Clearbridge Branding Agency, located at 310 Rowan Blvd in Glassboro, is looking for Fall 2019 interns. Clearbridge offers their clients SEO blogs, standard blogs, social media writing, and other forms of digital and traditional marketing writing. If any Writing Arts student has interest, please contact Rebecca at rkowalewicz@clearbridgebranding.com
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Tierney, located in Philadelphia, PA, is hiring copywriting interns. See below for their job description, as posted on LinkedIn.
Do you like writing, creating, thinking, and in general, making stuff up? Then we have just the thing for you. We're an advertising agency that just so happens to be looking for a writing intern in our creative department. Here, you'll work alongside other writers, art directors, designers and creative directors to create great advertising work for our clients. Preferred Qualifications
The Multicultural Arts Exchange is a nonprofit that presents, produces and promotes performing arts programs in the underserved community of Northeast Philadelphia. We are currently looking to hire a team of social media interns to build and maintain our online presence. Interns will work as a team, collaborating on various projects and duties. The following are the type of interns we are looking for:
Learn more about the Multicultural Arts Exchange on our website www.maephila.com, on facebook @maephila, or our YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2ZVNDrUpm3r-xbU8WmwBDw). Social Media Intern Job Qualifications Requirements to work as social media interns include majoring in business, marketing, communications, or a similar field and a solid understanding of social media and related web services. Since a social media intern’s basic work is to highlight the company’s presence in the social media, s/he needs to be extremely knowledgeable of the various tools and procedures used in doing this.
Chaos organizer — assist in creating and implementing social media marketing strategies and tactics, handle social media market research, update social media accounts with our events, handle content management tasks, and plan/execute special events. Tech Guru -- possess a clear understanding of advertising using digital ecosystem, manage analytics on several platforms (Google, Facebook,MailChimp, Eventbrite, Website), collect and analyze marketing data to develop and adjust correlating marketing plans, and track the growth and impact of social media on the business and create and submit progress reports. Creative genius — research, find, create, and manage multimedia content (photos, graphics, videos, etc.) that are relevant to constituents to create awareness along with planning and executing special events. Create presentations and agreements and assemble client activity reports. Must possess a clear understanding of advertising using digital ecosystem. Storyteller-in-chief – research, find, write, and manage online content (blog posts, articles, tweets, etc.) along with with planning and executing special events. Perform research activities to find articles, stories, and resources, relevant to the constituents and post links to social media profiles. Social Butterfly – Monitor and respond to social media activities regularly and foster relationships with new and existing audiences. Build a community! Timeframe: To provide a meaningful contribution to specific projects and sufficient work experience, we ask for a minimum time commitment of 10-15 hours per week for 15-20 weeks with possible nights and weekends, especially closer to the MAE events dates. Location: Flexible with a combination of working from home (college), office(s) and event locations. Compensation: Internships are generally unpaid, but MAE pays bonuses for outstanding work on special projects and provide expense reimbursements. Arrangements could be made to count this work as course credit. Depending on the student performance the offer could be made to become a minor partner in the organization upon the conclusion of the internship. To Apply: Please, send a resume and cover letter to describe why you are interested in the position to Mr. Michael Zorich, Project Director, at manager@maephila.com Communications Intern
Responsibilities and Duties:
Responsibilities and Duties:
Additional Information: This position will take place during the Fall 2019 semester and requires a minimum of 120 hours. The student in this position will earn three (3) credits upon successful completion. The applicant must be currently enrolled at Rowan University, have earned a minimum of 75 credit hours by the start of the term, and have a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher (Students with less than 75 credits completed may still be considered under special circumstances). Contact Information: Name: Kate Harman Department: Communication Studies Position: Lecturer Email: harman@rowan.edu Phone: 856-256-4348 Master of Arts in Writing Symposium Begins Tonight
