Honor Those Who Have Made a Difference

Now is your chance to nominate individuals or groups who have made a difference in your life and the lives of others at CC.

The President’s Leadership Awards Program recognizes colleagues who make an impact as strong leaders, innovative role models, and positive collaborators.

 
Submit nominations now through the end of Block 3, by 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18. As part of our strategic initiative to foster workplace excellence, it’s important to recognize those who are making a difference.

View previous winners of the President’s Leadership Awards and nominate a faculty or staff member, or team of individuals, based on the following criteria:

Brian Young Community Service Award: This awardee demonstrates a continued pattern of voluntary service to the college and exceeding their job duties, as demonstrated by former Vice President for Information Technology Brian Young. The awardee must have been employed by the college for five years or more.
Victor Nelson-Cisneros Diversity and Inclusion Award: This awardee exemplifies the qualities of former Associate Dean of the College Victor Nelson-Cisneros in supporting diversity and inclusion on campus.
Glenn Brooks Innovation and Courage Award: This awardee displays the courage and innovative qualities of former Dean of the College/Faculty Glenn Brooks, who was one of the founding creators of the Block Plan.
Jane Cauvel Cultivating Collaboration and Community-building Award: This awardee cultivates community, collaboration, and culture on campus as embodied by Jane Cauvel, former professor of philosophy, and the college’s first ombudsperson.  Winners each year will receive: $2,500 cash prize, a feature on the President’s Leadership Awards website, and a leadership trophy to display for a full year.
 
The individuals who submit winning nominations also will be recognized.

Stay tuned for additional information highlighting winning nominations and tips for writing a stand-out submission. Nominations will be accepted through Friday, Nov. 18. Winners will be announced at Spring Conference on January 27, 2023.  
 
Thank you for helping to recognize CC’s exceptional leaders, and to honor the individuals who strive to make our college great. 

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New White House Policy for Federally Funded Research Publishing Guidelines (OPEN ACCESS)

Dear CC Researchers,

A new White House Office of Science & Technology policy fundamentally changes publishing for federally funded research. The new policy, which builds on the Holder policy from 2013 that required public access for research from agencies that had at least 100 million in research and development, now applies to all federal agencies. In the shortest possible terms, federally funded research will now be required to be published with free public access, including applicable data sets, without traditional embargos. This will change how research is published and accessed in the United States. The different agencies have until the end of 2025 to deploy implementation plans. This is an essential step to creating access to publicly funded research and hopefully creating more equitable publishing practices. Below, you will find the highlights of the policy in a much more digestible format than the memorandum. Also, if you are currently engaged in federally funded research I would encourage you to communicate with the funding agency.   

Here are the key changes from SPARC:

§  Makes taxpayer-funded research publications available immediately, at no cost to the public. The new policy guidance eliminates the current 12-month waiting period, and ensures that research publications be made freely available and publicly accessible by default in agency-designated repositories without any embargo or delay after publication, so that anyone can immediately access and use the research results.

§  Makes taxpayer-funded research more useful and valuable. The policy guidance ensures that research publications are made available in machine-readable formats to enable their full use and reuse. This will enable researchers and the public to unlock the full value of taxpayer-funded research through text and data mining, computational analysis, and other state of the art technologies. 

§  Improves scientific research integrity. The guidance calls for the underlying data needed to validate the conclusions of articles to be made immediately available, and also asks agencies to develop approaches and timelines for sharing other federally funded scientific data not associated with research publications. This will improve the quality and reproducibility of research. 

§  Increases public trust in taxpayer-funded research. The memorandum notes that the public should be able to identify which agencies support any given investment in science, the scientists who are conducting that research, and the extent to which peer-review has been conducted on it. It calls on agencies to update their policies to make appropriate metadata (including author names, affiliations, and funding sources) available at the time of publication. Additionally, it calls for the use of persistent identifiers for all research outputs. 

§  Promotes equity in the research enterprise. The guidance asks agencies to take measures to reduce inequities in both the publishing of and access to federally funded research publications and data, especially among individuals from underserved backgrounds and those who are early in their careers.

§  Extends the scope and reach of current policy. The new guidance covers all federal agencies and departments, a significant expansion beyond the 20 agencies covered under current policy. It substantially broadens the definition of publications and includes, not only research articles and accepted manuscripts, but also peer-reviewed book chapters, editorials, and conference proceedings. 

§  Provides ample time for policy updates to be implemented. The new policy guidance provides a long lead time for agencies to develop and implement new policies. Agency plans must be complete and published by Dec. 31, 2024, and go into effect no later than one year after publication. 

§  Builds on 15 years of steady progress made by both Democratic and Republican administrations and significantly strengthens current U.S. policy—including the landmark 2008 National Institutes of Health (NIH) Public Access Policy and the 2013 White House OSTP Memorandum on Public Access to Publicly Funded Research Results. 

§  Aligns with UNESCO’s recent Recommendation on Open Science and brings the United States to equal footing with governments across the world who have established strong open access policies to promote their national innovation agendas.

See the full memorandum here: chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/08-2022-OSTP-Public-Access-Memo.pdf 

 

Best,

Dustin Fife

College Librarian

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Block 2 Music Events

Join us for concerts in Packard Hall!

Join us for concerts in Packard Hall!

Unless indicated, all concerts are in Packard Hall, are free, and require no tickets.

Music Ensembles Showcase

The CC Music Department presents a concert featuring four of its ensembles — Bluegrass, Tiger Jazz, Gamelan and Mariachi Tigre — as part of CC Homecoming and Family Weekend festivities.

Music at Midday

Presenting instrumental and vocal student performances every third Wednesday of the block during the academic year.

George Crumb

The Crumb Legacy

Music by George Crumb and his Students
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 12
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 13
Pre-concert lecture begins at 6:30 p.m. each night
Live streamed on YouTube and Facebook

Hindu Epics Class Concert

Members of MU222 – Performing the Hindu Epics, instructed by I Made Lasmawan, perform a free afternoon concert as Block 2 comes to a close.

Coming up next block!

The Rocky Horror Show
Friday, Oct. 28: 8 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 29: 3 p.m. & 8 p.m.
Taylor Theater
Limited seating! Register here to get your name on the door list.
Presented in collaboration with CC Theatre Workshop. 

Music Ensembles

Join a CC Ensemble!

Some CC ensembles are still accepting new members through the first week of Block 2.
Ensembles are open to ALL CC students with NO extra fees! There is an option to earn academic credit by registering for a semester-long adjunct course, but it is not always required. Faculty and staff are welcome to join many of our ensembles, too! Learn more about our ensembles and find out how to join.

ICYMI: CC Music at President’s Inauguration

CC Music at Inauguration
The CC Music Department was proud to support the inauguration of CC’s 14th president, L. Song Richardson, in August with an original composition and performances by our Music Department faculty, students, alumni, and friends.

Pictured:
• The Inaugural Fanfare, Jubilation, was composed by CC Prof. Ofer Ben-Amots and performed by Benjamin Paille, trumpet; Susan Grace, piano; and Ricky Sweum, bari saxophone.
• Chidera Ikpeamarom, ’22, sang “Greatest Love Of All” at the beginning of the ceremony.
• The CC Gamelan ensemble, under the direction of I Made Lasmawan, performed for the recessional.

Not pictured:
• Eric Wicks, Shove Chapel organist and CC organ instructor, performed to open the inauguration and for the processional.
• Grace, Artist-in-Residence and Senior Lecturer, also performed Chopin’s Nocturne following Richardson’s Inaugural Address.

Photos by Lonnie Timmons III

Connect with Music at CC
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CONTACT US

Colorado College Department of Music
Packard Hall
5 West Cache La Poudre St.
719-389-6042
music@coloradocollege.edu

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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Loss of a Member of Our Campus Community

Dear CC Community,

It is with great sadness that I report the death of one of our students on campus today. The individual’s name is being withheld pending notification of their family. As we wait as a community, we quietly hold the family and their loved ones with deep compassion. 
If you need support:
Students can access confidential support through the Counseling Center by emailing counselingcenter@coloradocollege.edu” style=”font-weight: normal;font-weight: normal;color: #7a6646;text-decoration: underline;color: #7a6646;text-decoration: underline”>counselingcenter@coloradocollege.edu or calling (719) 389-6093. Access crisis and support services after hours and on the weekends by calling the Counseling Center at (719) 389-6093, and then pressing 2.
Staff and faculty can access confidential support through the Employee Assistance Program by calling (800) 272-7255.
The chaplain is also available to the entire community for confidential support at chaplainsoffice@coloradocollege.edu” style=”font-weight: normal;font-weight: normal;color: #7a6646;text-decoration: underline;color: #7a6646;text-decoration: underline”>chaplainsoffice@coloradocollege.edu or by calling (719) 389-6638.
More information will be shared as soon as we are able and we will continue to provide support. 
Sincerely,

Rochelle T. Dickey ’83, P’19

Dean of Students/Vice President for Student Life

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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

TOMORROW: Block 2 First Mondays

Start Block 2 with the campus community at the first First Mondays presentation of the academic year TOMORROW, Sept. 26, at 11:15 a.m. 

Katherine Standefer ’07, author of the 2022-23 Common Read “Lightning Flowers: My Journey to Uncover the Cost of Saving a Life,” was a finalist for the 2021 Kirkus Prize in Nonfiction, a New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice/Staff Pick, and shortlisted for the J. Anthony Lukas Work-in-Progress Prize from Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and the Nieman Foundation at Harvard University. Join Standefer in the Kathryn Mohrman Theatre in Armstrong Hall, or join virtually by registering for the webinar

The First Mondays Event Series is a campus-wide forum that aims to engage all members of the CC community, including students, staff, administrators, and faculty. The series creates opportunities for the whole community to gather, encouraging everyone to be part of the intellectual life of the college, and facilitating discourse among students, faculty, and staff, across courses, disciplines, and divisions. Classes are dismissed early on the first Monday of each block so that all may attend the First Mondays event.

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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College