College newsletters published throughout the year

The University Library has published the Fall 2015 edition of “Academic Gateway,” a newsletter about the University Library. Contents include an article on a grant to digitize World War II Japanese Internment items, a letter from Dean Ruth Kifer and more. It is available for download from ScholarWorks.

Current and archived newsletters from other academic units and colleges are also available online:

College of Applied Sciences and Arts

Lucas College of Business and Graduate School

Connie L. Lurie College of Education

Charles W. Davidson College of Engineering

College of Humanities and the Arts

College of Science

College of Social Sciences

SJSU Research Foundation Office of Sponsored Programs Bulletin 12.15 (2)

 

Spartans recognized for connecting students to campus and community

SJSU students Randy Vazquez, Danny McLane and staff member Jahmal Williams pose with their community service certificates presented by the city of San Jose. Photo by Associate Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications Michael Cheers.

SJSU students Randy Vazquez, Danny McLane and staff member Jahmal Williams pose with their community service certificates presented by the city of San Jose. Photo by Associate Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications Michael Cheers.

Danny McLane, ’16 Industrial and Systems Engineering, has some simple advice for students who are new to San Jose State’s campus: Have a group of people to whom you can talk.

McLane came to San Jose State as a freshman from Richmond as the first in his family to attend college.

“As a first-generation college student, it was a culture shock,” he said. “I didn’t know what to do. When I first got here, I only knew some people from freshmen orientation. I was alone and didn’t know anyone.”

During his second semester, he joined the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity.

“It opened things up for me and I began to connect,” he said. “I was put in a leadership position and I know a lot of people now. It gave me mentors.”

McLane is helping other students find the connections that will make them successful through his work as an intern with the SJSU African-American Student Success Task Force.

He is one of three Spartans who were recognized by the San Jose City Council Dec. 2 for their work in connecting underrepresented minority students to the community – on and off campus.

Students McLane and Randy Vasquez, ’15 Photojournalism, and SJSU staff member Jahmal Williams, received the award for their work at Barbers, Inc., a downtown barbershop where they helped with a multicultural mural that was unveiled on Dec. 2. The mural displays the stylists from the shop cutting the hair of cultural icons such as Carlos Santana, Maya Angelou, Muhammad Ali, Johnny Cash, Bruce Lee, among others.

McLane and Williams are actively involved in SJSU African-American Student Success Task Force, while Vasquez is involved in the SJSU Chican@/Latin@ Student Success Task Force. Along with other members of the task forces, they have created Barbershop Talks, a series for black men and other minority men on campus to share their experiences.

“Those talks are very vital to a lot of students,” McLane said. “It’s not just for African American or Latinos, but for any minority students. It’s a space for those students to feel free.”

He said he has heard from other students that they struggle to feel connected to campus.

“They say they don’t see people who look like them,” he said. “This is an opportunity to connect with other people who look like them, are like-minded and it also adds a community. I see these students who participate and when I see them on campus, I think, ‘hey, that’s my friend.’”

Williams said because black students are such a small population on campus, it’s easy to overlook them and their experience.

“We’ve done a really good job of connecting black students to each other, resources on campus and connecting them to a larger SJSU community,” Williams said. “It’s a place, a city, where they can thrive and feel like they have a purpose. They have staff and faculty who do care about their experience, academics and in life.”

Read more about the mural project.

December 2015 Newsletter: SJSU Helps ‘Restore Coyote Creek’

When Sarat Lue, an electrical engineering student, arrived at SJSU he said he wanted a way to connect with his new community.

“(Michael Fallon) told me about the Coyote Creek project and I thought it would be a good opportunity to make an impact in my new community,” Lue said. “I feel a sense of belonging to this community because I am making a positive impact and driving this community forward.”

Michael Fallon is the director of the SJSU Center for Community Learning & Leadership (CCLL). He facilitates partnerships between the university and organizations that help students engage in the community while developing leadership skills. In the latest National Survey of Student Engagement, SJSU students reported a higher participation in service learning, compared to their peers in California and the nation.

Lue was one of several group leaders who guided 222 volunteers on a massive cleanup of the South Bay watershed on Oct. 17. Since August 2014, volunteers have removed 62 tons of trash from the creek.

The SJSU Restore Coyote Creek project is one part of the South Bay Creeks Collaborative, which includes SJSU faculty, staff and students; community organizations; the City of San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley Water District. The group received the Outstanding Environmental Project of the Year Award at the San Francisco Estuary Conference in August for its work.

Deb Kramer has been the program manager for Keep Coyote Creek Beautiful since May, when she was hired through a joint grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for the City of San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley Water District.

Kramer said SJSU has helped the grant go even further through volunteer efforts, “in so many ways.”

“From more hands on the creek to more awareness to student activities to student projects,” she said, the university has provided key resources.

In addition to physical cleanups, students and faculty have also raised awareness about the watershed. Students and faculty were instrumental in hosting the Coyote Creek Howl conference last spring, a one-day summit that focused on the ecology and human issues related to the watershed.

