At the University of Alberta ( my alma mater) it was a pleasure hanging out with Matt Glombick and his excellent interns Aaron and Juliana. As I said to Aaron ( referring to a conversation I had with him a year ago), he could have simply taken an internship in a regular church. It would have been nowhere near as exciting as this one. The name of the church/club/ministry ( it is a project even for them to define it) is EPIC : referring to the grand story God is unfolding into which we are invited to be a part. It is more than a cool name. It defines the vision and the philosophy of ministry of this group. Check it out HERE
Here is the idea. It would be a ‘regular life’ church that sought to integrate church with the way people actually live their lives in the classroom and in the market place. The idea would be that it would intersect people where they actually live, rather than expecting people to extract themselves from their lives and live a parallel but unconnected spiritual life alongside of their regular life.
They had a time of debriefing. Matt was concerned that this term they did not have the same type of interesting seekers that made last term so enjoyable. Aaron referred to cycles and seasons and suggested that it may be a time to go deeper with the students.
We then met with the student leadership team, which also included a seasoned ministry couple who play the important role of spiritual parents to these young people. Having taken a year out of regular ministry, they found Epic a refreshing change . Part of the discussion revolved around whether they were a church or not. That flowed from another discussion regarding “What is a church”. My own take on the subject, when asked for my input, was that in campus ministry I tend to see church as a Verb. Rather than seeing it in static categories, I tend to ask whether we are “doing church” or “churching” on campus. Are we being church to this campus? The details will follow.
Their Tuesday night main gathering is at Deweys Pub, in the billiard and meeting room attached to it. It is a great venue for the relaxed conversational EPIC style of gathering.
They repeat the Epic Creed. This was to be a Wiki service which means that everyone has the opportunity to add something to it. Sort of the model of 1 Cor 14 where everyone came prepared to bring something. The idea is that church is a place to gather and to connect with the Big Story , the Meta Narrative which is in the process of being written. There were some songs which were led by someone with a guitar that helped focus people and create a context of worship. Several people shared. There was a guest presenter, who represented IJM ( Internation Justice Mission) which is a leading organization in setting people ( mostly young women) free from slavery. IJM is a natural partner for CMC in that it puts feet to many of our convictions. When she was done, I was offered the opportunity to share the message Dave gave me to share with his generation before he departed.
The service ended with people hanging out and visiting. There is obviously a good sense of community about EPIC , even with the enormous pressures of school that militates against it. There is a lot more that I could say about it. I always appreciate the way Matt empowers his staff and students, while giving them appropriate leadership.
Matt is very strong on building bridges. In addition to being the pastoral advisor to the EPIC Student Club he is the Pentecostal Chaplain to the University of Alberta. He builds bridges wherever he goes.
He takes his role as the head of the U of A Chaplaincy Association seriously. They are in the middle of developing a MOU ( memorandum of understanding) with the U of A Administration that lays out the parameters of their responsibilities and privileges. For the Administration the chaplains provide an accountable and stabilizing influence to interface with the various “spiritual” campus clubs and organizations. They also provide services to the broader community in matters of pastoral concern. That would include functions like funerals, crisis intervention and grief recovery.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Pemilu Raya Calon Ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip Periode 2011
Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan (HMJ) Ilmu Komunikasi merupakan organisasi mahasiswa di tingkat jurusan. HMJ sebagai media bagi mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi untuk menyalurkan aspirasi dan kreasi, yang berkaitan dengan perkembangan intelekual di tingkat jurusan khususnya dan Fakultas secara menyeluruh. HMJ juga merupakan media aktualisasi diri bagi mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi dan mengaplikasikan disiplin ilmu yang diperoleh serta tanggung jawab sosial yang diemban kepada masyarakat dan lingkungan.
Sehubungan dengan sangat esensialnya eksistensi HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi, maka akan diadakan serangkaian kegiatan Pemilu Raya HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip periode 2011. Kegiatan ini diharapkan mampu menjaring SDM yang berkualitas di antara mahasiswa Ilmu komunikasi guna mewujudkan visi dan misi Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi yang lebih baik di masa mendatang.
Rangkaian acara Pemilu Raya HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip ini adalah dimulai dengan sosialisasi dan pendaftaran calon ketua pada tanggal 1-9 Desember 2010. Kemudian dilanjutkan dengan verifikasi dan pengumuman verifikasi pada tanggal 10-11 Desember 2010. Adapun calon ketua yang berhasil lolos verifikasi adalah Eka Oktaviani dan Nugraheni Yunda Nuraga.
