Sunday, April 23, 2006

Ice Cream and Officers

First, the ice cream! Since there weren't that many people that were
able to attend the last meeting, we decided that we should push the
call hall ice cream back to dead week. We discussed doing this
Thursday, May 4th, at 5:30, and meeting in front of ECS before going to
get it (paid for by Metaforum!) If you could email me (anna28@ksu.edu)
and let me know if you can come, so we have some idea of a head count.
Also, if this day/time doesn't work for you, let me know. If there are
lots of conflicts, we could move it!

Secondly:

Congratulations to the Metaforum Officers for the 2006-2007 school year!

President: Carla Schuster, schuster@ksu.edu
Vice President: Christina Forsberg, forsberg@ksu.edu
Treasurer: Kelsey Bates, bates@ksu.edu
Newsletter Editor: Anna Jurey, anna28@ksu.edu
Assistant Editor: Micah Janzen, theelf@ksu.edu

Carla has lots of fantastic ideas for next year, posted below, so check it out, and if
you have comments/ideas, please feel free to share as comments to this
post!

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Hello! In case you don’t know me, I’m Carla Schuster, an English major (double-majoring in French) at good-old KSU. 2006-7 will be my last year at this lovely institution of higher education (sad…) and my last to be with the Metaforum gang (double-sad!)

I would dearly love to be there to tell you about what I want to do for the upcoming year in Metaforum, but I’m in France with my education being held hostage by a bunch of French radicals (more info on the Metaforum blog site), so you’ll have to settle for this hand-out that only displays a small part of my sparkling personality. But all that aside, I’m EXTREMELY excited for this upcoming year, and I hope you are too! (or will be, after you hear what I would plan to do!)

First of all, what I think this club needs is some more departmental involvement. I’ll explain: I’ve been in the English department for nearly four years, and I know about a forth of the English staff, most of the undergrad students only by sight, and nearly none of the grad students! And I don’t think I’m the only one. (Which is why I included my picture—perhaps you’ve seen my smiling face in class? –or unsmiling, if it was before, say, noon.) So, what I would propose is that we have an introductory get-to-know-everybody Departmental Picnic at the park at the beginning of the year in August. Whether someone is new to the club and/or the department, are like me and still know nobody, or have just wandered over from the Engineering department to seek some literary enlightenment, this would offer a great no-stress opportunity to get together and meet. (It would probably be pot-luck, unless the club wants to spring for a caterer.)

Next, I think we need to make our presence known on campus (most people don’t even know what Metaforum is!) with Metaforum T-shirts, featuring, perhaps, reasons why it’s great to be an English major or Shakespearean insults, or something else creative and literary.

Also, throughout the year, I think it would be cool to have a Library Display of banned books, literature from a specific period, or other literary topics of interest, to get more people interested in literature and Metaforum. (Depending on permission and space from the library.)

Hopefully, sometime during the year, we would also plan a group trip, either to Hamlet or Madama Butterfly, at the Lyric Opera in Kansas City, to the Renaissance Festival, or to the Sigma Tau Delta national conference in Pittsburg or regional conference, depending on if we get enough demands for and monetary means to go.

Lit Wit Jeopardy in September. Put your favorite professor on the spot, with students asking literary trivia questions, and professors answering to compete for who wins the grand prize (to be decided). It will either be free or admission charged, with the profits going to a scholarship or Varney’s gift certificate for school books for an English major (probably, but not necessarily also a Metaforum member). Possibly concessions served, depending on what room we get for it.

Literary Pumpkin Carving Contests in October, with members/staff/whoever vying for a prize by carving their favorite literary authors, characters, or related pictures out of pumpkins. For all. If you think your artistic skills are lacking, cut-outs will be provided, and you can opt to not compete for the prize!

Around the World in 4 Hours in November, with displays, literature, and food from all parts of the world, Anglophone and other types of literature (perhaps coordinated with the Spanish, German, and French clubs, since it’s a rather large project). This would be a large event, with the whole campus invited, that would take a bit of planning, but I think it would be worth it!