Social Work students have been involved in looking at the homeless population around the creek. CCLL and the Social Work Graduate Student Association hosted a premiere of a documentary, “Exodus from the Jungle,” at SJSU in October with homeless advocacy groups. The documentary looks at several homeless residents who sought new shelter after being removed from an area along Coyote Creek known as “The Jungle” which closed in 2014.

“We are facing obstacles such as homeless people living along the creek,” Lue said. “Unfortunately for them, there is no permanent solution to house them which forces them to rely on quiet spots along the creek to rest their heads.”

December 2015 Newsletter: CHAMP Connects Students and Seniors

Jonathan Dinson, right, takes Leticia Medrano's blood pressure at the Senior Wellness Fair in 2014. Dinson, then a student in SJSU's Valley Foundation School of Nursing, is just one of dozens of students to volunteer at the wellness fairs in the last five years.

Jonathan Dinson, right, takes Leticia Medrano’s blood pressure at the Senior Wellness Fair in 2014. Dinson, then a student in SJSU’s Valley Foundation School of Nursing, is just one of dozens of students to volunteer at the wellness fairs in the last five years.

SJSU’s Center for Healthy Aging in Multicultural Populations (CHAMP) partnered with the Santa Clara county Department of Aging and Adult Services and the Timpany Center to host the Fifth Annual Senior Wellness Fair Oct. 24.

More than 500 people attended the fair. SJSU students and faculty provided health education, basic health screenings and community resources to the visitors with whom they interacted. Employees and volunteers from local nonprofits, city and county agencies also set up tables in the gymnasium to share resources with senior citizens during the fair.

The College of Applied Sciences and Arts’ CHAMP is an interdisciplinary effort of the School of Social Work; the Valley Foundation School of Nursing; Nutrition, Food Science and Packaging; Kinesiology; Occupational Therapy; Psychology; and Communicative Disorders and Sciences. Students and faculty from each of those departments volunteered at the Senior Wellness Fair, with students from the School of Journalism and Mass Communications (JMC) providing PR for the event.

“It was excellent,” Harlow Williams, 71, of San Jose, told JMC students at the event. “I didn’t realize how many different things would be available.”

He said the wellness fair was comprehensive.

“I am hard of hearing and I found a number of things very specific to that situation,” he said, noting that he and his wife also found services that would help a friend in need of assisted living services. “I’m not computer literate so it is important to me to talk to people one-on-one to listen to what they have to say and be aware of what they have to offer.”

Naomi Gomez, a social work graduate student, said she and her fellow students were there to educate seniors on mood changes that lead into depression in the aging population.

“We are offering seniors today different support systems and referrals to help lift their moods, or if they know of someone, they can pass this useful information to (them),” Gomez said.

Sadhna Diwan, director of CHAMP and a School of Social Work professor, said the fair offers students an opportunity to practice their communication skills, learn how to engage seniors in screenings and health education, and learn about the array of community services available to promote wellness and healthy aging.

Eddie Jimenez, College of Applied Sciences and Arts, contributed to this report.

SJSU students awarded at biomedical conference

San Jose State students and faculty attended the Association of Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students in Seattle in November.

San Jose State students and faculty attended the Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students in Seattle in November.

San Jose State students and faculty attended the Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students in Seattle Nov. 11-14, where five SJSU students received awards.

Fauna Yarza, a spring 2015 transfer student, received an award for her microbiology poster presentation. The trip was her first time to a national conference and her first time to give a poster presentation about her research.

“It gave me confidence in myself as a scientific communicator,” said Yarza, ’17 biological sciences with a microbiology concentration.

Yarza is part of the Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement (RISE) program that promotes research opportunities for underrepresented minorities. Yarza’s parents emigrated to the U.S. from Mexico and her mother has only a grade-school education.

“All she asked of me growing up was to get a college degree,” Yarza said.

Working with Assistant Professor Elizabeth Skovran, Yarza and other students are researching bacteria that appear to be able to take in rare earth elements that could be beneficial in recycling metals from electronics.

“I’d like to go for my Ph.D so research experience is crucial,” Yarza said.

Yarza  said through the RISE program “I get paid to do research.”

“Without it, I would need to take out more loans or get a part-time job,” she said. “I’m not sure I could balance classes, work and research.”

Yarza said the program has also given her access to mentors with whom she would not have had the chance to interact, including Professor Karen Singmaster who is the program director for SJSU’s RISE.

Students from the Maximizing Access to Research Careers Undergraduate Student Training in Academic Research (MARC-USTAR) program, Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP) program, and the College of Science Research and Teaching Scholars (CoSRaTs) program also attended the conference. The programs are funded by federal grant. Singmaster is the SJSU program coordinator for LSAMP and program director of CosRaTs. Dr. Leslee Parr is the director of MARC-USTAR.

MARC students Jessica Ballin and Rebecca Sandoval, both psychology majors, presented research performed during the summer at the University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign and Universty of Michigan, respectively. Awardees from the RISE program presented work done with faculty at SJSU.  In addition to Yarza, Elvia Silva, a biological sciences student working with Dr. Tzvia Abramson and Adrian Riives, a chemistry student working with  Dr. Gilles Muller, were also recognized with an award.

Students hold up the awards they received for research presentations.

Students hold up the awards they received for research presentations.