Pada tanggal 13-19 Desember 2010 para calon ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi tersebut melakukan kampanye tertulis, sedangkan kampanye lisan dilaksanakan pada tanggal 20 Desember 2010 di Taman Gedung B-C FISIP Undip Tembalang pukul 10.00-11.30 WIB.
Senin, 20 Desember 2010 pukul 09.30 WIB para calon ketua beserta tim suksesnya sudah mulai memadati lokasi kampanye lisan, penonton pun juga sudah terlihat memenuhi lokasi. Kampanye lisan ini dibuka dengan sambutan dari Turnomo Raharjo selaku Kepala Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip Tembalang pada pukul 10.00 WIB. Turnomo mengatakan bahwa ia sangat puas dengan kinerja HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip periode 2010 yang diketuai oleh Ika Rizki Yustisia, ia berharap kedepannya HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi periode 2011 dapat terus berkembang menjadi semakin baik dan lebih baik lagi. Seusai sambutan dari Turnomo Raharjo, acara kemudian dilanjutkan dengan penjabaran visi dan misi serta sekilas mengenai program kerja yang akan dilaksanakan oleh masing-masing calon Ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip Periode 2011. Pertanyaan mulai bermunculan setelah para calon ketua menguraikan mengenai visi dan misi mereka, mulai dari pertanyaan yang ringan sampai kepada pertanyaan yang berat dan sulit untuk dijawab. Namun, para calon tetap dapat menjawab dengan begitu lancarnya. Antusiasme penonton pun seakan tak pernah surut hingga akhir acara. Setelah sesi tanya-jawab selesai, acara ditutup dengan penampilan spesial dari para calon Ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi Periode 2011 yaitu Eka Oktaviani dan Nugraheni Yunda Nuraga. Mereka telah mempersiapkan 2 lagu untuk dinyanyikan bersama-sama di akhir acara. Diiringi dengan permainan gitar oleh Ginanjar Saputra dan Gandhi Syarifudin, para calon ketua terlihat sangat menikmati detik-detik mereka menyanyikan lagu ... dan ... . Penonton dan para tim sukses juga ikut bernyanyi bersama. Kebersamaan dan rasa kekeluargaan sangat terasa di sana.
Puncak acara adalah pada hari Rabu, 22 Desember 2010 yaitu acara pemungutan suara/ pemilihan ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip yang mengambil lokasi di Gedung B FISIP Undip Tembalang pukul 09.00-18.00WIB. Dalam kegiatan ini terdapat 510 kertas suara yang dicetak dan 188 kertas suara yang terisi. Seusai pemungutan suara, acara selanjutnya adalah perhitungan suara yang dilakukan pada pukul 19.00 WIB. Acara perhitungan suara dipimpin oleh ketua OC Pemira, dan dihadiri oleh para anggota kepengurusan HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip Periode 2010, para tim sukses masing-masing calon ketua, saksi- saksi, dan mahasiswa ilmu komunikasi FISIP Undip lainnya. Dalam hasil pemungutan suara terdapat 169 kertas suara yang sah, 19 kertas suara yang tidak sah. Kertas suara yang sah berisikan 90 suara yang memilih Eka Oktaviani, 79 suara yang memilih Nugraheni Yunda Nuraga, dan 1 suara yang abstain. Berdasarkan hasil perhitungan suara tersebut, maka Eka Oktaviani adalah Ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi terpilih periode 2011 berdasarkan jumlah suara mayoritas.
Keseluruhan acara ini kemudian ditutup oleh Ika Rizki Yustisia selaku Ketua HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi Periode 2010. Ika menuturkan agar kelak HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi dibawah kepemimpinan Eka Oktaviani dapat tetap menjadi suatu wadah untuk menyalurkan aspirasi dan kreasi para mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip, dan tetap menjunjung tinggi rasa kekeluargaan di dalamnya.
Friday, December 17, 2010
Pemira HMJ 2010
Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan (HMJ) Komunikasi merupakan organisasi mahasiswa di tingkat jurusan. HMJ sebagai media bagi mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi untuk menyalurkan aspirasi dan kreasi, yang berkaitan dengan perkembangan intelekual di tingkat jurusan khususnya dan Fakultas secara menyeluruh. HMJ juga merupakan media aktualisasi diri bagi mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi dan mengaplikasikan disiplin ilmu yang diperoleh serta tanggung jawab sosial yang diemban kepada masyarakat dan lingkungan.
