Summer 2014 Archives - Augsburg Now /now/tag/summer-2014/ 海角社区 Wed, 02 Apr 2025 19:22:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 Augsburg Alumni Honor Ed Saugestad ’59 Through Fundraising Challenge /now/2015/03/19/augsburg-alumni-honor-ed-saugestad-59-through-fundraising-challenge/ Thu, 19 Mar 2015 14:14:59 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4586 Ed Saugestad 鈥59 is 鈥減lain and simply, a legend,鈥 according to Jeff Swenson 鈥79, Augsburg College athletic director. Saugestad led the Auggie men鈥檚 hockey team to 503 victories and three national championships. He was football coach and athletic聽director. The ice arena鈥檚 main rink carries his name. But the legacy of 鈥淏ig Man,鈥 who died in

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Ed Saugestad 鈥59 is 鈥減lain and simply, a legend,鈥 according to Jeff Swenson 鈥79, Augsburg College athletic director. Saugestad led the Auggie men鈥檚 hockey team to 503 victories and three national championships. He was football coach and athletic聽director. The ice arena鈥檚 main rink carries his name.

But the legacy of 鈥淏ig Man,鈥 who died in March of聽pancreatic cancer after serving Augsburg for 39 years and聽retiring in 1996, goes far beyond athletics. As a soft-spoken聽teacher, mentor, and source of courage and inspiration, he made a difference. If Corky Hall 鈥71 is any indication, he also聽instilled generosity and gratitude.

鈥淗e is the person who kindled the fire in me, and I think he did that for many, many people,鈥 Hall said. He and his wife, Lori, led the charge to name Saugestad Hall in the Center for聽Science, Business, and Religion (CSBR) with their $25,000聽pledge鈥攁 first step toward the $150,000 naming goal and a tribute to the CSBR as a visual symbol of strength and聽connection.

When we build the CSBR, 鈥淸础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚] facilities will grow to match the quality of our faculty,鈥 said Hall. 鈥淐oach had a huge effect on all of us.鈥

A gifted athlete who became both hockey and football聽captain, Hall had few academic expectations when he entered聽Augsburg. His parents hadn鈥檛 finished high school, no one in his family had attended college, and homework was a foreign聽concept. Yet, one day, he managed to ace a test in Saugestad鈥檚 tough physiology class.

鈥淓d was the first person to tell me that I was smart,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淗e set me on a path I wouldn鈥檛 have found聽otherwise.鈥 That path led him to a career that included starting,聽with classmate Bill Urseth 鈥71, one of the nation鈥檚 leading promotional marketing agencies, U.S. Communications, U.S.聽Restaurants, and U.S. Studios; launching a brand consultancy, Hall Batko; and founding Stellus Consulting, which helps
corporate leaders envision and brand their companies.

It also led him to realize that great mentoring builds strong聽bridges鈥攂etween athletics and academics, between teachers聽and students, and between gratitude and giving back.

鈥淎ugsburg needs great facilities for athletes to develop聽their academic side,鈥 he said. 鈥淓d made the bridge for me聽between athletics and academics, and if I hadn鈥檛 gotten strong聽academics at Augsburg, I wouldn鈥檛 be the person I am today. I want to give a gift that says 鈥榯hank you鈥 to Ed for making such a聽difference in my life.鈥

Hall has found that his fellow聽Augsburg alumni have similar gratitude for聽Saugestad鈥檚 commitment and are willing to echo his 鈥渢hank you.鈥

鈥淐orky is so respected by the Augsburg聽community that, when he steps forward, he sets聽a tone with his leadership. That鈥檚 the momentum we need,鈥 said Keith Stout, Augsburg College聽director of principal gifts. 鈥淗e wants everyone聽involved, participating at any level. If they鈥檙e grateful for their聽time with Ed, it鈥檚 their chance to honor his legacy.鈥

By May, the initiative had raised $105,000.

鈥淗e deserves it,鈥 Hall said. 鈥淓d did so much to make our聽lives better. Now it鈥檚 our turn.鈥

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Auggies go green! /now/2014/07/22/auggies-go-green/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:31:14 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4210 Augsburg College President Paul C. Pribbenow was one of several Auggies to take an inaugural ride on the Metro Transit Green Line during its grand opening June 14. The Green Line runs from downtown St. Paul to downtown Minneapolis and is the second Light Rail Transit (LRT) line to pass through Cedar-Riverside鈥攖he only neighborhood in

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Auggies go greenAugsburg College President Paul C. Pribbenow was one of several Auggies to take an inaugural ride on the Metro Transit Green Line during its grand opening June 14. The Green Line runs from downtown St. Paul to downtown Minneapolis and is the second Light Rail Transit (LRT) line to pass through Cedar-Riverside鈥攖he only neighborhood in the Twin Cities with access to both LRT lines.聽

The addition of the Green Line expands student access to jobs, internships, and experiential education opportunities; enhances safety in the neighborhood; and contributes to a vital urban environment for all who live and work in the area.

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Celebrating student success /now/2014/07/22/celebrating-student-success-2/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:30:03 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4212 Augsburg students earned a range of prestigious accolades during spring semester, including the following: Barry Goldwater Scholarship Eric Bowman 鈥15, a biology and chemistry major and McNair Scholar, received an honorable mention in the Barry Goldwater Scholarship competition. The Goldwater Foundation provides $7,500 undergraduate scholarships to students who plan to pursue a research career in

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Augsburg students earned a range of prestigious accolades during spring semester, including the following:

Eric Bowman
Eric Bowman ’15

Barry Goldwater Scholarship
Eric Bowman 鈥15, a biology and chemistry major and McNair Scholar, received an honorable mention in the Barry Goldwater Scholarship competition. The Goldwater Foundation provides $7,500 undergraduate scholarships to students who plan to pursue a research career in a STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) field, and the scholarship is the premier undergraduate award of its type in these fields. Bowman was one of only eight Minnesotans to receive an honorable mention this year.

Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship
Sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship Program offers grants for U.S. citizen undergraduate students of limited financial means to pursue academic studies or credit-bearing, career-oriented internships abroad. Since 2008, 36 Auggies have been awarded a total of $150,000 from the Gilman International Scholarship.

