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Stand-Outs

Students Impress at National Conference

How about those undergraduates from Ƶ? That was the talk at the recent 50th annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) in Fort Worth, Texas, after Ƶ students spontaneously entered the society's 4th annual Ethics Bowl competition.

A friendly competition that provides conference attendees with an opportunity to think and talk about applying professional ethics to real-life experiences as practicing archaeologists, the Ethics Bowl is apparently a tradition at the conference.

"All teams prepare in advance and have the topics to assist in preparation," said Professor of History and Department Chair Darlene Brooks Hedstrom, who is also the director of the archaeology program. "What made our students so remarkable beyond being willing to participate as undergraduates is that they didn't know about this part of the program until we arrived in Texas. They also did not know the topics in advance. I also had no idea about this component, as I was new to attending SHA along with them. So, they held their own and were confident enough to participate."

Students who participated in the Ethics Bowl included Dorian Hunter, class of 2019 from Springfield, Ohio, who is a business major and an archaeology and history minor; Abbey Fraker, class of 2019 from Westerville, Ohio, who is a history major and archaeology minor; Katelyn Shanor, class of 2017 and a sixth-generation Ƶ student from Roswell, N.M., who is a biology major and archaeology minor; and Lauren Ehlers, class of 2020 from Caudon, Ill., who is a history major and archaeology minor.  A fifth Ƶ student, Lindsey Lightner, class of 2020 from West Jefferson, Ohio, who is a political science major with minors in history and archaeology, was a participant in a round table titled Acting Locally: Archaeology in Policy and Planning with local government officials interested in cultural heritage and local history.

The students entered the debate against graduate students, discussing historic preservation, ethics in history and archaeology, as well as questions about "who owns the past." The result: a superior performance. In fact, the Ƶ students performed so well that a final round was added to the competition with the group taking second place.

"The room was so impressed by our students and their training in my archaeology class that deals specifically with the history of preservation and heritage that the SHA executive committee elected to award them $250 to acknowledge their success; the first prize team wins $750," Brooks Hedstrom said. "Throughout the rest of the conference, I received emails and texts from faculty at the conference talking about 'those Ƶ students' and 'how great they were!'"

Committee members not only awarded the money, but also wrote letters to interim Ƶ President Dick Helton and interim Provost Mary Jo Zembar. One letter in particular came from Mark Warner, president-elect of the SHA, who helped organize the Ethics Bowl.

The faculty and professionals who were there either as judges or as spectators were tremendously impressed. I have been involved in this organization for approximately 25 years. and this was one of the most satisfying things I have seen at the conference.
Mark Warner, president-elect of the SHA

"To be frank, your students were the talk of the conference," he wrote. "They spontaneously joined the competition (literally putting down their lunches to participate) and went head-to-head against a team of graduate students (three Ph.D.s. and one master's) and more than held their own, almost beating the other team. The faculty and professionals who were there either as judges or as spectators were tremendously impressed. I have been involved in this organization for approximately 25 years. and this was one of the most satisfying things I have seen at the conference. You should be tremendously proud of these students for their willingness to stick their neck out and join in."

According to its website, the SHA was formed in 1967 and is the largest scholarly group concerned with the archaeology of the modern world (A.D. 1400-present). The main focus of the society is the era since the beginning of European exploration. SHA promotes scholarly research and the dissemination of knowledge concerning historical archaeology.

Historical archaeology is the study of the material remains of past societies that also left behind some other form of historical evidence. This field of research embraces the interests of a diverse group of scholars representing the disciplines of anthropology, history, geography and folklore.  For more information on the SHA, go to 

Ƶ students also attended a bioarchaeology workshop and met several professionals in cultural resource management, museum studies, the National Park Service, heritage specialists, and historians who use archaeology to write about the past.

"I also was asked to meet with the President of SHA (Warner), and he expressed his appreciation for bringing our students as well as how remarkable it was for them to be so prepared and professional," Hedstrom added. "He strongly encouraged me to find a way to bring them back to next year's conference in New Orleans. The students were thrilled with their accomplishments and knew I would be proud of them. I can't describe how magical it was to see them just beaming with their intellectual satisfaction at holding their own against graduate students."

The five students were able to attend the conference with funding from the C. Louis Meyer Foundation - a gift established by Louis Meyer Brown, class of 2000 and given to both the Ƶ history and psychology departments to support student travel to museums and conferences.

Recognizing the gift of a life-changing education he received from Ƶ, Brown, from Chicago, Ill., has committed $10,000 annually to support the departments.

He currently serves as vice president of wealth management at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC in Chicago, and worked with his family's foundation to provide the gift. Founded in 1946, the foundation seeks to further public welfare through the relief of poverty and suffering, the advancement of education, the promotion of health, and the extension of the influence of religion.

 

Cindy Holbrook
Cindy Holbrook
Senior Communications Assistant

About Ƶ

Ƶ's curriculum has centered on the liberal arts as an education that develops the individual's capacity to think, read, and communicate with precision, understanding, and imagination. We are dedicated to active, engaged learning in the core disciplines of the arts and sciences and in pre-professional education grounded in the liberal arts. Known for the quality of our faculty and their teaching, Ƶ has more Ohio Professors of the Year than any four-year institution in the state. The university has also been recognized nationally for excellence in community service, sustainability, and intercollegiate athletics. Located among the beautiful rolling hills and hollows of Springfield, Ohio, Ƶ offers more than 100 majors, minors and special programs, enviable student-faculty research opportunities, a unique student success center, service and study options close to home and abroad, a stellar athletics tradition, and successful career preparation.

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