Viewing entries tagged
research

Alumni All-Stars: Tips for a Tough Academic Job Market

Alumni All-Stars: Tips for a Tough Academic Job Market

Max Jack, a researcher and an alumnus of the Ethnomusicology Ph.D. program at UC Santa Barbara, recently spoke to students and faculty about his experience navigating the academic job market in the United States and abroad. Jack also gave advice on doing research and submitting to academic journals.

Raab Fellows: A Year of Research, Writing and Self-exploration

Raab Fellows: A Year of Research, Writing and Self-exploration

The Raab Writing Fellows Program, sponsored by Santa Barbara writer Diana Raab, held its end of the year showcase at Mosher Alumni Hall last week. Students in the program presented their year-long research projects to students and faculty. Their projects featuring an array of academic articles, reports, memoirs, novellas, zines, and videos

Discovery Through Detail: Maya Figurines Reveal Slavery

Discovery Through Detail: Maya Figurines Reveal Slavery

Director of the Getty Research Institute, Mary Miller virtually visited UCSB to speak about new insights she has gained by studying 8th-century Maya figurines. In her talk, she shared images of exquisite sculptures that revealed a complex and little-known side of Maya civilization that likely included slavery.

The Truth Behind Land-Grant Universities

The Truth Behind Land-Grant Universities

Journalist Tristan Ahtone and historian Robert Lee presented their research into stolen and underpaid indigenous lands that were granted to universities as real estate speculation to raise money. The event “Land-Grab Universiites” was co-hosted by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC) and the IHC’s American Indian and Indigenous Collective Research Focus Group.

The Changing World of Writing

The Changing World of Writing

Three University of California professors are lead researchers for the Wayfinding Project, a multi-year study of how writing affects the lives of recent college graduates. UC Santa Barbara Writing Program professor Karen Lunsford discusses the the project’s recent findings, as well as what is in store for the future.