This spring, sociology and psychology major Pa-Loo Lor 鈥14 studied at 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 exchange partner, Hong Kong Baptist University. This summer, GaoSheng Yang 鈥14 studied and interned in Shanghai. She is an international relations major with a minor in management information systems. And this fall, biology major Fowsia Elmi 鈥15, international business and finance major Smeret Hailom 鈥15, and sociology major Ayan Khayro 鈥15 will study in Turkey; and music major Elizabeth Fontaine 鈥16 will study in Indonesia.

Kemper Scholars Program
Najma Warsame 鈥17, a communication studies student, was named the College鈥檚 fourth Kemper Scholar. Students in this prestigious program, which is funded by the James S. Kemper Foundation, receive academic scholarships and stipends to cover the costs of two summer internships in major nonprofit and for-profit organizations. Augsburg is one of only 16 U.S. liberal arts colleges with the Kemper Scholars Program distinction.

Newman Civic Fellows Award
Vincent Henry 鈥15 was named a Newman Civic Fellow for 2014. The Newman Civic Fellow Award is a Campus Compact distinction recognizing students who-鈥攖hrough service, research, and advocacy鈥攚ork to identify the root causes of social issues and effective mechanisms for creating lasting change.

Muna Mohamed
Muna Mohamed ’15

Phillips Scholarship
Each year, the Minnesota Private College Council awards six scholarships from the Jay and Rose Phillips Family Foundation of Minnesota to students who attend its 17 member institutions. This year, two of the six were awarded to Augsburg students Sagal Ali 鈥16 and Muna Mohamed 鈥15. Ali will work on a project that addresses the high risk of obesity and the rise of diabetes among Somali women, while Mohamed鈥檚 project will focus on engaging Muslim women in sports while honoring their religious and cultural beliefs.

2014 Presidents鈥 Civic Engagement Steward Award
The Augsburg student group Students for Racial Justice won the Presidents鈥 Civic Engagement Steward Award at the Minnesota Campus Compact Summit that took place this spring. This award recognizes those who have advanced their campus鈥檚 distinctive civic mission by forming strong partnerships, supporting civic engagement, and working to institutionalize a culture and practice of engagement.

Rossing Physics Scholars
Two Augsburg College students have been named Rossing Physics Scholars for 2014-15. Juan Tigre 鈥16 and Fikre Beyene 鈥16 will receive $10,000 and $7,000, respectively. The Rossing Fund for Physics Education Endowment in the ELCA Foundation was established in 2005 for physics majors at the 27 ELCA colleges.

Travelers EDGE Scholars and Travelers Internships
Stella Richardson Hohn 鈥15 and Lee Thao 鈥15 are interning in St. Paul and Hartford, Conn., respectively, as part of the Travelers Insurance Empowering Dreams for Graduation and Employment (EDGE) program. This program focuses on college recruitment and retention of low-income and first-generation students, and enhances awareness of careers in the insurance and financial industries. In Minnesota, the focus specifically is on students graduating from both the St. Paul and Minneapolis public school districts.

Five additional Auggies鈥Lorreal Edwards 鈥16, Liban Elmi 鈥16, Lyton Guallpa-Naula 鈥16, Angela Hernandez 鈥16, and Seng Vue 鈥16鈥攁lso will complete internships at Travelers Insurance in St. Paul. This group will participate in professional and leadership development workshops supported by the Kemper Foundation to prepare for their internship opportunity.

Michelle Grafelman
Michelle Grafelman ’15

Vann Fellowship
Michelle Grafelman 鈥15, an Augsburg Presidential Scholar, was awarded the $5,000 Vann Fellowship in Biomedical Ethics at Mayo Clinic. As a summer fellow, she is working with physician and research mentors within Mayo鈥檚 Program in Professionalism and Ethics to examine issues such as end-of-life care, genetic therapies, and patient consent, among others.

Student research awards and achievements

Students participate in Zyzzogeton 2014
Zyzzogeton is an opportunity to hear about the exciting scholarship happening on campus. This year, more than 80 students presented their research and creative activity to the Augsburg community in the annual spring poster session, which is sponsored by the Office of Undergraduate Research and Graduate Opportunity (URGO), the McNair Scholars program, and the Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (LSAMP) program.

Summer 2014 Off-campus Research Appointments

Cedith Giddings
Cedith Giddings ’15

This summer, several Auggie researchers will be building their skills to support graduate school admissions and careers in the sciences.

  • Elly Bier 鈥14鈥攑hysics; National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Weih Borh 鈥16鈥攃hemistry; Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (LSAMP Summer Research Program)
  • Chris DeVet 鈥15鈥攃hemistry; CIMA Labs pharmaceuticals
  • Becca Freese 鈥16鈥攂iology and mathematics; University of Minnesota (Summer Institute in Biostatistics)
  • Kirubel Frew 鈥14鈥攃hemistry; working with Armon Sharei and Katarina Blagovic at Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, respectively
  • Cedith Giddings 鈥15鈥攂iology; University of Minnesota (CHE-CTSI Advanced Research Program and Undergraduate Research Program)
  • Michelle Grafelman 鈥15鈥攂iology; Mayo Clinic (Vann Fellowship in Bioethics)
  • Daniel Hildebrandt 鈥15鈥攂iology and chemistry; Mayo Clinic (Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship)
  • Taylor Kuramoto 鈥15鈥攎athematics; University of Tennessee, Knoxville (National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis)
  • Oscar Martinez
    Oscar Martinez ’16

    Oscar Martinez 鈥16鈥攃hemistry; Scripps Research Institute in Jupiter, Fla. (Summer Undergraduate Research Fellows Program)

  • Bethany Marlette 鈥14鈥攂iology; Mayo Clinic
  • Yemi Melka 鈥15鈥攃hemistry and聽international relations; Friends Committee on National Legislation in Washington, D.C.
  • Lily Moloney 鈥15鈥攃hemistry; Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif. (Summer Undergraduate Research Fellows Program)
  • Promise Okeke 鈥15鈥攂iology; Harvard Stem Cell Institute of the Harvard Medical School
  • Andrew Roehl 鈥15鈥攃hemistry; Colorado State University (Summer Research Experience for Undergraduates)
  • Ben Swanson 鈥15鈥攃hemistry; Northwestern University (Materials Research Science & Engineering Center)
  • Sadie Tetrick 鈥16鈥攑hysics; Dartmouth College Physics Department

Posters on the Hill
Each spring, the Council on Undergraduate Research hosts its annual undergraduate poster session, Posters on the Hill, in Washington, D.C. At the event, students meet members of Congress, funding agencies, and foundations, and have the opportunity to advocate for undergraduate research programs.

