- Oct 39:00 AMAcademic ConsultationWant to get ahead, stay ahead, and feel in control? We've got your back! Meet with a Peer Leader for a one-on-one academic consultation to: Create a personalized semester plan; map out major deadlines and exams; build a weekly study routine that works for you; learn tips to stay focused, balanced, and motivated.
- Oct 39:00 AMPSELC: Promoting Your Mission: Effective Advocacy & Lobbying for Nonprofits & Government AgenciesInstructors: Jason Jakubowski, President & CEO, CT Foodshare Michael Bzdyra, Sr. Lobbyist, FOCUS Government Affairs Sarah Croucher, Asst. Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, UConnMany nonprofits want to engage in advocacy in relation to their work. Whether it is supporting or opposing the passage of state-level legislation that will make a difference to their stakeholders, engaging in budget discussions, or working at the federal , or even municipallevel for visibility or legislative advocacy. However, many questions often face nonprofits when thinking about engaging in this work, perhaps creating wariness of participating in any form of political advocacy.This workshop is intended as a one-day introduction to provide nonprofits, government, or public sector leaders with tools for effectiveadvocacy and lobbying. We will cover the difference between advocacy and lobbying, laws and other regulations that constrain particular activities, and how the three levels of government (municipal/local, state, and federal) can be approached. We will also provide information on when to register as a lobbyist, disclosures that may be required, how government entities can lobby government, and some basics related to campaign finance and gift rules. We are also planning a panel discussion with bipartisan legislators to discuss how they have engaged effectively with nonprofits and public sector leaders. Participants will leave with the tools to begin to engage in advocacy or lobbying as a nonprofit or public sector leader, with effective building blocks to be impactful in the public policy arena at the local, state, or national level.See UConn School of Public Policy website https://publicpolicy.uconn.edu/collaborative/ for pricing & registration
- Oct 39:30 AMVALUE Training Follow Up - The Assessment Toolkit: Empowering Data-Driven DecisionsIn this interactive virtual workshop, we will explore key components essential for building a robust process for authentic assessment with VALUE. You will expand your assessment toolkit, empowering you to design, implement, and refine the assessment process. This session will equip you with essential tools and strategies to inform data-driven decisions that strengthen your accreditation efforts and drive meaningful institutional change. Learning outcomes: - Select the tools needed to use assessment data for accreditation and to meaningfully support student success. - Review robust methodological examples of scoring practices, data management, data analysis, and reporting results. - Reflect on how the assessment process will evolve over time. Register - https://fins.uconn.edu/secure_inst/workshops/workshop_view.php?ser=3493 (https://fins.uconn.edu/secure_inst/workshops/workshop_view.php?ser=3493)
- Oct 311:00 AMLet's Talk with SHaWStudents who may benefit from attending a Let's Talk: Mental Health Office Hours session include:Students who want help connecting to resources but are unsure where to begin Students who are looking for advice on a non-clinical issue Students who are unsure about therapy and are curious about what it is like to talk to a therapist Students who may have concerns about the mental health of a friend and seek advice on how to support their friend If a student is not an imminent risk, and is refusing your support in contacting our office, you may also consider contacting the UConn Student CARE Team (https://studentcareteam.uconn.edu/).
