winning recordings and is one of the best places to record choral singing, LaBarr said.

A composer of instrumental and choral music, Wykoff studied with composers David Del Tredici, Bruce Saylor, and Jeffrey Nichols at the City University of New York. He also studied privately with Alice Parker, a major influence on his work.

Wykoff lives in Tennessee, where he is a professor of music theory and composition at Lee University.

[Read more…] about Missouri State University Chorale releases “Radiance Untethered”

Filed Under: Community Engagement, Cultural Competence, Faculty Accomplishments, RCASH Highlights, Student Accomplishments Tagged With: Cameron LaBarr, Chorale, Department of Music, John Wykoff, Parker Payne, Public Affairs, School of the Arts, Student Success

MSU students experience Ecuador through Education Abroad

September 17, 2024 by Lynn M. Lansdown

Six people sitting in circle weaving grass

Five Missouri State University students, including three from the Reynolds College, traveled to Ecuador July 3-6 as part of an Education Abroad program.

The students were graduate student Kinli Miller and undergraduate students Bailey Meesey, Kai Schiller, Ryan Ziegler and Brynn Kayhill.

They were accompanied by Jason Shepard, senior instructor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Gerontology.

Multi-faceted curriculum emphasized experiential learning

During the three-hour credit course, “Andes to the Amazon,” the students learned about Ecuador’s cultures and societies through experiential learning, according to Shepard. The curriculum included community tourism development, traditional medicine and agriculture.

Six individuals sitting outside in front of Andes mountains
Enjoying the beautiful outdoors near the lake town of San Pablo de la Laguna. L-R: Ryan Ziegler, Brynn Kayhill, Kinli Miller, Jason Shepard, Kai Schiller and Bailey Meesey. Photo credit: Juan Miguel Espinoza.

As part of the course, students conducted interviews, participated in field trips and kept daily field journals. They will use these field notes, Shepard said, along with lectures, interviews and additional research to construct presentations and posters. The students will then present their findings at an approved conference or public forum.

[Read more…] about MSU students experience Ecuador through Education Abroad

Filed Under: Community Engagement, Cultural Competence, Ethical Leadership, RCASH Highlights, Research, Student Research Tagged With: Department of Sociology Anthropology and Gerontology, Education Abroad, Jason Shepard, Public Affairs, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Student Success

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