Summa cum laude English graduate Margo Ensz 鈥13 was among the top 10 percent of applicants selected to present and received an honorable mention for her URGO summer research project, 鈥淎nalyzing the Persistence of a Sense of Place Among Young Adults in the Technology-Rich, A-Contextual 21st Century,鈥 advised by Colin Irvine, Augsburg College associate professor of English.

Scholars at the Capitol

Amineh Safi
Amineh Safi ’14

During spring semester, Augsburg TRIO McNair Scholars Amineh Safi 鈥14 and David Fowler 鈥14 participated in the 11th annual Private College Scholars at the Capitol event. Each private college in Minnesota annually selects two students to attend the event and present their research. Safi鈥檚 research topic, 鈥淩acializing Islam: Newspaper Portrayal of Crime Involving Muslims and Islam,鈥 is a descriptive content analysis examining how crimes involving Muslims are portrayed in the Star Tribune and the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Fowler鈥檚 research focused on methods for studying heart development and function in the model organism Daphnia magna.

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Faithful and relevant /now/2014/07/22/faithful-relevant/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:29:05 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4218 The post Faithful and relevant appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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Faithful and RelevantWith careers in accounting, education, military service, and pastoral ministry, six recent Augsburg alumni are finding that their undergraduate experiences studying vocation and interfaith leadership are paying off well beyond their聽college years.

These Auggies participated in the Christensen Scholars and Interfaith Scholars programs at Augsburg鈥攑rograms that provide scholarships for students to take upper-level religion courses that thrust them deep into topics of faith, religious diversity, service, theology, and vocation.

Meeting on weeknight evenings throughout the academic year, students engaged with these topics鈥攁nd each other鈥攖hrough focused discussion, inquiry, service-learning, and reflection. The number of scholarships available each year is limited, so getting into the program is a competitive process, involving writing an essay and obtaining a recommendation from an Augsburg College faculty or staff member. Students accepted to the programs earn four religion credits and a $2,000 scholarship for the year. But, according to some of the early alumni from the programs, the value of the experience extends well beyond course credit and financial support.

Grappling with vocation

One of the aspects that Auggies in the Christensen Scholars and Interfaith Scholars programs valued most about the experience was the dedicated time to learn and to grapple together with difficult topics and questions.

鈥淗aving that regular, dedicated time for discussion helped us to better articulate our gifts, strengths, and passions,鈥 said Emily Wiles 鈥10, a youth and family ministry major who this spring earned a Master of Divinity from Luther Seminary. 鈥淲e pushed each other to articulate our positions, which helped me really connect with what I think and who I am,鈥 she said. As a result, 鈥渢hings that I might have otherwise taken for granted, I came to 鈥榦wn鈥 as my gifts.鈥 In having to express and explain your perspectives, Wiles said, 鈥測ou really get to know yourself better.鈥

Also beneficial, according to several alumni, was the opportunity to reflect on the full meaning of vocation. 鈥淢y generation is going to have 15 different jobs or careers in our lifetimes,鈥 said Cody Tresselt-Warren 鈥09, who majored in accounting and religion at Augsburg and today is a tax accountant at Wells Fargo & Company.

鈥淵ou think, when you鈥檙e in college, that once you graduate and get a job, you鈥檙e set,鈥 he said. But there are so many other important layers鈥攆rom family obligations to the needs of the wider world鈥攖hat, 鈥測ou have to interpret your calling from a number of perspectives. It鈥檚 a dynamic, evolving journey.鈥

Sylvia Bull 鈥10 agreed, noting that, especially in the U.S.鈥攁 generally career-oriented culture鈥攊t is important to expand the view of vocation beyond just a job or career. Bull, an international relations and religion double major who this spring completed her third year at Princeton Theological Seminary in Princeton, N.J., sees faith as serving an important role in considerations about vocation. We need to 鈥渙pen our eyes of faith to see all of the things that we do in our lives as part of God鈥檚 call,鈥 she said.

And 鈥渆ven if faith is not explicitly part of the conversation,鈥 said Jessica Spanswick 鈥10, who today works as director of career services at Globe University, 鈥渋t is a profound, shared human desire to seek and find meaning in our lives.鈥

Welcoming difficult conversations

Alumni from these programs also shared an appreciation for how their experiences helped them develop the listening and interpersonal skills to learn from and understand others. 鈥淲e learned to step boldly and respectfully into difficult conversations,鈥 said Peter Weston Miller 鈥10, 鈥渕eeting people where they were at, where God had uniquely called them to be.鈥

Weston Miller, an English major who also completed his Master鈥檚 of Divinity at Luther Seminary this past spring, said these conversations taught the participants how to 鈥渂uild relationships based on human integrity and dignity, not just [based on] topics鈥 that they agreed upon.

鈥淲e learned to know ourselves better through the eyes of others, despite different backgrounds, political leanings, and socio-economic statuses,鈥 he said.

In particular, alumni from the programs valued the opportunity to interact and work with people who bring different faith perspectives. 鈥淪peaking with people from many different faith backgrounds helped me learn to listen to and understand others鈥 views and beliefs,鈥 said Spanswick, who majored in international relations at Augsburg and recently completed her MBA at Globe University. In her current work, Spanswick meets people from many different cultures, and she noted that their cultural practices often differ because of faith traditions.

Whitney Pratt 鈥11, who majored in economics at Augsburg and serves as a first lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force, agreed that interfaith competency is an important life skill. 鈥淩eligion is such an important facet of our lives,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ost of our political struggles center around topics that stem from the moral foundations鈥 that different groups of people use to guide their behaviors and interactions in society.