The first of three-straight evenings of Master of Arts in Writing Symposium presentations takes place tonight (May 7) starting at 6:30 p.m. in Room 144 of the Chamberlain Student Center. This year’s collection of 14 graduate program capstone projects includes works in such genres as fiction, nonfiction, poetry, children’s writing, scholarship, and musical theater. Click here for more information or contact M.A. Program Coordinator Ron Block. Light refreshments will be served. The Time for Pomp and Circumstance Draws Near Rowan University Graduation Week begins this Saturday, May 11, with the full university commencement ceremony kicking off at 5 p.m. at Wackar Stadium. This year’s commencement speaker for the pan-collegiate ceremony is internationally recognized fitness guru Shaun T (Shaun Thompson Blokker, left), a 2001 Rowan Health and Exercise Science graduate from Camden. During the event, one graduating student in attendance will receive $5,000 in a random drawing and will have a chance to win $50,000. The Saturday ceremony will be followed by the Commencement Coast Celebration on the nearby Robinson Green. The celebration will feature the free Coastal Café buffet and dessert bar, a beer and wine cash bar, live music, games, and numerous photo opportunities. . . . Four days later, the festivities continue with the College of Communication and Creative Arts commencement on Wednesday, May 15 at 10 a.m. on Bunce Green. This is the ceremony at which Writing Arts students receiving their B.A. and M.A. degrees will have their names called and will walk across the stage to receive their diploma binders. The featured speaker for our college ceremony will be Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and current MSNBC correspondent Trymaine Lee, a 2003 Rowan Journalism graduate from Chesilhurst. Please keep in mind: Faculty who wish to march in the processional and sit on the main stage for either the full university ceremony or the CCCA ceremony must be in full academic regalia. Grades and Assessments Due Next Friday the 17th Don’t forget that all Spring 2019 grades must be submitted on Self-Service Banner by the end of the business day on Friday, May 17. Please note the faculty grading interface has been updated and looks slightly different. Click here for detailed instructions on how to enter your grades. That same Friday the 17th also is the deadline for College Composition II assessments. If you taught CCII this spring, you should have received links to your course assessment forms from Jeffrey Bonfield; if you haven’t, please contact Jeff right away. End-of-Year Department Retreat Set for the 23rd Less than a week after grades are due, we’ll all be back together at The Vic for our end-of-the-year Writing Arts Department Retreat. The Thursday, May 23 session will begin at 9:30 a.m. in Victoria 200 and, as usual, will include a full day of updates, presentations, and workshops. Lunch will be served, and the retreat will be followed by an end-of-the-year reception at The Landmark. An agenda for the retreat will be circulated soon and you can contact Jenn Courtney for more information or to suggest discussion topics. Please contact me for more information about the Landmark reception. Please Vote on Dates for This Year’s Phillies Game Despite a 6-0 loss to the Cardinals last night, the Phillies remain in first place in the National League East and continue to see their ticket sales surge. That’s why we’re working to narrow down our choices for this year’s “Rowan Writing Arts Night at the Phillies” and to purchase our discounted tickets as soon as we can. The nine dates under consideration are Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday, June 10, 11, or 12 vs. the Diamondbacks; Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday, June 24, 25, or 26 vs. the Mets; or Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday, July 15, 16, or 17 vs. the Dodgers. Please fill out this Doodle Poll and let us know all of the dates that work for you and how many friends and family members you’d like to bring. We need at least 25 attendees to get a $4 per ticket discount in our preferred seating area: Section 330. Please contact me with any questions. We had a great time last year and look forward to another excellent evening in 2019! Congratulations Anna On Your Service Award! Anna Bassiri is this year’s Writing Arts Department winner of the College of Communication and Creative Arts Excellence in Service Award. The award, as described by Dean Tweedie in his announcement, recognizes “often unseen efforts by faculty who help support their programs with ongoing, uncompensated, day-to-day service.” In addition to this recognition, Anna will receive $250 for the 2019-2020 academic year in professional development funding that can be used for travel, books, materials, or other classroom-related purchases. The other CCCA winners are Herb Appelson in Art; Dianne Garyantes in Journalism; Alison Novak in Public Relations & Advertising; Clara Popa in Communications Studies; and Chris Winkler in Radio, Television, & Film. Random House Buys Rights to Lisa Jahn-Clough Book The Schwartz and Wade children’s book imprint – part of international publisher Penguin Random House – has purchased the Lisa Jahn-Clough book Strange Stories: About Nice Kids, Naughty Kids, Happy Kids, Sad Kids, Magic Kids, Magic Toys, Spooky Ghosts, Yummy Waffles, Silly Monkeys, and Other Such Things with publication scheduled for summer 2021. The book is a collection of short stories about children who escape situations of poverty, bullying, and loneliness through magical happenings. Publisher’s Weekly reports that Lisa represented herself in this deal for world rights. Nice work, Lisa! And furthermore . . .