Sehubungan dengan sangat esensialnya eksistensi HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi, maka akan diadakan kegiatan Pemilihan Raya. Kegiatan ini diharapkan mampu menjaring SDM yang berkualitas di antara mahasiswa Ilmu komunikasi guna mewujudkan visi dan misi Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi yang lebih baik di masa mendatang.
AGENDA PELAKSANAAN
Sosialisasi dan Pendaftaran 1 Desember – 9 Desember 2010
Verifikasi 10 Desember 2010
Pengumuman Hasil Verifikasi 11 Desember 2010
Kampanye Tertulis 12 Desember - 19 Desember 2010
Kampanye Lisan 20 Desember 2010
Hari Tenang 21 Desember 2010
Pemilihan Ketua HMJ/Pemungutan Suara 22 Desember 2010
TEMPAT PELAKSANAAN
Kampanye Lisan : Junction Gedung B-C FISIP Undip Tembalang, pukul 09.00-11.00 WIB
Pemungutan Suara : Junction Gedung B-C FISIP Undip Tembalang, pukul 09.00-17.00 WIB
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Kurang lebih setahun sudah, Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi Fisip Undip periode 2009-2010 menjalankan tanggung jawab bersama. Sebagai sebuah keluarga, banyak kegiatan yang kita garap bersama demi membesarkan nama HMJ Komunikasi dan yang pasti untuk menghibur dan mengedukasi banyak orang.
Berbagai acara yang bersifat edukatif digarap dengan harapan mampu menambah wawasan teman-teman mahasiswa ilmu komunikasi Undip dan masyarakat umum. Mulai dari seminar-seminar, diskusi, dan workshop. Selain itu, HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi Undip selama periode ini kerap berpartisipasi aktif dalam berbagai aksi sosial. Mulai dari aksi donor darah, aksi peduli anak jalanan, sampai aksi pengumpulan dana dan bantuan untuk korban merapi dan mentawai. Tidak hanya itu, Kegiatan-kegiatan yang bersifat menghibur pun ikut diselenggarakan oleh HMJ Komunikasi. Berbagai pentas musik yang digarap berhasil mendatangkan artis lokal sampai artis ibu kota. Hal yang cukup membanggakan, di tahun ini, HMJ Komunikasi berhasil mengadakan kembali pentas Komusikasi yang telah sangat dirindukan oleh para mahasiswa Ilmu Komunikasi Undip.
Kerjasama yang menyenangkan, yang mengubah tiap butir keringat menjadi perasaan bangga dan bahagia selama. Di ujung tahun ini, menjadi akhir dari periode kepengurusan HMJ Komunikasi 2009-2010. Inilah potret wajah-wajah yang selama setahun ini berjuang bersama dalam semangat kekeluargaan meneruskan dan membesarkan nama HMJ KOMUNIKASI Undip. Salam Komunikasi!
Friday, November 26, 2010
Peduli Merapi 2
Sabtu, 6 November 2010, Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan (HMJ) Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip kembali menyalurkan bantuan secara langsung kepada korban bencana Merapi. Tim yang terdiri dari 9 orang ini berangkat dari Semarang sekitar pukul 09.00 WIB dan tiba di Posko Jalin Merapi II yang berada di Mungkid pada pukul 13.00 WIB. Di Posko Jalin Merapi II ini, tim HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip berkoordinasi terlebih dahulu dengan tim Jalin Merapi II untuk mengetahui daerah yang tepat dan patut untuk diberikan bantuan.
Sebelum memberikan bantuan ke Posko yang disarankan oleh tim Jalin Merapi II, tim HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip berkunjung ke Desa Sawangan. Di sana terdapat beberapa penduduk yang tidak ikut mengungsi tetapi perekonomiannya terisolasi. Desa ini berjarak 17-18 kilometer dari puncak Merapi. Kami mengunjungi desa tersebut, berbagi cerita dengan penduduk sekitar, dan mendengarkan mereka berkeluh kesah.