A themed literary movie night, like Science Fiction, French, Walt Disney, Bollywood, or Jane Austen, (or all at the same time, such as pairing “Bride and Prejudice” with an adaptation of the Austen original), complete with discussions on how the books were made into movies, or, if original movies, how they act as pieces of literature or products of a particular culture, (not at all as serious as it sounds!), possibly in December. Probably at a member or sponsor’s house, since the chairs are incredibly uncomfortable at the rooms we usually use in the Union! If it’s a success, we can plan one in the spring, with a different topic.

Valentine’s Day Message in a Bottle in February. Seriously, why even have Shakespearean poetry if it’s not going to be shared with all? And what better day than the traditional day for lovers? This would involve putting little “kits” of a love poem (Shakespearean sonnets, among other things), along with candy inside a plastic heart of bottle, (and perhaps a flower) and then sell them to make profits for Metaforum, with the added benefit of sharing literature and love!

Scrabble-a-Thon in March. Why read extensively and have an inordinately huge vocabulary if you’re not going to show it off every once in a while? Contestants would register and compete for a prize, glory, and the honor of being “The King (or Queen) Scrabbler.” Choose to either play for fun, or compete in the competition. For the entire department, including staff.

High Tea, Alice-in-Wonderland Style in April or May. Well, this is, after all, an English club! And although the name refers to the literature, and not the country, I still think we should honor it by having proper British tea, crumpets, cucumber sandwiches, and real china on the lawn of a member’s or sponsor’s house. Also, we would have readings from British classics such as Alice in Wonderland, other English works praising tea, as well as original works, read by faculty and students. Also, if in May, this would also be a chance to say goodbye to the graduating seniors and give out the gift-certificates and/or Metaforum scholarships, if we raise enough money to do so.

Perhaps some of these events are a bit ambitious, and if the club or the department doesn’t some things are a good idea, we’ll have to think about not doing some of them… Also don’t take the schedule as gospel-truth, since, odds are, the dates and times of each will have to be changed! Along with a couple of literary movies some months and perhaps some more faculty readings (at least one per semester), I think that would be enough for any over-ambitious English club to take on!

Hopefully you all would be just as excited about upcoming year of Metaforum as I am!

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Final Meeting, don't miss it!

Hey everyone!

It's our final meeting of the year. So on Thursday the 20th at 5:30 we
will be meeting in ECS 121 to vote on our new officers and then walking
over to Call Hal for ice cream (courtesy of the English club)!

Our nominees for this next year are...drum roll please...

President: Christina Forsberg, Carla Schuster
Vice Pres: Christina Forsberg, Carla Schuster
Treasurer: Kelsey Bates

Also, there has been some discussion of creating two new
officers/positions: Newsletter Editor and Assistant Editor. I already
have a nominee for each, but if anyone else wants to put their name in
let me know before the meeting. So far its...

Editor: Anna Jurey
Ast. Editor: Micah Janzen

If anyone has a schedule conflict and can't make it, e-mail your vote to
either me or Carol Franko before Thursday so we can count you. Hope you
all have a good Easter!

~Micah Janzen
theelf@ksu.edu

Sunday, April 09, 2006

English Majors Job Opportunities Panel cont.

I posted the announcement for the job panel a little late, but decided it would highlight this post, in case you missed all of the other promos... so see the previous post if you are totally lost.

Onward! I realize that many of you may not have had the chance to attend this job panel, due to scheduling conflicts and such (as has happened to me in past years) and decided that the metaforum blog would be a good chance to share the knowlege!

*disclaimer: names may not be spelled correctly, and if my information is just a tad off, my apologies...

Kevin Johnston
-high school teacher in Manhattan, Masters degree-
He started out as a journalism teacher, before getting the position of english. Advice: transitioning from student to teacher can be a bit of a challenge... and be flexible and patient. As a teacher chances are you will not start out teaching the subject you want; stick with it and you'll get there eventually! It is a rewarding job!