Do you have a new publication, a reading, or any other event of interest coming up? Please let me know so I can let all our colleagues know in the Rowan Writing Arts Events Update newsletter. Stop by my Victoria 521 office or email me at royek@rowan.edu to give me the 4-1-1. Access Events Update online by clicking here. Stephen A. Royek, M.A. Lecturer, Writing Arts Rowan University Chair, Faculty Senate Awards Committee Victoria Hall, Room 521 Phone: 856-906-4755 Email: royek@rowan.edu Internship Opportunity Fall 2019: Impact100 South Jersey and Community Foundation of South Jersey4/30/2019 Impact100 South Jersey and Community Foundation of South Jersey are seeking a Marketing and/or Public Relations Intern, who is full of creative ideas and eager to contribute on a large scale. The intern will gain visibility into the inner workings and aspects of the marketing and public relations fields, provide concrete deliverables and learn from top to bottom.
Responsibilities
Kyle Ruffin kyle@kruffin.com 609-980-6651 Ellen Ragone eragone@wglaw.com 609.410.2640 Today and This Week: Singularity Press Book Sale!
The final book sale of the semester to benefit the Writing Arts Department’s student-run startup Singularity Press is being held today, tomorrow, and Thursday (April 23, 24, and 25) from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the first-floor elevator lobby of Victoria Hall (260 Victoria Street). Stop by to search for that hard-to-find book you’ve been yearning for, or feel free to pick through the stacks to pique your interest. Both cash and Venmo payments are accepted, as are straight-up donations to the Press. Contact Megan Atwood for more information. Special Report Writing Center Shows Age Can Be A Fascinating Number When most young adults go to college, they don’t normally make friends who are 10 years younger or 70 years older than them. That is, unless they work at the Rowan Writing Center. The RWC – a branch of the Writing Arts Department that offers writing tutoring services to students across the campus – has, since last fall, been running community outreach programs with clients at opposite ends of the lifespan spectrum: An elementary school class and a senior citizen assisted living facility. Writing Arts assistant professor Celeste Del Russo, director of the Writing Center, set up writing workshop programs at the two institutions – The Terraces at Parke Place senior facility in Sewell and the Thomas E. Bowe Elementary School in Glassboro – as a life experience for her tutors. “These programs,” Celeste said, “keep our tutors connected to the community and to the real world. The work we’re doing with the seniors and with the school kids is more than just a service activity line on a resume. It keeps them grounded and connected and helps them grow as individuals.” “Peggie is my friend,” 22-year-old Laura Kincaid, a three-year Writing Center veteran, said of her 91-year-old writing partner at the Terraces. “She’s a fascinating woman. She was sickly as a child and grew up in a hospital. By age 16, she was working in a gas station. Peggie was a journalist and a writer and still considers herself an ‘avid proofreader.’ “I truly enjoy the time I spend with her,” Laura said. “We exchange email and I still visit her from time to time.” At the Terraces, the goal for RWC tutors is to “capture the moment, to get these life stories chronicled,” Celeste said, explaining that many of these experiences might be lost forever if not for this project. While the program at the Terraces was designed to coincide with National Assisted Living Week back in September, Celeste said the RWC has shifted its focus to celebrate National Poetry Month in April. “We want our tutors to help the seniors turn their memories into poetry.” At the Bowe school, the Writing Center tutors are working with gifted and talented students in grades four through six, concentrating on the “Girls Will Be Girls” writing group. “We want these young students to build confidence in their writing,” Celeste said. “By putting their work on display, they see their writing has value and is appreciated by others.” Writing that has value and is appreciated by others: These goals are being achieved by 11-year-olds and 91-year-olds with the guidance and assistance of the Rowan Writing Center and the Writing Arts Department . . . proof of the