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A friendly reminder to faculty: Instructional Development Fund proposals are due in the Center for Faculty Excellence, 316 Gannett Center, April 15.

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For support with your transition to remote teaching, please join one or all of the following webinars offered via Zoom.

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Each weekday starting Monday, March 30, the Center for Faculty Excellence will host brief performances and talks by faculty artists—musicians, painters, poets, dancers, writers, photographers, filmmakers, and more. 

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Please allow us to provide support with your transition to remote teaching.  Feel free to join one or all sessions.

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 Get Reminders and Updates on Registrar related issues on your Phone!

 

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 On Thursday, March 19th at 12:10 pm in the Clark Lounge Charles Murray a nationally recongized innovator in eSports and Coordinator of the SUNY Canton eSports program will highlight how eSports in higher education has become a cultural phenomenon that is taking college campuses all across the world by storm. SUNY Canton has established itself as a leader in collegiate esports for the North East U.S. with two ECAC championship titles, a varsity program with dedicated full-time staff, and a burgeoning esports population that is beginning to rival the size of traditional athletics on their campus. Attendants can learn how SUNY Canton created partnerships to evolve its program from 18 students playing three games to about 100 students playing 8 titles.

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Contributed on behalf of Cathy J. Saloff-Coste, MS, RDN, CEDRD, IC Nutritionist, Hammond Health Center 

If you’ve been following this Intercom series during National Eating Disorders Awareness Week, you know that it’s not always obvious when someone is heading toward developing an eating disorder, or even if they are living with a diagnosable eating disorder. You may know someone who shows clear symptoms, or you may recognize more subtle signs in someone – or yourself. Where do you start to get help? 

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Contributed on behalf of Cathy J. Saloff-Coste, MS, RDN, CEDRD, IC Nutritionist, Hammond Health Center 

We’re in the midst of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week (NEDAW) with their message that “Hindsight is 20/20”. The focus this year is on acknowledging that eating disorders can affect anyone and that everyone struggling with an eating disorder, no matter who they are or where they are in recovery, deserves to get the treatment and support they need. By looking back at the past year’s trials and successes, we can increase awareness and understanding of eating disorders and can not only help encourage recovery but also be a part of prevention efforts. 

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Contributed on behalf of Cathy J. Saloff-Coste, MS, RDN, CEDRD, IC Nutritionist Hammond Health Center

It’s back again: February 24-March 1 is National Eating Disorders Awareness Week (NEDAW), and this year is building on last year’s message of inclusivity in the eating disorder community. By looking back and sharing the struggles and successes of individuals’ efforts toward recovery, we can continue the conversation and give courage to others to continue their efforts toward health and self-acceptance.

Eating disorders can affect anyone. No one is immune, regardless of age, socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, body shape or weight. Teens and young adults are particularly vulnerable to developing eating disorders, and recent research suggests that transgender people may also be at increased risk. Up to 30% of college women and men meet the criteria for the illness, and 30 million Americans will suffer from an eating disorder at some point in their life. 

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Full-time, continuing faculty members are invited to submit proposals to the Center for Faculty Excellence for CFRD released time during the Spring 2021 semester.

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On Wednesday, February 19th from 12 pm - 3 pm, you're invited to bring your Ithaca College owned laptop to the Information Technology Service Desk in Job 104 for this month's 'health check' and 'tune up'.  Enjoy light refreshments as the IT team ensures your laptop is secure, operating efficiently and provides insight into best practices / tips and tricks that will enhance your computing experience.  We look forward to seeing you there!

The Information Technology Service Desk Team

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The Opioid Overdose Prevention Training Workshop is a skill-building program presented by staff from Southern Tier AIDS Program (STAP). The workshop is designed to help you in recognizing and preventing fatal opioid overdoses. Participants will learn basic information about opioid drugs, harm reduction, signs of overdose, and how to administer naloxone in the case of an medical emergency. Participants who complete the training will receive an identification card that they can use to obtain a free naloxone kit at the STAP location in downtown Ithaca. 

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The Mobile Food Pantry is a program provided by The Food Bank of the Southern Tier that delivers fresh produce, dairy products, and other food and grocery items directly to distribution sites where people need food. All members of the IC community are welcome to "shop", choosing items that they need. Participation in this event is open to all members of the campus community to shop, volunteer, or donate to the Food Bank of the Southern Tier.  Our event is located at the A&E Center, north loading dock.

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Requests for new technology items for the 2020/2021 fiscal year (NSOP and capital) need to be submitted for review by IT by March 1st, by clicking here and selecting the ‘Submit a Request’ button.  These items should also be submitted as part of your normal BudgetPak request.

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We are seeking volunteers to serve as College Trained Advisors and/or Board Members for cases of sexual misconduct. Both Advisors and Board Members play a critical role in protecting student rights and enacting due process measures.

College Trained Advisors are part of a pool of college employees made available, through the Title IX Office, to complainants and respondents as they go through the investigative and student conduct processes. Advisors are an invaluable supportive measure for participants of the sexual misconduct process, as they offer support, knowledge, and a helping hand throughout the process.

Board Members will be called upon for Conduct Review Boards to review all evidence collected during an investigation and presented by Complainants and Respondents during the hearing. This board will present a finding based on the preponderance of evidence. Conduct Review Board members are an essential part of the decision-making process and ensure a fair and equitable experience for all involved parties throughout the duration of the hearing.

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The Opioid Overdose Prevention Training Workshop is a skill-building program presented by staff from Southern Tier AIDS Program (STAP). The workshop is designed to help you in recognizing and preventing fatal opioid overdoses. Participants will learn basic information about opioid drugs, harm reduction, signs of overdose, and how to administer naloxone in the case of an medical emergency. Participants who complete the training will receive an identification card that they can use to obtain a free naloxone kit at the STAP location in downtown Ithaca.

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The Department of Writing invites all interested IC students to apply for the Spring 2021 Visiting Writers' Workshop, a unique 1-credit class that allows IC undergraduates to study with some of the best, most influential writers of their generation, whom the college brings to campus as part of its Distinguished Visiting Authors series.

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Difference isn’t the problem. Discourse is! CMST assistant professor Christopher House will offer CLTC 10000:01 Introduction to Culture and Communication as an online course during Winter 2020 (Jan 6-17, 2020).

In this course, students explore and interrogate the ways that communication (e.g., language, media, and discourse) establishes and enacts identity power dynamics. In thinking about communication as global citizens, our online discussions of, for example, movies like Crash (Paul Haggis, 2004) and Snowpiercer (Joon-ho bong, 2013) help us to understand how social identities are constructed, institutionalized, changed, contested and/or appropriated by various social groups.

This course fulfills Liberal Arts general education and ICC Diversity requirements.

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Come discover new studio art work tonight Friday December 13th 5-7pm

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 Join us this Friday December 13th.

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