鈥淵ou can try to build intercultural competence, but without understanding religion,鈥 Pratt said, 鈥測ou won鈥檛 be fully effective.鈥 To function as a citizen in today鈥檚 world, 鈥測ou have to understand how people think and the beliefs on which they base their social and moral codes.鈥

Asking tough questions

In the end, these Auggies agreed that the programs鈥 greatest value was that they equipped participants to ask challenging life questions鈥攕eemingly simple (but, actually, not-so-simple) questions like, 鈥淲here have you come from鈥攁nd where are you going?鈥 and 鈥淗ow do you know you鈥檙e on the right path?鈥

Consistently, all of these alumni said it was the questions鈥攏ot the answers鈥攖hat were most meaningful to them. In fact, they have each continued the practice of asking and reflecting on difficult questions and they shared some of the questions they regularly encounter in their lives today:

  • 鈥淎m I questioning my current path because I don鈥檛 like it [today] or because it鈥檚 really not my calling?鈥
  • 鈥淗ow do I remain true to my Lutheran beliefs and still operate in an ecumenically diverse organization?鈥
  • 鈥淗ow will what I want to say affect this other person?鈥
  • 鈥淚f this current path is not my calling, what鈥檚 the best step to take to explore what is right?鈥
  • And, the question that Martin Luther is famous for: 鈥淲hat does this mean?鈥

鈥淎s our lives and our world change,鈥 Weston Miller said, 鈥渨e need to keep asking these questions in order to keep ourselves expanding, growing, nurturing, and propelled forward in God鈥檚 calling for all of us.鈥

Continually asking these questions and searching for meaning helps us to see the world not just as it is, Wiles added, but as it could be.

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What is it? /now/2014/07/22/what-is-it/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:27:51 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4220 Each summer, undergraduate students at Augsburg College work directly with faculty mentors to complete individually designed research projects and creative activities. Auggies seeking to enhance their education gain rich, hands-on experience by participating in research opportunities sponsored by the College, funded through grants and private gifts, or offered through federal programs. Students from all disciplines

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Each summer, undergraduate students at Augsburg College work directly with faculty mentors to complete individually designed research projects and creative activities. Auggies seeking to enhance their education gain rich, hands-on experience by participating in research opportunities sponsored by the College, funded through grants and private gifts, or offered through federal programs.

Students from all disciplines can participate in summer research. This year, their topics included designing a tool to sample motor vehicle pollution; examining immigrants鈥 influence in community organizations and politics; cloning and characterization of Daphnia magna, a water flea; and analyzing the effects of the No Child Left Behind Act on Minneapolis youth, among many others.

During the research process, students often use specialized materials and technologies, investigate complex and specific concepts, and explore existing scholarship and literature.

Here are the answers to the question, “What is it?”


What is it - chemistryQ: What is it?

A: A column that contains a catalyst and through which a stream of reactants move. Reactants are substances that undergo change during a chemical reaction, and 鈥渇low chemistry鈥 is a process that gets its name from the movement of these materials.

Alan Medina-Gonzalez 鈥16
Major: Chemistry, Minors: Biology and Mathematics
Research mentors: Z. Vivian Feng, associate professor of chemistry; and Michael Wentzel, assistant professor of chemistry

Alan Medina-Gonzalez 鈥16 chose to participate in summer research because it granted him the opportunity to spend more time in the lab optimizing a chemical reaction, which is a fun鈥攁lbeit time-consuming鈥攑uzzle he enjoys solving. 鈥淚 wanted to see what it was like to work on a project all day long versus only going into the lab four hours per week as part of a class,鈥 he said.

Medina-Gonzalez鈥檚 research involved setting up chemical reactions using flow chemistry鈥攁 process that helps make reactions more 鈥済reen鈥 by allowing chemists to lessen waste generation and to improve energy efficiency and safety. His research goal included producing a variety of molecules, including acetaminophen鈥攖he primary active ingredient in Tylenol and other medicines鈥攖o demonstrate the uses of flow chemistry in the pharmaceutical industry.聽


What is it - exercise scienceQ: What is it?

A: A foam roller, a tool that breaks up fibrous tissue in order to increase muscle elasticity and circulation flow.

Briana Felton 鈥14
Major: Exercise Science, Minor: Psychology
Research mentors: David Barrett, assistant professor of health, physical education, and exercise science; and Tony Clapp, associate professor of health, physical education, and exercise science

Briana Felton 鈥14 chose a summer research project that will help to prepare her for the dream of attending graduate school to study physical therapy. Felton is a member of the Augsburg women鈥檚 soccer team, and she loves sports and fitness. Athletes commonly use a foam roller on their muscles for self-myofascial release鈥攁 process that applies pressure to trigger points within muscle tissue and is thought to cause the tissue to relax and become more flexible.聽

Although the use of foam rollers has become a common practice in therapy and fitness centers, few peer-reviewed studies have examined its effectiveness. For Felton鈥檚 research project, she conducted a study in which middle-aged adult males participated in an exercise program utilizing foam rollers. Felton then assessed the study participants鈥 balance and functional movement patterns using industry-standard tests to see whether their scores improved over the course of the study. Higher scores have been shown to correlate with a person鈥檚 decreased risk of injury.聽

The results:

Felton鈥檚 study found that the Functional Movement Screen, the聽assessment used to gather comparison data for individuals鈥 fitness聽before and after the foam-rolling regimen, had a significant increase聽in its composite scores. On average, scores from pre- to post-test聽increased by 2.06 points out of 21. Although the composite scores聽illustrated a significant increase, not all of the individual tests聽showed such an increase. Study participants were also asked to聽self-evaluate perceived pain, and there was no significant increase聽for any of the 10 survey questions.

In the future, Felton is interested in replicating this study with聽females in the same age group as her summer 2014 study, which was聽limited to males. She also is considering whether selecting a聽population with more known deficits and, therefore, more room to聽improve could influence the research results.


What is it - biopsychologyQ: What is it?

A: An electroencephalogram (EEG) recording cap, which is used to capture the brain鈥檚 electrical activity while at rest or engaged in mental activity.

Brad Marcy 鈥15
Major: Biopsychology, Minor: Chemistry
Research mentor: Henry Yoon, assistant professor聽of psychology

Research conducted on substance use disorders often extends to either the biological or the behavioral aspects of addiction. This summer, Brad Marcy 鈥15 took on the challenge of combining both of these aspects into a single study incorporating behavioral information鈥攊n this case, a person鈥檚 age of first alcoholic drink (AFD)鈥攁nd biological data, which was derived from brain patterns collected through EEG scans.

Marcy and other Augsburg psychology students gathered data by working with student volunteers, including those in the College鈥檚 StepUP program, which serves students who are in recovery from addiction. Marcy鈥檚 research project involved processing and analyzing participants鈥 EEG data in order to identify telltale signs of being at biological or genetic risk for dependence in these brainwave patterns. He then examined whether an association exists between this biological information and AFD. By evaluating these variables, Marcy can later assess their usefulness in refining the diagnosis of substance misuse.


What is it - gender studiesQ: What is it?