- Oct 312:00 PMCAM Presentation: Milda StanislauskasSpeaker: Milda Stanislauskas Title: TBD Via Webex: https://uconnhealth.webex.com/uconnhealth/j.php?MTID=mdacf393cf6a2ee5314a3b76525ea5e57 (https://uconnhealth.webex.com/uconnhealth/j.php?MTID=mdacf393cf6a2ee5314a3b76525ea5e57)
- Oct 312:15 PMPSLA Seminar Series: Charles KrasnowHost: John InguagiatoLocation: YNG 132Webex:s.uconn.edu/psla_seminars (http://s.uconn.edu/psla_seminars) Extension Connection: Using Industry Insight to Advance Greenhouse Production in Connecticut
- Oct 312:20 PMMCB Research in Progress: Antonio RuaAntonio RuaAlexandrescu Lab (https://ata.mcb.uconn.edu/)
- Oct 312:30 PMLet's Talk Online with GracielaStudents who may benefit from attending a Let's Talk: Mental Health Office Hours session include:Students who want help connecting to resources but are unsure where to begin Students who are looking for advice on a non-clinical issue Students who are unsure about therapy and are curious about what it is like to talk to a therapist Students who may have concerns about the mental health of a friend and seek advice on how to support their friend If a student is not an imminent risk, and is refusing your support in contacting our office, you may also consider contacting the UConn Student CARE Team (https://studentcareteam.uconn.edu/). This session is held by Graciela Quinones-Rodriguez, LCSW (https://studenthealth.uconn.edu/person/graciela-quinones-rodriguez/)
- Oct 31:15 PMLet's Talk with MichelleStudents who may benefit from attending a Let's Talk: Mental Health Office Hours session include:Students who want help connecting to resources but are unsure where to begin Students who are looking for advice on a non-clinical issue Students who are unsure about therapy and are curious about what it is like to talk to a therapist Students who may have concerns about the mental health of a friend and seek advice on how to support their friend If a student is not an imminent risk, and is refusing your support in contacting our office, you may also consider contacting the UConn Student CARE Team (https://studentcareteam.uconn.edu/). This session is held by Sijia (Michelle) Chen, LPC (https://studenthealth.uconn.edu/person/sarah-hallwood/)
- Oct 31:30 PMMCB Faculty Meeting
- Oct 33:00 PMEast Asian Workshop- "Taiwan's Plastic Industry in Historical Perspective"
- Oct 34:00 PMCOGS Colloquium: Dr. Catherine Tamis-LeMondaTalk Title: Word learning in context: Disambiguating the ambiguousAbstract: The pace and breadth of early vocabulary development is impressive to say the least. Infants grow from producing their first words around 12 months to using over 500 words by 2 ½ years. How do infants crack the code to acquire so many words in a relatively short period of time? Our theoretical framework emphasizes the embodied and embedded nature of learning: Infants actively engage with their environments in the presence of socially responsive partners who provide semantically relevant input within a tight time window during highly specific activity contexts. The tight temporal connection between infant action, caregiver speech, and activity context cuts across word classes—nouns, verbs, adjectives, prepositions—thereby functioning to 'disambiguate the ambiguous'. To illustrate the embodied and embedded nature of infant learning, I present several studies from our lab on infants' exposure to different word classes in the ecologically-valid home environment. We videorecorded infants (12-24 months) and mothers during natural home activities (1 to 2 hours per visit, Ns=30-100). We transcribed interactions and identified all concrete nouns in mothers' speech. We also marked mothers' use of verbs and 'math words'— adjectives and prepositions that refer to numbers, quantities (more, less), spatial relations (under, on top of), shapes, and magnitudes (big, long). Annotations of the timing, behaviors, and contexts of infants' speech exposure revealed several impactful characteristics: (1) Words in mothers' speech contained high regularity in temporal structure. For example, mothers used the same word in a bout of repetition (e.g., dog, dog, dog; up, up, up) and they referenced objects from the same taxonomic category (e.g., animals) within a tight time window (e.g., dog, cat, horse); (2) Mothers provided multimodal input (speech with gesture/touch) that functioned to highlight word meaning; (3) Infants' own actions were a reliable impetus for word exposure (e.g., verbs and spatial terms like walk, jump, down referred to infants' movements through space), and (4) High regularity characterized the activity and location contexts of infants' exposure to particular words (e.g., food nouns and words for magnitudes were frequent during snack time). Notably, characteristics of infants' home experiences and language interactions predicted individual differences in skills across domains—including sustained attention, vocabulary growth, the production of words during interactions, school readiness and academic achievement years later. We discuss implications for theories of word learning and language interventions.Meetings: If you are interested in meeting with Dr. Tamis-LeMonda during the day or attending dinner in the evening on Friday, please email crystal.mills@uconn.edu.