importance of what we do every day – both inside and outside our classrooms. It’s Time to Order and Administer Your Student Evaluations If you haven’t already done so, be sure to order “Student Evaluation of Teaching Effectiveness” surveys for each of your classes this semester. In addition to providing you with feedback on your pedagogical performance this spring, you will need these Evaluations for your upcoming recontracting packet. While students can complete these surveys on their own time, it is strongly recommended you dedicate time during class for students to fill out the evaluation, leaving them alone in the class as they do so. Click here for more information on how to order the evaluations, instruct your students on how to access the survey, and send reminders to students who might not have yet completed the form. For more information, contact Natalie Kautz at the Faculty Center. Department Diversity Council Focuses on Equity, Inclusion The Writing Arts Diversity Council – formed earlier this semester – is hard at work on many exciting projects to attend to diversity-related needs in the department and to work toward increasing equity and inclusion for faculty, staff, and students. Following an informal listening tour, the 20 council members have taken up subcommittee work on staffing, professional development, student concerns, and curriculum. Projects include production of a faculty fact sheet on the characteristics of the Rowan student body, assessing needs and opportunities related to race and adjunct faculty, adding diversity-related resources to the Instructor Support Site for the First Year Writing Program, and partnering with the Office of Social Justice, Inclusion, and Conflict Resolution for professional development. The passion and dedication of the Writing Arts Diversity Council is inspiring and offers great hope for our department’s continued and growing excellence. (Editor’s Note: Thank you to colleague Rachael Shapiro for this update,. Please contact her for more information on the council, to discuss its initiatives, and to volunteer to serve in the fall semester.) CCII Textbook Grant Helps Students Save Significantly Congratulations to Writing Arts colleagues Jude Miller and Amanda Haruch who – along with Sam Kennedy from the Campbell Library staff – received a Textbook Alternative Program Grant that will enable the department to replace our College Composition II textbooks with Open Educational Resources. It’s estimated this switch will save Rowan students somewhere between $100,000 and $166,000 per year. In addition to the cost savings, Jude said the grant will “further promote accessibility, inclusion, and affordability” throughout all sections of CCII and “will also afford us the space to more purposefully curate readings and course materials from diverse voices.” Great work, Jude and Amanda! You are saving our students money and upgrading our teaching materials at the same time. WA Student to Have Nonfiction Piece Published Writing Arts student Jackie Domenus will have her personal essay “Tomboy” published in the nonfiction section of an upcoming edition of Watershed Review literary magazine, a publication of the University of California at Chico. Launched in 2012, Watershed Review reports its mission as being “to publish literature and visual art that illustrates diversity in thought and experience, and an awareness of literary tradition in conversation with the shifting edges of genre. . . . and a Few More Upcoming Activities and Events
Help Pick the Date For ‘Writing Arts Night at The Phillies’ Tickets for the first-place Philadelphia Phillies are flying out of Citizens Bank Park faster than they have in a while, which means we need to start narrowing down our potential days for “Rowan Writing Arts Night at the Phillies.” Please take a moment to fill out this Doodle Poll and let us know how many of these nine dates in June and July you would be able to join your colleagues, family, and friends for a night at the ballpark. Please put a number after your name indicating how many tickets your group would like. (See my entry for an example.) The magic number is 25 people as that’s the threshold needed to get a $4 per ticket discount. Last year’s group enjoyed our left field location in Section 330, which – for this year – would mean each seat would cost $24, (discounted from $28). FYI, the opponents we might see are the Arizona Diamondbacks (June 10, 11,12), the New York Mets (June 24 ,25, 26), or the Los Angeles Dodgers (July 15, 16, 17). Please feel free tocontact me if you have any questions. Do you have a new publication, a reading, or any other event of interest coming up? Please let me know so I can let all our colleagues know in the Rowan Writing Arts Events Update newsletter. Stop by my Victoria 521 office or email me at royek@rowan.edu to give me the 4-1-1. Access Events Update online by clicking here. Stephen A. Royek, M.A. Lecturer, Writing Arts Rowan University Chair, Faculty Senate Awards Committee Victoria Hall, Room 521 Phone: 856-906-4755 Email: royek@rowan.edu Glassworks Takes the Stage Tonight in West Chester, PA
This month’s “Livin’ on Luck” reading series event at Barnaby’s Pub in West Chester, PA, – being held tonight, April 9 – will feature our own Glassworks magazine with presentations from the just-released Spring 2019 issue, from the personal works of the publication’s faculty and students, and from other members of the Rowan Writing Arts Department. Scheduled readers for tonight’s event – sponsored by the Delaware County, PA-based Mad Poets Society – are colleagues Tim Donaldson, Myriah Stubee, and Tim Zatzariny. An Open Mic period will follow the featured presenters. The evening kicks off at 7 p.m. at Barnaby’s (15 South High Street, West Chester, PA 19382 / 610-696-1400) and, since the event is being held on a Tuesday, it’s also Taco Night with special prices all evening on the tasty Mexican snack. Contact Glassworks managing editor Anthony Palma for more details or click here to access the event’s Facebook page. Next Up, Tomorrow, Pack Your Academic “Brown Bag” The final First Year Writing Professional Brown Bag session of the spring semester will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow, April 10, in the 4th Floor Conference Room (Room 422) of The Vic. The session will focus on – as explained in a recent department email message – “various strategies to best assess student work in a more meaningful, equitable, and productive way. (The session) will explore the concept of contract grading in our classes and look to maximize our current portfolio assessment practices.” Light refreshments will be served and you can contact Kristine Lafferty for more information. “Listening, Learning & Taking Action” Sessions Set On the heels of last week’s hate-speech-filled protest that the Rowan community turned into a celebration of support for the differences that make our campus community strong and special, the university’s Division of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) has scheduled a series of Listening Tour sessions. These meetings – planned for 5 p.m. Monday April 15, Noon Wednesday April 17, and 11:30 a.m. Monday April 22 (click here to RSVP) – will allow all students, faculty, and staff to share their experiences with diversity and their thoughts on how Rowan can best address these important issues. In addition, DEI – in cooperation with the Division of Student Affairs and the Student Government Association – is holding a panel discussion to discuss free speech, inclusiveness, and personal safety at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16 in Room 144 of the Chamberlain Student Center. Please contact university VP Penny McPherson Myers for more information. . . . and a Few More Upcoming Activities and Events
Coming next week in Events Update: A look at some recent community outreach efforts by the Rowan Writing Center, more details on the “Rowan Writing Arts Escape Room Challenge,” and a poll to choose this summer’s “Rowan Writing Arts Night at the Phillies.” Do you have a new publication, a reading, or any other event of interest coming up? Please let me know so I can let all our colleagues know in the Rowan Writing Arts Events Update newsletter. Stop by my Victoria 521 office or email me at royek@rowan.edu to give me the 4-1-1. Access Events Update online by clicking here. Stephen A. Royek, M.A. Lecturer, Writing Arts Rowan University Chair, Faculty Senate Awards Committee Victoria Hall, Room 521 Phone: 856-906-4755 Email: royek@rowan.edu Welcome back! We hope everyone had a relaxing and/or productive spring break (depending on your goals). Just six weeks to go until portfolios, finals, and graduation!