A: The examination of journal articles, images, and academic texts鈥攊llustrated here鈥攁re key aspects of student researchers鈥 literature review process. A literature review discusses published information in a particular subject area.

Awale Osman 鈥15
Major: Communication Studies, Minor: Women鈥檚 Studies
Research mentor: Adriane Brown, assistant professor of women鈥檚 studies

鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to be a teacher,鈥 said Awale Osman 鈥15, a McNair research scholar whose project almost perfectly aligned with his desired career path. Osman began his undergraduate education at a community college before transferring to Augsburg, and his research project involved examining the establishment and evolution of women鈥檚 studies, the emergence of gender and masculinity studies, and current dialogue regarding the field. This work allowed him to combine his interests in communications and women鈥檚 studies into a project that enhanced his academic skills.

Osman would like to return to a community college one day鈥攖his time as a professor instead of as a student. Osman chose his research topic in order to establish a foundation in the research he hopes will be incorporated in a future doctoral program that will, eventually, lead to a teaching role in higher education. 鈥淚 realize I have to be grounded to be successful in my track,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o, I鈥檓 going for it.鈥


What is it - computer scienceQ: What is it?

A: The Bengali pronoun 鈥膾迟腻,鈥 which is similar to the English pronoun 鈥渋t.鈥

Priti Bhowmik 鈥15 and Bram Oosterlee 鈥16
Majors: Computer Science
Research mentor: Shana Watters, associate professor of computer science

As international students, Priti Bhowmik 鈥15 and Bram Oosterlee 鈥16 were attracted to research linked with the official languages of their home countries. In 2011, Bhowmik left Bangladesh to attend Augsburg, and she seized the opportunity to use her background in the Bengali language in combination with her computer science major. Her research project fell in the field of computational linguistics鈥攁 branch of linguistics in which computer science techniques are applied to the analysis of language and speech. She explored whether the pronoun 鈥膾迟腻鈥 has the same cognitive status as the English pronoun 鈥渋t.鈥 That is, whether a Bengali speaker, in determining what 膾迟腻 refers to in a sentence, uses his or her short-term memory in the same manner that an English speaker does when determining what the word 鈥渋t鈥 refers to.

Oosterlee, a student from the Netherlands, performed a similar study by examining the cognitive status of the Dutch pronoun 鈥渉et.鈥 Bhowmik and Oosterlee鈥檚 work ultimately will contribute to developing systems that enhance how computers extract information, summarize text, and translate language. One example of the usefulness of these processes is that they increase the likelihood of returning accurate content descriptions when doctors use digital medical reference materials to find information that pertains specifically to a disorder.


What is it - biologyQ: What is it?

A: The parasitic plant dodder聽(Cuscuta pentagona) attached to a host plant from which it acquires all its water and nutrients.

Lucy Bukowski 鈥16
Major: Biology, Minor: Environmental Studies
Research mentor: Bill Capman, associate professor of biology

Augsburg College students have studied the interactions between dodder and its host plants since 2008, and this summer Lucy Bukowski 鈥16 worked on an experiment testing the hypothesis that a decline in the health of the host plant triggers the dodder to flower. Bukowski鈥檚 project benefitted from the help of a plant pathologist at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities who offered greenhouse space, thus providing a larger growing area and better growing conditions for Bukowski鈥檚 research.

Online-exclusive content: More about the dodder project

Bill Capman has mentored Augsburg College students conducting hands-on research using the聽dodder plant both to fulfill their undergraduate coursework and to gain experience through the聽College鈥檚 co-curricular programs. In Bukowski鈥檚 case, spending the summer working on an individually tailored project offered a structured yet challenging opportunity to gain exposure聽to the steps comprising sophisticated academic research, which include conducting a literature聽review, collecting and analyzing data, presenting key project takeaways to a live audience in a聽setting that simulates a research conference, and more.

Bukowski鈥檚 project聽built upon聽research by a series of previous Augsburg College students during the past 10 years whose work聽focused primarily on patterns of host plant resistance to dodder. Faculty members often lead subject-specific research聽that incorporates new students year after year, adding depth and longevity to the investigation聽while also allowing students to contribute to聽a body of聽research聽that is bigger than聽their individual聽project.

Anika Clark 鈥14 took part in research advised by Capman during the summer of 2013, and she聽said her experience was enhanced through the contributions made by preceding students.

鈥淸By]聽looking at the methods of previous research done at Augsburg, I could optimize the methods for聽my specific question,鈥 she said.

University of Minnesota greenhouse
Bukowski and Capman’s research plants at the University of Minnesota greenhouse.

Clark鈥檚 research spurred a unique鈥攁nd fortunate鈥攐pportunity for Bukowski. Through the聽research presentation at the conclusion of Clark鈥檚 2013 project, a plant pathologist from the聽University of Minnesota聽became intrigued by the dodder research聽at Augsburg. He聽invited Capman to give a research seminar at the University of Minnesota on the dodder work and聽then聽offered聽the use of some of his聽greenhouse聽space as an improved setting in which to grow dodder and its host plant, velvetleaf, during the聽summer of 2014.

鈥淟ucy聽got聽to work聽side-by-side with really big science,鈥 said Capman, explaining that the聽greenhouse is also used for research on wheat rust, soybean aphids, and other projects linked to聽global food security.

Access to a bigger聽and more uniform growing聽space allowed Bukowski and Capman to implement a large-scale project for聽the first time,聽building on聽an already fascinating聽series of studies.

Bukowski and Clark said they plan to attend graduate school in the future and appreciate the聽ways in which on-campus summer research at Augsburg has helped to prepare them for the next聽phase in their education.

鈥淧rior to [the dodder] project, I had no research experience,鈥 said Clark. 鈥淚 am so lucky that鈥聽gained a sense of confidence regarding my abilities.鈥

Bukowski hopes her first research experience will lead to additional opportunities prior to聽her graduation while also enhancing her graduate school applications and preparedness for its聽rigorous workload.

鈥淭his project shows I can work semi-independently and successfully on research,鈥 she said. 鈥淚聽know it will open up more doors for me in the future.鈥


Experiential education through undergraduate research

One key way Augsburg College delivers on its commitment to experiential education is through undergraduate research projects in which Auggies employ their talents and passions. On campus, these projects are funded through several sources, including 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 Office of Undergraduate Research and Graduate Opportunity (URGO), National Science Foundation and corporate grants, private donations, and the McNair Scholars program鈥攁 federal TRIO program funded by the U.S. Department of Education and designed to increase graduate degree attainment by students who are first-generation, low-income, and/or members of groups underrepresented in graduate education.