- Oct 34:00 PMFarm Friday at Spring ValleyThis is a great way to earn community service hours! No previous experience is necessary. Remember to dress for outdoor conditions, including warm water-repellant footwear. More details and transportation information available athttps://dining.uconn.edu/spring-valley-farm/volunteer-tour/ (https://dining.uconn.edu/spring-valley-farm/volunteer-tour/)
- Oct 35:00 PMSoccerSoccer played on the law school soccer field.
- Oct 35:30 PMA Night Filled with ConstellationsA Night Filled with Constellations Friday, October 3, 5:30pm-7:00pm Fee: 10 per person (5 per Benton Member) Please join us for a magical night filled with constellations. The evening starts with a private tour of our exhibition Fate & Magic: The Art of Maureen McCabe. We will focus on her assemblages that have constellations prominently featured in them. After our tour, we will walk as a group to the UConn Planetarium for a show highlighting the constellations visible in the Northern Hemisphere during the autumn season. Space is very limited so please make your reservation early. Parking on North Eagleville Road is recommended so your vehicle will be next to the Planetarium at the conclusion of the event. We will gather outside the Planetarium at 5:30pm to walk to the Benton as a group.
- Oct 38:00 PMWeekly Films SeriesSaturday, Aug. 23rd Monsters University Thursday, Aug 28th Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Friday, Aug. 29th Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Saturday, Aug. 30th Pirates of hte Caribbean: At World's End Thursday, Sept. 4th Shrek Friday, Sept 5th Shrek 2 Saturday, Sept. 6th Shrek the Third Thursday, Sept. 11th Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning Friday, Sept. 12th F1 Saturday, Sept. 13th Superman Thursday, Sept . 18th Batman 1989 Friday, Sept. 19th The Dark Knight Saturday, Sept. 20th The Batman Thursday, Sept. 25th Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom Friday, Sept. 26th Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark Saturday, Sept. 27th Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
- Oct 4All dayArt Exhibit in Celeste LeWitt Gallery at UConn HealthVibrant paintings by Andrea Sanchez and Jaii Marc Renee on display in the Celeste LeWitt Gallery — Join us for a meet and greet from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 29.
- Oct 4All dayEight Days a Week : An Illustrated Record of Rock 'n' RollEnjoy this unique exhibition of rock music memorabilia from the archive of editor, journalist, and radio disc jockey Ken Best. This personal collection features decades worth of iconic photos, album covers, posters and promotional materials that Best has amassed while writing about music for newspapers in New Jersey and Connecticut and interviewing musicians and authors on the radio at WPKN in Bridgeport and WHUS in Storrs. Highlighted will be 50 photos of major rock 'n' roll figures by Connecticut photographer Joseph Sia, including his famous image of Jimi Hendrix at Woolsey Hall in New Haven in 1968, known as "The Shadow," from Best and Sia's 1992 book,Eight Days a Week: An Illustrated Record of Rock 'n' Roll (Pomegranate Books).
- Oct 4All dayEmployee Art Exhibit17 artists across the UConn community have their artwork on display in our Connector Gallery.
- Oct 4All dayFRAME Contest: Your Research in the SpotlightUConn and UConn Health faculty, staff, and students from all disciplines are invited to submit striking research images, graphics, or artwork. Winning entries will be displayed in OVPR spaces, transforming our walls into a gallery that celebrates the creativity and diversity of UConn research. Showcase the beauty of your research – from stunning microscopy images and bold data visualizations to fieldwork photos and original research-inspired art. Share your work with the UConn community Celebrate the creativity that drives discovery Click here (https://research.uconn.edu/frame-contest/) for contest details and entry form. Deadline: November 10, 2025 Questions: Contact research@uconn.edu (mailto:research@uconn.edu).FRAME: A creative, engaging forum showcasing UConn research.
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