Susan Simon (Blake)
-copy editor for Quintessential books in KC, Undergrad in Lit.-
Although she only graduated this past December, she managed to land a position for a new Christian literature publishing company, where she interned the previous summer. Publishing companies aren't self sustaining, so it is under a marketing company. As a small company, she also has to help out editing/writing for the marketing size, but has more direct influence within the company. The publishing business is difficult to get into, so have patience, and any related experience helps give an edge!

Sara Kearns
-instruction librarian at Hale Library, english undergrad, Masters in Library Sciences-
She worked the circulation desk at the public library, and enjoyed the reseach aspect of her English degree, and decided to go to librarian school. A one year-ish masters program, some schools offering online classes, to become a librarian doing more than just shelving books. Most libraries look for ALA accredited program graduates, and she recommended attending in a large city to give a wider range of libraries (she was in DC). She worked at a law firm's library, and returned to Manhattan, taking the Hale business librarian position with this background. She enjoyed teaching as well, and shifted to the instructional librarian position. The job is very flexible, and she's (I think) going to be getting a Ph.D. in the near future.

Jim Hohenbary
-scholarship advisor at K-State, Masters-
Starting out as an advisor for open option, he transferred to the scholarship advisor position when it opened up. He informs students of scholarship opportunities, especially prestigous ones, assists students in writing and learning to present themselves for these scholarships, and oversees the nomination processes when only a set number of students from each school may apply. This is a growing field. In advising positions in general, english majors can be very competitive, and a masters is required. He also mentioned, in an academic setting, there is somewhat of a glass wall in any position, for those without Ph.D's, although one can pursue this while currently at a job there.

Kristin Brighton
-CEO of a Manhattan marketing co., journalism/mass comm, & english degree, Masters-
As a student at K-State, Kristin worked at McCain and was in charge of marketing, and also taught as a GTA, which she emphasized gave her many skills that can be used for so many different things. She worked in KC for a start up marketing company, and later returned to Manhattan to do freelance work. Recently she joined with two other women to form a company. She suggested that practical work experience will help give an edge, as it gives employers some assurance that you will be an asset to the company. Even if you can't do much, something as simple as a paper proofreading business for fellow students could fit the bill.

Kent Glasscock
-former Kansas Speaker of the House of Re
p, Director of something and technical transfer (patent stuff... it was a long title) for the university, in the family lumber business, English undergrad-
After graduating, despite urgings of a professor, he returned to the family lumber business instead of pursuing a masters. He got involved in government, eventually becoming Speaker of the House for the Kansas State House of Representatives. Currently, he is still in the family business, and is director of basically the people who manage patents and such for the university. He emphasized that BOOKS ARE IMPORTANT, and with an english degree, you develop critical thinking skills, and an understanding for how people work. With these skills you can do anything!

In summaries and questions, it was pointed out that few english majors pursue a Ph.D. as it prepares you generally for one job: a professor. Undergrad and masters degrees have a wide range of opportunities, as seen in the panel.

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Hopefully this recap is beneficial. I think I've covered all the high points, except that if you couldn't come, you missed out on nabbing some sweet library magnets... "big brains are sexy" and "if you talk too loud, the library ninjas will slay you." :)

your treasurer,
~Anna

English Majors Job Opportunities Panel

Dear Students,

Perhaps I met with you when you were thinking of becoming an English
major, and I might have given you a sheet with "marketable skills of
English majors" followed up with Lists of Careers and then one of
Employers that match up with the skills. This Friday you can see
people who got an English major here, and who are working in various
fields: editing; professional writing; high school teaching; university
advising; library-ing; CEO-ing (what's that?) These kind people
(traveling from places far and sundry) will talk about their careers,
their current positions, and how they prepared for and landed these
jobs. They'll also answer questions following their presentations. I
know you are really, really busy, but this is an excellent opportunity
--please come!!

The time: Friday, April 7, 3:30-5:00 pm
The place: The ECS Literature and Film Room (017 ECS).

--Carol Franko