Setelah selesai berkunjung di Desa Sawangan, kami segera beranjak ke barak pengungsian di PDAM Mungkid yang jumlah pengungsinya adalah sekitar 500 orang. Kami memberikan bantuan kepada pengungsi yang berada di barak tersebut berupa pakaian layak pakai, baju dalam pria dan wanita, masker, mie instan, susu, beras, alat mandi, selimut, mainan anak-anak, dan popok bayi. Total bantuan yang diberikan adalah Rp 975.750,00. Ada pun sisa dana bantuan yang hingga tanggal 22 November 2010 terkumpul adalah sejumlah Rp 2.660.000,00, dana tersebut akan kami sumbangkan kepada korban tsunami di Kepulauan Mentawai, Sumatera Barat.
Kami mengucapkan terima kasih banyak kepada para dermawan yang telah ikut menyumbang dan berpartisipasi dalam penggalangan dana bantuan korban Merapi dan Mentawai. Semoga bantuan yang diberikan dapat bermanfaat bagi para korban bencana tersebut.
Setelah selesai berkunjung di Desa Sawangan, kami segera beranjak ke barak pengungsian di PDAM Mungkid yang jumlah pengungsinya adalah sekitar 500 orang. Kami memberikan bantuan kepada pengungsi yang berada di barak tersebut berupa pakaian layak pakai, baju dalam pria dan wanita, masker, mie instan, susu, beras, alat mandi, selimut, mainan anak-anak, dan popok bayi. Total bantuan yang diberikan adalah Rp 975.750,00. Ada pun sisa dana bantuan yang hingga tanggal 22 November 2010 terkumpul adalah sejumlah Rp 2.660.000,00, dana tersebut akan kami sumbangkan kepada korban tsunami di Kepulauan Mentawai, Sumatera Barat.
Kami mengucapkan terima kasih banyak kepada para dermawan yang telah ikut menyumbang dan berpartisipasi dalam penggalangan dana bantuan korban Merapi dan Mentawai. Semoga bantuan yang diberikan dapat bermanfaat bagi para korban bencana tersebut.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
A bit of history..
I arrived with James Perraux at Langley Christian Life Assembly for the BC/Yukon district’s conference entitled Live Out Loud, at the beginning of October. It was great to see familiar faces, albeit with a few more lines and grey ( if any )hairs. Travelling to BC is a bit of a pilgrimage for me. Especially due to the fact that I spent eighteen years of my life in Vancouver,including fifteen years of full time ministry. All but a few of those years involved campus ministry. There is a big part of me on the West Coast and it is hard to describe what it is like to reencounter myself back in my familiar haunts. I got to hang out with some people who have played a large part in my life.
Let me share a picture of interest In the middle is my previous associate pastor at Point Grey Community Church, Greg Laing. He was also the associate of Lawrence Rae (left) , who succeeded me as pastor. Greg is now the lead pastor. I planted the church and pastored it from 1989 to 1997. This is the first time that we have been able to get a picture of the three of us in the same place at the same time. How about that halo effect
The second picture includes a couple more generations. First, there is Rod Bitterman ( right), who took a chance on hiring me , in 1982, out of Regent College at Vancouver Christian Life Centre (downtown -West End) as its Young Adults pastor ( continuing ministry I had already been involved in for the three years I was involved in the church while going to Regent) and who released me part-time to begin campus ministry in 1985 and plant Point Grey Community Church four years later. As well as Lawrence and Greg, there is Jeff Wong, who has been on staff at PGCC and is planting an innovative urban church called More Than 12 . As Jeff was sharing notes with one of his team who was part of VCLC in the old days, he says that it is more than clear to him that we share the same DNA, even though the look and structure are different.
This actually has a tie into campus ministry. Rod Bitterman believed in university ministry. He was willing to put himself behind me, and Reid Johnson before me, to cover and support ministry on and to the UBC campus and beyond. He did it without any expectation of being able to see the benefit of this investment within the walls of his church. However, the way the Kingdom works, God honored VCLC for its support of campus ministry and subsequently the planting of Point Grey Community Church. Further, Lawrence and Greg have taken the same missional , Kingdom ( Big Picture) view of campus ministry. PGCC has supported campus ministry in a way that is both sacrificial and inspiring.
In the future, I would like to write about this in some depth. The lineage you see in this photo represents a glimpse of a Vision that God started. Thirty years later I can see the ongoing fruit of it in the way it has produced and reproduced disciples and spread the Kingdom far beyond the borders of the local church. On a personal note, I simply cannot understand pastors who feel that campus ministry needs to be about them ,or their church, and who cannot see the bigger picture of what God can do when we lay our agendas down and work for the greater good.