March Department Meeting: This Wednesday the 27th Our next Writing Arts Department meeting will be this Wednesday, March 27, at 3:30 p.m. in Victoria 200. Full-time and ¾-time faculty are expected to attend while adjunct and TEP instructors are welcome to sit in. Jenn Courtney will be sending an agenda in the next day or so with more details. . . . Please don’t forget to bring a donation for The S.H.O.P. as our grocery cart will be in the meeting room. We’ve already filled one cart this semester and it would be great to top off a second one before summer when students’ need for food is at its greatest. Also, if you attended 4Cs in Pittsburgh last week, this is the perfect opportunity to drop off any toiletries you might have picked up during the conference. Thank you! Medallion Winner Barton Picks Up Another Award Rachel Barton, recipient of this year’s Excellence in Writing Arts Medallion, will be picking up another honor before graduation: The Dr. James M. Lynch Jr. Courage in Adversity Award. The Faculty Senate Awards Committee selected Rachel from more than a dozen nominees for the award that is presented to a senior who has overcome circumstances of extreme hardship to achieve an education. The award is named for Dr. Lynch, who spent 22 years at Rowan University as Dean of Students and a faculty member and administrator in the Department of Educational Leadership. Rachel will receive her award at the Celebrating Leadership Awards ceremony on Sunday, April 14 at 4 p.m. in the Chamberlain Student Center ballroom. A Rowan Medallion (left) is the highest honor the university bestows upon a graduate to acknowledge superior performance in a particular area or field. Winning one Medallion is special; winning two is extraordinary. Congratulations, Rachel! Both honors are well deserved. Sharpen Your Pencil: More Dates and Deadlines
Perfect Round Boosts Quizzo Team to Second - Again “The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Quizzo team that night; the lead looked out of reach and our score was such a fright.-*” However, unlike the ill-fated Casey and his three-pitch strikeout, the Writing Arts competitors pulled out a perfect 10-for-10 final round over spring break for a second-straight second-place finish at P.J. Whelihan’s Quizzo Night. With the competition being held just before the start of the NCAA basketball championships, the final category, fittingly, was “Name the tournament entrant with these nicknames.” We were the only team who knew where the Anteaters (left), Gaels, Orange, and seven other competitors call home. Earlier in the evening, we were fortunate to get six of ten correct in a graphic category that asked for the names of pictured video game characters. Win or lose, it was – once again – an excellent evening. Keep an eye onEvents Update for details on our next event: “The Rowan Boulevard Escape Room Challenge.” . . . (*- Apologies to Ernest Lawrence Thayer) Last Call for Employee Tours of Hollybush Mansion Thursday, April 4 is the final day of this spring’s series of employee tours of Hollybush Mansion. The tour runs from 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. and participants are asked to use the entrance that faces Evergreen Hall. Contact University Relations for more information. . . . The oldest building on our campus – completed in 1849 – Hollybush was the school’s first woman’s dormitory before the completion of Laurel Hall. It also served as the home for four of our first five presidents – Jerohn Savitz, Edgar Bunce, Thomas Robinson, and Herman James (our fourth president, Mark Chamberlain, chose a smaller dwelling off campus) – and it’s now used as a museum and to host university receptions. Hollybush has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1972 and a 2016 research project indicates the structure most likely was designed by John Notman (1810-1856), known as the Father of American Italianate Design Do you have a new publication, a reading, or any other event of interest coming up? Please let me know so I can let all our colleagues know in the weekly Rowan Writing Arts Events Update newsletter. Stop by my Victoria 521 office or email me at royek@rowan.edu to give me the 4-1-1. Access Events Update online by clicking here. Stephen A. Royek Lecturer, Writing Arts Rowan University Chair, Faculty Senate Awards Committee Victoria Hall, Room 521 Phone: 856-906-4755 Email: royek@rowan.edu Reminders and Requests as Spring Break Approaches
As we count the hours and days to the start of spring break this weekend, here are some items for your academic and personal to-do lists:
Access Events Update online by clicking here. Stephen A. Royek Lecturer, Writing Arts Rowan University Chair, Faculty Senate Awards Committee Victoria Hall, Room 521 Phone: 856-906-4755 Email: royek@rowan.edu |
WELCOME TO THE BULLETIN BOARDHere, we archive opportunities for student publication, as well as relevant miscellaneous announcements. Archives
April 2021
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