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Academics

Conference: Stewardship or Sacrifice? Religion & the Ethics of Climate Change

Things are coming together for our conference at PSU regarding religious and ethical dimensions of climate change. I will be a panelist and I am looking forward to it! From the conference website:

Conference: October 7–8, 2009
Pasquerilla Spiritual Center
The Pennsylvania State University
All events are free and open to the public.


Held at the Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, this conference will examine the role that religion can play in solving the climate change crisis. This interactive conference is open to everyone concerned about climate change, but it is especially designed for members of religious communities in Pennsylvania. Join us for lectures, workshops, films, and liturgy. Learn about the science, the ethics, and the practical steps that Pennsylvania churches and synagogues are taking now to reduce the impact of global warming.

Keynote Speakers:

photo The Rev. Canon Sally Bingham
President and Founder of the Regeneration Project
and Interfaith Power and Light
photo Prof. Michael E. Mann
Associate Professor, Meteorology and Geosciences,
and Director, Earth System Science Center (ESSC),
Penn State

For more information:
click here

 

FERPA for Fun! (Note for those teaching in US higher ed)

For those teaching in the US what can and cannot be released to people other than students (e.g., parents!) is detailed in a guideline referred to as “FERPA,” The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.  The short is, you can’t tell anyone but the student anything. As a dean I can tell you that parents are not often happy to hear that (“but I pay the bills!”). The truth is there is more than can be disclosed but of course we want to err on the side of caution. I recently learned, for example, that “full access to their student’s academic record will be provided if the parent first provides proof of dependency.” Since most of our students’ parents submit a IRS Form 1040 for financial aid purposes those parents thus will have a right access their student’s records. More on the update to the FERPA guidelines:

Dec. 9, 2008  – InsideHigherEd.com

Rules Seek to Clarify FERPA

In an update of key federal privacy rules, http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/E8-28864.htm the U.S. Education Department is trying to tell colleges what they can release about students, not just what they can’t release.

The rules — published in today’s Federal Register — update the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which generally bars the release of educational records by colleges without students’ permission.

But the law, known as FERPA, has taken on a life of its own. According to many experts, FERPA is cited regularly by colleges to avoid releasing information that’s not even covered by it. In the wake of the Virginia Tech killings, there has been renewed interest in clarifying what colleges and schools may release — and in many instances the new regulations appear to be reassuring colleges that FERPA only goes so far, and that they do have discretion to release certain kinds of records.

For example, the new regulations state explicitly that in the case of a health or safety emergency, a college can disclose information about students without their permission. While the rules require some justification for such release, they make clear that the protections on student privacy are not absolute.

Rather, the final rules say, the idea is to find “the right balance between student privacy and campus safety.” The rules specifically affirm the value of notification, noting with appreciation some responses to earlier drafts that thanked the department for seeing that notifying parents and others of certain situations may help protect the safety and health of all involved.

See full story at:  http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/12/09/ferpa

 

Last Call for SBL Mid Atlantic Regional Meeting

I have been intending to submit a paper, but I confess I have not. So Jeremy’s notice buys me more time to procrastinate! No! Get your papers submitted now!

Dear Colleagues,

I wanted to take a moment to remind you once again to keep
the submissions coming for our 2009 SBL Mid Atlantic
Regional meeting.  If you have not done so already, please
email me your submissions by FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5 at
schipper@temple.edu.  We will be meeting on March 26-27,
2009 in Baltimore.  For further information regarding
submission guidelines, awards, locations, and hotel
reservations, please see the attached “call for papers” pdf.
(I have also copied this the pdf into the body of this email
in case you have trouble with the attachment.)  PLEASE FEEL
FREE TO POST THE CALL FOR PAPERS AND ENCOURAGE YOUR FRIENDS,
COLLEAGUES, OR STUDENTS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE CONFERENCE.
Information regarding conference registration will become
available in the coming months.

All the Best,

Jeremy Schipper
Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible
Department of Religion
Temple University

SBL Mid-Atlantic Regional Coordinator

 

5,000 years of Imperial History of the Middle East

This is an amazing Shockwave production showing in 90 seconds the ebb and flow of empires in the region of the Mediterranean basin and beyond. Sure, we can (and I hope some will) quibble about the details but I think this will give a nice broad sense of the region and its political history to my students.

HT to SCMProfessor and thanks to Mapsofwar.com for making it.

 

Bibliobloggers at SBL

Douglas Mangum of Biblia Hebraica has a nice listing of Bibliobloggers presenting at SBL. It is quite a list! We were working a Biblioblogger get together but so far we have not had much luck. I will keep you posted! In the meantime, do check out the growing list of papers on offer by our guild.

As pointed out, Aramaic Studies offers a two-for-one!

Bonus Session – Two for the Price of One: SBL24-103, Aramaic Studies
11/24/2008, 4:00 PM to 6:30 PM, Room: Meeting Room 309 – CC
1. Ed Cook, Ralph the Sacred River (1st presenter, time 4:00 pm)
4Q541, Fragment 24 Reconsidered (Again)
2. Chris Brady, Targuman (5th presenter, estimated time 6:00 pm)
The Development of the Character of Ruth in Targum Ruth