Quick Summary
- Campus Store grand opening, Oct. 4-7
- Canvas course count exceeds 1,000
- Open houses on campus development plan update
- TANA silkscreen demo precedes fall workshop
- Davis Neighbors Night Out, Oct. 16
Roughly 1,600 people attended the Science Friday radio show at the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts last weekend, and soon the whole world can hear a recording of the show.
ٺƵ scientists are featured in the episode titled “Life Without Water,” to be presented on (90.5 FM) from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 9 to 11 p.m. this Friday (Sept. 30). Ira Flatow’s show also plays on more than 375 other National Public Radio-affiliated stations.
The show, recorded Sept. 24, included:
- , associate professor, discussing ocean acidification and oyster shells
- Research scientist and graduate student , presenting a show-and-tell with their
- Professor Emeritus that come back to life
- Forest ecologist Christina Restaino, describing how drought, climate change and bark beetles combine forces to kill trees
- The Martian author , a Davis native, pitting journalists against ٺƵ grad students and in a water quiz show.
Campus Store grand opening, Oct. 4-7
The first week of school is behind us, so you’d think the Campus Store in the would take a breather! No way: Next week the completely remodeled store celebrates its grand opening!
It’s a four-day open house: Tuesday-Friday, Oct. 4-7. Come on in any time for 20 percent off clothing, gifts and other items.
From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day, the store will serve popcorn and cookies, and invite visitors to spin a wheel for prizes.
Plus, Gunrock and the Cal Aggie Marching Band-uh! will stop by at noon on Tuesday and Friday.
The Amazon@ٺƵ store next to the Campus Store held a grand opening earlier this month.
Canvas course count exceeds 1,000
The transition from SmartSite to ٺƵ Canvas is well underway. As of last Friday (Sept. 23), approximately 1,000 instructors were using the new campus learning management system to teach more than 1,100 published classes with enrollment of 29,600 students.
“That’s more than the number of courses that are still using SmartSite,” said Todd Van Zandt, learning management system program manager. “It’s an excellent start. We appreciate the hard and thoughtful work that many people have done to get us here. We especially appreciate the work of the faculty as they have begun to adopt Canvas.”
ٺƵ Canvas is replacing SmartSite during a transition that began in June and will last through the 2016-17 academic year. SmartSite is available for teaching through spring 2017, although most of the transition will have occurred by then. About 910 published courses are using SmartSite this fall.
The main goal now is supporting the new users of Canvas, especially instructors. Toward that end, the continues to offer a wide range of resources, from “getting started” workshops and in-person assistance for faculty, to drop-in hours and self-guided tutorials.
— Bill Buchanan, TechNews
Open houses on campus development plan update
The draft planning scenario — a revised update of the campus’s Long-Range Development Plan — is available online and will be the subject of public forums next week.
. Want to learn more? Come to one of these outreach events:
- Tuesday, Oct. 4 — open house, 2-6 p.m., ٺƵ Coffee House
- Wednesday, Oct. 5 — tabling, 5-8 p.m.,
- Thursday, Oct. 6 — open house, 6:30-9 p.m., , co-hosted by the city of Davis
TANA silkscreen demo precedes fall workshop
ٺƵ’TANA community art center presents a silkscreen printing demonstration from 4 to 6 p.m. Wednesday (Sept. 28) for people interested in participating in the center’s fall quarter silkscreen workshop.
TANA — (Art Workshop of the New Dawn) — holds its silkscreen workshop quarterly for ages 13 and up, encouraging the exploration and representation of culture. The fall quarter workshop dates are Sept. 29 to Nov. 30. Spaces go quickly, so sign up soon. Send an email to TANA manager Drucella Miranda for more information.
For the demonstration, TANA co-founder and master printmaker Malaquias Montoya will produce a multicolored silkscreen print. He is a professor emeritus in the Department of Chicana/o Studies, which runs TANA at 1224 Lemen Ave., Woodland.
Davis Neighbors Night Out, Oct. 16
Neighbors are coming together all over Davis to plan street parties for Sunday, Oct. 16, for the , a celebration of community and campus, sponsored by the city, the university and Associated Students of ٺƵ.
Other communities across the country have night-out events earlier in the year. But here in Davis, we wait until the university is back in session — so students can participate. Organizers have a goal of seeing students and permanent residents start the year on a positive note, by meeting one another in a friendly setting, establishing good communication and forging connections to foster neighborhood safety and minimize conflicts.
Anyone can be a “party sponsor,” say, for a block party or a neighborhood association party, or a party in an apartment complex. The sponsor will take the lead in setting up an activity such as a potluck dinner, barbecue, dessert party or ice cream social to give neighbors an opportunity to introduce themselves and exchange phone numbers for neighborhood watch lists or future events.
The organizers suggest holding block parties in common areas to create a more welcoming feel (and to make the events easier to find, for people who may be unfamiliar with the neighborhood). Party hours should fall within the noon to 7 p.m. timeframe.
Be sure to invite everyone in the neighborhood, and consider personal invitations to newcomers. Sponsors can make and distribute their own invitations (there’s a template on the , in the “Documents and Templates” section), or the city will prepare and mail invitations.
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu