Conference Program


Detailed Concurrent Session Program Download

 

 
Schedule of Events
 
Nuts, Bolts & Stories of Success
Upper Midwest Association for Campus Sustainability - Biennial Conference
April 9–10, 2010 • University Center • University of Wisconsin-River Falls
 
Friday, April 9
7:30 AM–5:00 PM Registration & Poster  Set-up
8:00 AM–12:30  Pre-Conference Workshop: Clean Air-Cool Planet / 2nd Nature (Pre-Registration Required)
12:00–1:00 PM  Lunch on your own (retail food vendors in UC or community)
1:00–9:00 PM Posters & Networking
1:15–1:30 PM  Welcome (Cain & Provost Fernando Delgado)
1:30–2:30 PM  Plenary Session 1: Dr. Paul Rowland – Exec. Dir. AASHE, “Campus Sustainability: How Far We’ve Come & Where to Next”
2:45–3:45 PM  Concurrent Session #1
4:00–5:00 PM  Concurrent Session #2
5:00-6:00 PM   Poster Session w/Presenters
6:00–7:30 PM  Social Hour/Dinner Buffet (included in registration)
7:30–8:45 PM  World Café Facilitation: Clare Hintz & Christine Kelly, Midwest Regional Collaborative for Sustainability Education
9:00 PM  Evening Networking / D.J. Dance Party in Falcon’s Nest / Self-Guided Downtown Tour
 
Saturday, April 10
7:30–11:00 AM Registration, Information
7:30–8:30 AM Continental Breakfast Buffet (included in registration) – Posters & Networking
8:30 – 10:30 AM Open House – Oil & Biodiesel Operations – Ag Engineering Annex – Room #167
8:00–9:00 AM Concurrent Session #3
9:15–10:15 AM Concurrent Session #4
10:15–10:45 AM  Morning Break – Posters & Networking
10:45–11:45 AM  Concurrent Session #5
12:00–12:30 PM  Lunch (included in registration) and Luncheon Keynote
12:30–1:30 PM  Luncheon Plenary Session: Winona LaDuke, “Restoring Land-Based Economies in the Seventh Generation”
1:30-1:45 PM Closing Remarks
1:50-2:30 PM The Future of UMACS: Next Steps and Vision - Facilitator: Jon Jensen
 
SAFE TRAVELS HOME!!!

 

 

Keynote Speakers

 

Paul Rowland became the Executive Director of AASHE on August 1, 2009. Paul was one of the founders of the Ponderosa Project at Northern Arizona University where he served in a variety of capacities including Director of the Center for Environmental Sciences and Education, Coordinator of Environmental Education, and Director of Academic Assessment. More recently he has served as Dean of the School of Education at The University of Montana and Dean of the College of Education at the University of Idaho. He holds a Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction from New Mexico State University and an M.S. in Ecology and a B.A. in Biology from Rutgers University. 


 

Winona LaDuke is an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) enrolled member of the Mississippi Band Anishinaabeg who lives and works on the White Earth Reservations, and is the mother of three children. She is also the Executive Director of Honor the Earth, where she works on a national level to advocate, raise public support, and create funding for frontline native environmental groups.

In 1994, Winona was nominated by Time magazine as one of America's fifty most promising leaders under forty years of age. She has been awarded the Thomas Merton Award in 1996, the BIHA Community Service Award in 1997, the Ann Bancroft Award for Women's Leadership Fellowship, and the Reebok Human Rights Award, with which she began the White Earth Land Recovery Project.

A graduate of Harvard and Antioch Universities, Winona has written extensively on Native American and Environmental issues. She is a former board member of Greenpeace USA and serves, as co-chair of the Indigenous Women's Network, a North American and Pacific indigenous women's organization. In 1998, Ms. Magazine named her Woman of the Year for her work with Honor the Earth. Also in 1997, her first novel, "Last Standing Woman", was published by Voyager Press. In 1999, South End Press published "All Our Relations", a non-fiction book on Native environmental struggles. Both books are available through the Native Harvest catalog. Winona's editorials and essays have also been published numerous times in national and international journals and newspapers.


 

 

 

 

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