September 2009 Archives

2009 Stand Up Award Recipient: Miatta Massaley

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photoMiatta Massaley

Class of 2010
Economics
Penn State University Park
Self Nominated

Penn State economics major Miatta Massaley was quick to recognize that legal rights are often worthless if you cannot afford a lawyer.  For many years, hundreds of students in the Borough of State College could do very little when they were mistreated by their landlords.  And many private landlords were similarly without means of redress when students failed to pay rent, or caused damage to their rental properties.  Miatta soon realized that an alternative to expensive legal proceedings was desperately needed.

2009 Stand Up Award Recipient: Hilary Griffith

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photo Hilary Griffith

Class of 2010
Letters, Arts, and Sciences
Penn State Fayette, the Eberly Campus
Nominated by Susan Crampton-Frenchik

Standing up for your beliefs often requires courage and commitment.  Hilary Griffith rose to the challenge, and inspired others to appreciate and respect difference.

When a friend approached Hilary and offered to organize a free professional performance at the Penn State Fayette campus to help raise money for THON, she embraced his idea.  You might wonder why supporting a charity performance would require courage or conviction. In this case it had to do with negative reactions from students and staff.  You see, Hilary's friend is a professional drag queen and the performance would be a drag king and queen show.

2009 Stand Up Award Recipient: Andie Graham

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photoAndie Graham

Class of 2009
Letters, Arts, and Sciences
Penn State DuBois
Nominated by Keely Roen

Every year, the ECO club at Penn State DuBois holds a fundraiser.  In the spring of 2007, the club decided to host a pudding wrestling match.  The ECO club is a male-dominated club populated by the Wildlife Technology Program--a program with 24 men and only four women. While the event was likely well-intentioned, even the publicity for the event--in which a woman wrestles another woman in a pool of pudding--was causing a spate of sexist remarks.  Sexually suggestive comments that objectified women were heard on campus and male students posted photos of the potential wrestlers online, accompanied by degrading comments.  One student, who initially supported the event, listened to the reactions and became increasingly concerned, and she chose to do something about it. That student is Andie Graham.

2009 Stand Up Award Recipient: Koann Eicher

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2009 Stand Up Award Recipient

photo Koann Eicher

Class of 2009
Letters, Arts, and Sciences
Penn State Shenango
Nominated by Juley Alford

Do you know about the Pennsylvania Safe Haven Law?  Odds are, you've never heard of it.  Yet this law offers an important option to parents who are unable to care for their newborn infants.  This law ensures that such parents can, without fear of prosecution, give their newborn child to any hospital staff member for safe haven.  The infant will receive needed medical care and the county's child and youth agency will help to find the child a suitable and loving home.  Supporters of the Safe Haven Law believe the law helps to ensure the welfare of these infants by providing an option for parents who feel they have no other choice.

2008 Stand Up Award Recipient: Mallorie McCue

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Mallorie McCue

Class of 2008
Advertising and Public Relations, and Women's Studies
Nominated by Vivienne Wildes and Caren Bloom-Steidel

When Mallorie McCue learned that Penn State was dramatically reducing the program addressing sexual assault in it's freshman orientation program (FTCAP) she did something about it. Concerned that a lack of information on this critical issue would leave incoming students vulnerable, she rallied hundreds of fellow students to write letters and speak in classrooms to raise awareness about sexual assault as a problem that must be dealt with proactively. Though Mallorie's petition--signed by over 900 students, faculty, and staff--didn't reinstate the 40-minute program, it did prompt a compromise: Mallorie worked with the administration to develop an on-line video module which gives incoming students access both to information about the risks of sexual assault and to critical resources.

2008 Stand Up Award Recipient: Desiree Martin

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Desiree Martin

Class of 2008
Human Development and Family Studies,
Penn State Fayette, the Eberly Campus
Nominated by Gina Jones

Most people think of Penn State students as 19- or 20-year-olds--not as mothers of college-aged students, like Desiree Martin. As a non-traditional student at Penn State Fayette, Desiree knows what it's like to not fit the "traditional" mold, and this perspective, as well as her life experiences, drive her passion to help others to rethink "diversity" and our ethical responsibilities toward one another.

2008 Stand Up Award Recipient: Emily Helms

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Emily Helms

Class of 2009
International Politics
Schreyer Honors Scholar
Nominated by Gretchen Casper

Watch or listen to the news on any given day, and the onslaught of tragedy and injustice occurring around the world is often enough to overwhelm any one of us. With so much injustice, there's a real temptation to sit back and let others take care of it. Emily Helms is not someone who sits back. Emily speaks out in a voice that community leaders, legislators, and her peers can hear--and she inspires others to join her.

2008 Stand Up Award Recipient: Elizabeth Francis

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Elizabeth Francis

Class of 2008
Pre-Medicine and Spanish
Schreyer Honors Scholar
Nominated by Jessica Erickson

It's a sad reality that not all people of the world enjoy the same access to health care that many of us enjoy. And the causes are complex, for even when there are free clinics, such as the free orthopedic surgery clinic in San Pedro Sula, many Honduran families cannot take advantage of it for the heart-breaking reason that they simply cannot afford the travel expenses to get to and from the clinic. Penn State student Liz Francis thought problems like this should have solutions, and she found a way to provide them.

Moral Literacy K-12

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Beginning October 1, 2009,  Penn State will host an exciting group of leading experts on the topic of moral literacy and moral leadership.  Bringing together faculty and teachers from across the US, Canada, and Australia, the 14th Annual Leadership and Values Conference, Exploring the Meta-Values of Authentic Leadership: Moral Literacy in Action will bridge theory and practice to examine the role of ethics in education. 

From an ethic of community (Furman) to the best interests of students (Shapiro and Stefkovich) to authentic leadership (Begley), participants will examine how best to bring ethics to bear on education.

Although there is a registration fee for the conference, come of the presentations are free and open to the public.  Educators and pre-service teachers are welcome to join the pre-conference workshops.

October 1

9:00-noon  Growing a School for Sustainable Leadership: The St. Kieran's Catholic Primary School Experience
Terri Paterson & Virginia Outred, Manley, NSW, Australia
Charles Burford
, Australian Catholic University

1:00-4:00  Promoting Moral Literacy Teaching Competency
Pauline Leonard, Deborah Hollimon, Dawn Basinger, Rebecca Smith, Louisiana Tech University

Friday, October 2

1:00-2:00  Moral Decency: An Aspiration for Educational Leadership
Victor Worsfold, University of Texas at Dallas

Values and Leadership Conference