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From game time to lifetime /now/2014/07/22/game-time-lifetime/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:25:56 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4222 August 18 marks the 100th birthday of legendary Augsburg College coach Edor Nelson 鈥38.聽 Nelson is one of the elite Augsburg coaches who profoundly impacted the College鈥檚 athletic programs and whose influence echoed in the lives of student-athletes beyond their competitions on athletic fields, rinks, and courts.聽 At Augsburg, the legacies of renowned coaching staff

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Game time to lifetime

August 18 marks the 100th birthday of legendary Augsburg College coach Edor Nelson 鈥38.聽

Nelson is one of the elite Augsburg coaches who profoundly impacted the College鈥檚 athletic programs and whose influence echoed in the lives of student-athletes beyond their competitions on athletic fields, rinks, and courts.聽

At Augsburg, the legacies of renowned coaching staff and faculty live on in the facilities that carry their names, are exhibited in their own philanthropy, and can be seen in the generosity they inspire in others.聽

Bruce Nelson 鈥71, son of Edor Nelson, said coaches such as his father grew up in an era in which sacrifice for the greater good was common, and coaches played larger roles in the lives of student-athletes than simply running drills.聽

鈥淭hese coaches taught student-athletes about commitment and that a team is bigger than the individuals,鈥 said Bruce, who lives out what he learned鈥攊n part鈥攂y serving as president of the Augsburg A-Club, a service organization of former and current Auggie student-athletes and friends of the College.

Bruce knows from first-hand experience that student-athletes see, understand, and appreciate the ways their mentors continue to influence their lives as they move on to new opportunities.

鈥淰ery few athletes, when they鈥檙e older, talk about wins and losses. They talk about camaraderie, support, and struggles,鈥 Bruce said. 鈥淭hey remember that my dad helped them get jobs out of college鈥攖hat the support didn鈥檛 stop after graduation.鈥

Nelson is one of a group of long-tenured coaches who are pillars in the Auggie community. Others include:

Ernie Anderson 鈥37鈥揅oach of 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 men鈥檚 basketball team from 1947-1970, Anderson also was athletic director for 33 years from 1947-1980. His tenure inspired the Ernie Anderson Court in Si Melby Hall.

Marilyn Pearson Florian 鈥76鈥揅oach of 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 women鈥檚 volleyball team from 1981-1998, she also was the women鈥檚 athletic director from 1988-2007. She increased the number of women鈥檚 sports and of female student-athletes.

Edor Nelson 鈥38鈥揂n Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame member, Nelson coached football from 1947-1969 and baseball from 1946-1979. 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 outdoor athletic field bears his name.聽

Lavonne Johnson Peterson 鈥50鈥撯淢rs. Pete鈥 led the 鈥楢uggiettes鈥 basketball team in 13 unbeaten seasons from the 1950s to the 1970s and was an instructor until 1980. Augsburg named the health and physical education center in her honor.

Joyce Anderson Pfaff 鈥65鈥揂 pioneer in women鈥檚 athletics and in the establishment of varsity women鈥檚 sports, Pfaff was 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 first women鈥檚 athletic director, serving from 1972-1998. She also taught for 43 years.

Ed Saugestad 鈥59鈥揅oach of the men鈥檚 hockey team from聽1958-1996, Saugestad鈥檚 championship teams claimed three NAIA national and six MIAC state titles. One of 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 hockey rinks is named in honor of Saugestad, who passed away in March.聽

Jeff Swenson 鈥79鈥揥restling team coach for 25 years, Swenson has served the past 10 years as athletic director. Auggies brought home 10 national wrestling titles under his leadership, and the wrestling wall of fame bears his name.

Today the commitment of these coaches continues to be honored through philanthropic initiatives by alumni whom they inspired.

Corky Hall 鈥71, 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 first men鈥檚 hockey All-American, is challenging fellow student-athletes-turned-Augsburg-alumni to raise funds for a named space in the Center for Science, Business, and Religion (CSBR) to honor Saugestad.聽

Mark Rabbe 鈥53, one of Edor Nelson鈥檚 baseball players, is funding a faculty office in the CSBR to honor the coach. And additional challenges are underway to honor the centennial of Edor Nelson鈥檚 birth.聽

These Augsburg alumni鈥攁nd many others who have stepped up to join a philanthropic challenge鈥攄emonstrate that alumni athletes recognize the role coaches played in positively shaping their lives and are willing to seize the opportunity to make a positive impact on the Auggies of tomorrow. 聽

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An Augsburg Legacy /now/2014/07/22/augsburg-legacy/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:25:01 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4226 Whether they are traveling five states by motorcycle from Minnesota to Tennessee, he鈥檚 teaching across two of Augsburg College鈥檚 academic departments, or she鈥檚 pursuing an undergraduate degree while raising toddlers, there鈥檚 one thing Larry and Cheryl 鈥89 Crockett know well: How to cross boundaries to arrive at a destination that expands their horizons and inspires

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Larry and Cheryl Crockett
Larry and Cheryl ’89 Crockett

Whether they are traveling five states by motorcycle from Minnesota to Tennessee, he鈥檚 teaching across two of Augsburg College鈥檚 academic departments, or she鈥檚 pursuing an undergraduate degree while raising toddlers, there鈥檚 one thing Larry and Cheryl 鈥89 Crockett know well: How to cross boundaries to arrive at a destination that expands their horizons and inspires others.

The Crocketts have a shared love for exploring the richness that exists at the intersections of seemingly different frontiers. For more than 30 years, Larry has served as an Augsburg professor of religion and computer science. During that time, Cheryl has experienced鈥攂oth as a student and as an Augsburg volunteer鈥攖he rich conversations that cross disciplines at the College.

That鈥檚 why the Crocketts decided to make a $50,000 estate gift to the Augsburg College campaign for the Center for Science, Business, and Religion (CSBR).

Both Larry and Cheryl recognize that students in today鈥檚 world must engage in discussions and solve complex problems in a multinational world where science, business, and religion intersect. And, they鈥檙e helping to pollinate those conversations by supporting the CSBR: 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 boundary-breaking academic building.

