Cal Poly Pomona

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2008 Outstanding Academic Advisor Award Recipient – Dr. Mary Yu Danico

2008 Outstanding Academic Advisor Award Recipient
Dr. Mary Yu Danico

Dr. Danico is being recognized for her commitment to helping students with both their academic and career goals. Dr. Danico frequently goes above and beyond the norm in her assistance of students, especially in her roles as the department’s “at risk” advisor. In addition, Dr. Danico developed and implemented the Psychology and Sociology’s new Peer Mentor Program, a program that benefits both incoming students – by providing them with mentors – and the mentors themselves by providing them with leadership skills.

Distinguished Contributions to Teaching and Learning Award Recipient – Dr. Peter Yates

Distinguished Contributions to Teaching and Learning Award Recipient
Dr. Peter Yates

In addition to excellent teaching evaluations in both very small and larger classes, Dr. Yates has implemented best practices from the teaching and learning research by:

  • Actively coordinating his course offerings with colleagues and carefully focusing on how his classes fit within the departments curriculum
  • Individually tailoring his teaching pedagogy to best suit individual students
  • Integrating his teaching with research
  • Writing a book on teaching methodology
  • Involving students in service learning opportunities, examples include:
    • Performing at a prison in San Luis Obispo
    • “The Mother Lode” a DVD in which he scored, performed, recorded, acted, designed, filmed, and edited the production.

Although he has been at Cal Poly Pomona for 27 years, he continues to find ways to introduce new technology into his classes and employs assessment results to improve his teaching.

Mock Trial Team Heads to Nationals

Cal Poly Pomona’s Mock Trial Team placed seventh out of the 28 teams who competed at the American Mock Trial Association Pacific Regional Competition in Rancho Cucamonga on Feb. 23 and 24.

Cal Poly Pomona trotted its way to the top amid competitors from schools such as UCLA, UC San Diego, USC and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. This tremendous show of force garnered Cal Poly Pomona a bid to compete at the Tucson National Tournament hosted at Arizona State University on March 14 – 16. This is the second time in the team’s five year history that Cal Poly Pomona has earned a national bid.

Cal Poly Pomona student James Perry was specifically lauded with an Outstanding Attorney trophy. Only 11 such trophies were awarded to the nearly 200 mock trial attorneys competing over the weekend. Fellow teammates Ella Tarnate and Jaquelyn Coella also brought trophies home for outstanding performances as trial witnesses.

To compete on the team students must first successfully complete PLS 308. The course is offered in the fall of every year and is instructed by alumnus Raul C. Sabado. Professor Sabado is a trial attorney with the Office of the Los Angeles County Public Defender. Attorney and alumna Orsolya Forgo was the team’s assistant coach.

“The beauty of the students’ success in this program is that it’s multi-faceted,” remarked Sabado. “Students bring national glory to Cal Poly while earning one of the most attractive extracurricular activities one can declare on a law school application.”

Sabado reports that, “every successful graduate of our program who has applied to law school has matriculated into a top 100 law school.”

For more information about the team, visit www.calpolymocktrial.com.

Original Article: Polycentric

Cal Poly Top Four in National Ethics Bowl

A team from Cal Poly Pomona reached the semifinals and placed in the top four at the national Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl Competition held Thursday, Feb. 21, in San Antonio, Texas.

The Cal Poly Pomona Ethics Bowl team engaged in the ultimate test of reasoning by addressing a wide range of issues such as direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising and the distribution of photographs via Google Street View.

The Cal Poly Pomona team — consisting of John Balla, Melinda Carrido, Cion Villalobos, Ara Astourian and Jennifer Cryer — qualified for the national competition after winning the California Regional Ethics Bowl Competition in December. Nearly 150 colleges and universities across the nation competed, but only 32 qualified for the annual national competition.

At the national competition, the Cal Poly Pomona team swept through its preliminary matches, defeating Western Michigan University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Kentucky.

The team then dominated a very well-prepared team from DePauw University during its quarterfinal match. The team’s streak of nine consecutive match wins came to an end during the semifinal match against Wright State University, a university with multiple national titles.

“For our team to reach the national semifinals is an extraordinary achievement,” said the teams coach, philosophy professor Michael Cholbi. “To be in the top four in the country after only three years of fielding an Ethics Bowl team at Cal Poly Pomona is astonishing.”

In the Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl, a moderator poses questions to teams of three to five students. Each team receives a set of case studies in advance of the competition, and questions posed to teams at the competition are taken from that set. A panel of judges evaluated answers based on intelligibility, focus on ethically relevant considerations, avoidance of ethical irrelevance and deliberative thoughtfulness.

Original Article: Polycentric

CLASS Students Extend Learning Beyond the Classroom

Music student Linda Huang, poses with Billy Bronco as they welcome 500 Pomona Unified School District children on campus to see a LA Opera performance of "Figaro's American Adventure". Linda and other members of Music Educators Network Conference helped host the children and performed for them after the opera.

Music student Linda Huang, poses with Billy Bronco as they welcome 500 Pomona Unified School District children on campus to see a LA Opera performance of

 

 


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Building 5 - 158
3801 West Temple Ave.
Pomona, California 91768

Phone: (909) 869 - 3500