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Grants gain ground /now/2014/07/22/grants-gain-ground/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:23:23 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4224 How can you better predict the weather on Earth鈥攐r in space? Why do elementary students learn the way they do? And what makes one person attracted to another? Augsburg faculty and students are committed to asking difficult questions and seeking equally complex answers. Each year, the College鈥檚 faculty, staff, and students apply for鈥攁nd receive鈥攑restigious grant

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How can you better predict the weather on Earth鈥攐r in space? Why do elementary students learn the way they do? And what makes one person attracted to another?

Augsburg faculty and students are committed to asking difficult questions and seeking equally complex answers. Each year, the College鈥檚 faculty, staff, and students apply for鈥攁nd receive鈥攑restigious grant awards to fund research, continued scholarship, and academic travel opportunities.聽

There鈥檚 tough competition among grant-seeking institutions, but Augsburg continues to gain ground and to obtain funding for new projects. That鈥檚 because when Auggies recognize an opportunity to improve teaching, advance scholarship, or enhance the student experience, they ask another great question:

Why not?

Here鈥檚 a brief overview of 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 recent grant achievements:

Augsburg ranks as top-tier NSF grant recipient. Augsburg College was ranked the top private college in Minnesota for the total dollar amount awarded by the National Science Foundation in 2012. With three grants totaling just more than $1 million, the College ranked third among all Minnesota institutions鈥攂ehind only the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities and the University of Minnesota-Duluth.聽

Participation grows across campus. More and more departments and groups are seeking grants as a way to enhance students鈥 educational experience, to build the hands-on problem-solving skills employers and graduate schools demand, and to propel 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 research scholarship to the next level. This past year, 13 academic departments and groups鈥攗p from just seven departments the previous year鈥攕ubmitted grant proposals, including:聽

  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Education
  • History
  • Interdisciplinary Collaboration
  • Mathematics
  • Management Information Systems
  • Nursing
  • Physics
  • Psychology
  • Social Work
  • Sociology
  • STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)

Faculty steer student involvement. Tremendous faculty dedication is part of the mix, too. More than 50 faculty and staff members are the driving force behind the College鈥檚 38 active grants. These teachers coach and guide 324 students in rigorous research related to climate change, human health, understanding addiction, and more.

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In memoriam: John and Norma Paulson /now/2014/07/22/memoriam/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:22:39 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4228 This summer, scenes of remembrance and honor unfolded on the beaches of Normandy as World War II veterans and their loved ones marked the 70th anniversary of D-Day鈥攖he battle recognized as the largest sea invasion in history. The occasion was reminiscent of commemorations attended years ago by John and Norma Paulson, caring parents of Augsburg

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Paulson Link
The Atrium-Link, funded in part by the Paulson family, is adorned with聽a Dala horse, a nod to John鈥檚 pride in his Swedish heritage. The link is聽named in memory of John鈥檚 parents, Rose E. and Johnny E. Paulson, and is聽dedicated by John R. Paulson, Sr., and his children, John Reid Paulson, Mary聽Jo (Paulson) Peterson 鈥80, Deborah Stansbury, Laurie (Paulson) Dahl 鈥76,聽and Lisa Paulson 鈥80.

This summer, scenes of remembrance and honor unfolded on the beaches of Normandy as World War II veterans and their loved ones marked the 70th anniversary of D-Day鈥攖he battle recognized as the largest sea invasion in history. The occasion was reminiscent of commemorations attended years ago by John and Norma Paulson, caring parents of Augsburg alumni and generous benefactors of Augsburg College. John returned to France several times as a D-Day +1 survivor. Norma joined him as a passionate steward of history. And, together, they formed a couple who鈥攚hen abroad鈥攃ould unite people across countries and鈥攚hen at home in Minnesota鈥攃ould connect a congregation, campus, or community.

John, who passed away June 7, 2012鈥68 years to the day after D-Day +1鈥攁nd Norma, who passed away March 5, are remembered for their committed involvement in Twin Cities organizations ranging from Rotary to Shriners, and from the Classic Car Club of America to the Purple Heart Association. The Paulsons were successful in their careers鈥擩ohn as a builder and Norma as a banker鈥攁nd made deeply meaningful philanthropic gifts throughout their lives.聽

While neither John nor Norma attended Augsburg, three of John鈥檚 children and a son-in-law are alumni of the College鈥Mary Jo (Paulson) Peterson 鈥80, Laurie (Paulson) Dahl 鈥76, David Dahl 鈥75, and Lisa Paulson 鈥80. The couple鈥檚 lifetime gifts to Augsburg exceed $2 million. In 2001, the Paulson family provided major funding to complete the Atrium-Link that connects Lindell Library via skyway to an atrium between Memorial and Sverdrup halls and, in 2006, they were early donors to the campaign for the Center for Science, Business, and Religion鈥攁 capital project John鈥檚 daughter Lisa said is fitting given her family鈥檚 numerous career ties to the health, science, and business fields.聽

Augsburg College President Emeritus William Frame recalls that John and Norma were passionate about their family and friends, their hobbies and interests, and their call to better the world. 鈥淭hey were a sight from the 1930s鈥擩ohn driving Norma in a Packard touring car up to Augsburg House, stamping down to applause鈥ore of his panache than of his great car,鈥 Frame said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the way they 鈥榙rove up鈥 to the dedication of the Link鈥 and their gifts to the College.聽

Throughout their lives, John and Norma connected the past to the present and future. Whether Norma was funding fieldtrips for grade school students from her hometown of Redwood Falls, Minn. to visit the Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul or John was contributing to an organ fund that allowed young musicians to practice, the Paulsons ensured future generations could engage with varying aspects of history.聽

Augsburg College Pastor Emeritus David Wold recalls the Paulsons as 鈥減eople of tremendous faith and commitment.鈥

鈥淚 learned so much from John in my days at Calvary Lutheran Church and in my years at Augsburg College,鈥 Wold said. 鈥淚 learned about patriotism鈥bout work ethic, about family, about resiliency through tragedy, about benevolence, and about Packards.鈥澛

And, Wold says he learned about the Paulsons鈥 鈥渃ommitment to the young and the old and to those in between.鈥

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Peer Gynt /now/2014/07/22/peer-gynt/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 14:20:31 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/now/?p=4231 Imagine it鈥檚 spring and you are at a site USA Today named as among the nation鈥檚 10 greatest places in America to smell the flowers. You start to meander along a footpath that will lead you through a natural habitat of trees and ferns to rolling prairie and lowlands, all while birds sing after a

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Peer Gynt visits the troll kingdom in an attempt to marry the troll princess.

Imagine it鈥檚 spring and you are at a site USA Today named as among the nation鈥檚 10 greatest places in America to smell the flowers. You start to meander along a footpath that will lead you through a natural habitat of trees and ferns to rolling prairie and lowlands, all while birds sing after a long winter.

As you round the corner from the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum鈥檚 visitor center, you come across a small homesteader鈥檚 cabin. It鈥檚 nestled among the trees. A group of people, dressed as peasants from the 1800s, bicker with one another. You鈥檝e just walked smack into the middle of the set of Peer Gynt, a play by Henrik Ibsen, being performed by students from Augsburg College and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities.

The site-specific performance鈥攁 production shaped by the unique place in which it is performed and that relies upon existing landscapes and features to serve as the stage and sets鈥攚as the first time the two schools collaborated and probably the first site-specific production of this scale for Twin Cities鈥 theatergoers.

鈥淭his adaptation demanded new partnerships between schools and with many theater artists鈥攑uppeteers, movement specialists, musicians, [and] fight choreographers. We pummeled students with new experiences and gave the audience a spectacular performance,鈥 said Darcey Engen 鈥88, associate professor and chair of 础耻驳蝉产耻谤驳鈥檚 Theater Arts program.

Collaborating with the University of Minnesota allowed Engen and her counterpart, Luverne Seifert 鈥83, to assemble the large cast required by the play: about 40 student actors in all. And the complexity of the script meant students would build new skills in collaboration, forge friendships, and nurture the beginnings of new professional networking relationships in the tightly connected world of Twin Cities theater.

鈥淚t seemed odd to Darcey and me that each night there were groups of students creating all of this amazing artistic energy, and they were only three blocks away from one another,鈥 Seifert said. 鈥淲e thought the universe might like them to meet. We wanted to see new alliances formed and to create more opportunities for artistic intersections because theater and artists are best served when more and more connections can be made.鈥

The staging of this classic Norwegian tale at a Minnesota landmark also was a testament to the academic excellence driven by Augsburg faculty and alumni who create multifaceted student-learning experiences.

鈥淔aculty know that in order to develop students鈥 abilities to think critically and to solve problems鈥攅ssential 21st-century skills鈥攚e need to expose them to hands-on opportunities to work together, to interact with people who think differently from themselves, and to provide time to reflect upon and voice what they learn,鈥 Engen said.

Students co-create script

That multi-layered complexity drew students to the story. Boo Segersin 鈥15, an Augsburg theater major pursuing minors in musical theater and Norwegian, said she was drawn in by the density of Peer Gynt.

鈥淚 read the play over winter break and wondered how we could do it. It鈥檚 on mountains. It鈥檚 in mountains. There are trolls. Just the landscapes were a challenge in themselves,鈥 Segersin said.

The students worked with Sarah Myers, Augsburg College assistant professor of theater arts, to adapt the script and halve the length of the play.

鈥淚 was nervous to work on the script, but one of the best parts was working鈥攁s a full cast鈥攚ith Sarah to cut things down,鈥 Segersin said. 鈥淲e found the 鈥榬ed thread,鈥 the core storyline that runs through the script, and, with that, found our way.鈥

That thread allowed the students to take the play from the three-hour adaptation by famed Minnesota poet Robert Bly to a compact 90 minutes that was accessible to newcomers of all ages but that remained engaging and challenging for seasoned theatergoers. It鈥檚 quite a feat when one considers that Ibsen鈥檚 original was a hefty seven hours.

Peer Gynt photo
Nearly 1,000 theatergoers visited the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum for Peer Gynt鈥檚 three-day run. The character聽of Peer Gynt was played by University of聽Minnesota student Joe Kellen.

Navigating culture, cast, weather, and landscape

Wrestling with the script of the play鈥攁 story of loss due to procrastination and avoidance followed by redemption late in life鈥攚as just one of the challenges faced by students. They also had to identify features in the arboretum鈥檚 landscape that could serve as sets, deliver their lines in open-air scenes with acoustics affected by the landscape and ambient noises not usually present in a theater, and learn original music, all while getting to know the culture and student performers from another school.

Then there were the logistics for which no planning can be done.

鈥淏ecause of the variables involved, site-specific theater provides attendees the chance to see what is a once-in-a-lifetime performance and to leave having been an active traveler in the play,鈥 Engen said. 鈥淔or performers, there鈥檚 a textured chaos that you can鈥檛 plan for and that forces you to think fast and improvise within boundaries. It leaves you exhausted and exhilarated at the end.鈥

Being faced with those challenges was just what Engen and Seifert wanted for students. The two worked closely to co-direct students in this first-ever collaboration between the schools.

鈥淪tudents learned to perform to the moment at hand,鈥 Engen said. 鈥淪ometimes that meant changing the energy and volume of lines to overcome wind or a noisy attendee. Other times it meant staying in character but improvising when a young child persisted in trying to break into the scene.鈥

Segersin said that it was a rewarding experience to work with peers from the University of Minnesota and to perform for the nearly 1,000 attendees who visited the arboretum for the production.

鈥淭his beautiful thing happened: We became a team,鈥 Segersin said. 鈥淎nd now, sometimes, when I sleep, I dream about them.鈥

Building professional networks

The relationships and networks, though, extend beyond just the student peers at the two institutions. Engen used the production to help students connect with other theater professionals.

鈥淪tudents built experience in creative problem-solving with some of the Twin Cities鈥 foremost theater professionals, including master puppeteers, musicians, and movement professionals,鈥 Engen said. 鈥淚t was a chance for students to explore the many ways to work in theater and to challenge themselves to meld these disciplines.鈥

Seifert added that making connections with artists across disciplines and fields is critical for the future of theater and the artists.聽

鈥淭hese students now can reach out to one another to collaborate on future projects,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his model allowed us to give students an understanding of how major companies in regional theater increasingly are combining resources to produce shows.鈥

That goal wasn鈥檛 lost on Segersin, who was invited to work as a summer intern with Sod House Theater, a production company founded by Engen and Seifert.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e still working out what it means. But I will have the chance to work with the performance of Peer Gynt at sites around the state, to meet professional Twin Cities鈥 actors and local actors, and to network,鈥 Segersin said.聽

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