Halos? |
Let me share a picture of interest In the middle is my previous associate pastor at Point Grey Community Church, Greg Laing. He was also the associate of Lawrence Rae (left) , who succeeded me as pastor. Greg is now the lead pastor. I planted the church and pastored it from 1989 to 1997. This is the first time that we have been able to get a picture of the three of us in the same place at the same time. How about that halo effect
Greg Lawrence Jeff Robb Rod |
The second picture includes a couple more generations. First, there is Rod Bitterman ( right), who took a chance on hiring me , in 1982, out of Regent College at Vancouver Christian Life Centre (downtown -West End) as its Young Adults pastor ( continuing ministry I had already been involved in for the three years I was involved in the church while going to Regent) and who released me part-time to begin campus ministry in 1985 and plant Point Grey Community Church four years later. As well as Lawrence and Greg, there is Jeff Wong, who has been on staff at PGCC and is planting an innovative urban church called More Than 12 . As Jeff was sharing notes with one of his team who was part of VCLC in the old days, he says that it is more than clear to him that we share the same DNA, even though the look and structure are different.
This actually has a tie into campus ministry. Rod Bitterman believed in university ministry. He was willing to put himself behind me, and Reid Johnson before me, to cover and support ministry on and to the UBC campus and beyond. He did it without any expectation of being able to see the benefit of this investment within the walls of his church. However, the way the Kingdom works, God honored VCLC for its support of campus ministry and subsequently the planting of Point Grey Community Church. Further, Lawrence and Greg have taken the same missional , Kingdom ( Big Picture) view of campus ministry. PGCC has supported campus ministry in a way that is both sacrificial and inspiring.
In the future, I would like to write about this in some depth. The lineage you see in this photo represents a glimpse of a Vision that God started. Thirty years later I can see the ongoing fruit of it in the way it has produced and reproduced disciples and spread the Kingdom far beyond the borders of the local church. On a personal note, I simply cannot understand pastors who feel that campus ministry needs to be about them ,or their church, and who cannot see the bigger picture of what God can do when we lay our agendas down and work for the greater good.
This Season
This fall has shot by as if it were on greased skids. I have had the opportunity to take in a lot of ministries - in Ottawa, Winnipeg, BC, Calgary, Windsor, Michigan, London, ON, Waterloo, Toronto and I have been in discussion with many more.
As I go, I write - and I was about to publish a big batch of commentary on this blogsite when my previous ( former - now deceased ) computer seized up and fried a hard days work.
I resonate with the plaintive voice of Richard Harris in the long playing ditty, of a previous era, "McArthur's Park" " Someone left the cake out in the rain.. And I don't think I can take it because it took so long to make it and I'll never have that recipe, again... O No... (echoes). "
I would have backed it up, but it happened just before the end of a long day of editing. I was about fifteen minutes of having it all up and posted. So I am resigned that if I want to recreate the stuff, it will have to be later :( .
As I go, I write - and I was about to publish a big batch of commentary on this blogsite when my previous ( former - now deceased ) computer seized up and fried a hard days work.
I resonate with the plaintive voice of Richard Harris in the long playing ditty, of a previous era, "McArthur's Park" " Someone left the cake out in the rain.. And I don't think I can take it because it took so long to make it and I'll never have that recipe, again... O No... (echoes). "
I would have backed it up, but it happened just before the end of a long day of editing. I was about fifteen minutes of having it all up and posted. So I am resigned that if I want to recreate the stuff, it will have to be later :( .
Dave - up close & personal |
The previous Sunday, Dave Slater, the founding pastor of Lift spoke to the gathering. A few months ago, Dave had taken a call to Parkview Church in Guelph, about 45 minutes away. That means he moved away.... But he was back and brought a worship team with him. It was a good night.
Dave had unique gifting as a networker , people person and visionary. With his gifting and experience, he proved to be a hard person to replace.
But, before I continue that narrative, let me give you a quick overview of this gathering. Sunday nights at Lift church involve a number of elements, all of which are good...
They begin with good worship. They give it the time and focus it deserves. They often rotate worship leaders, ( some of whom visit from other churches, with the core of the band consisting of Lift students).
There is a time of refreshment between the worship and the message. Allows a time to connect and stretch legs/
Announcments esp Simple Church which are small groups meeting around a main point. It could be guys issues, girl issues, a NT study, service or whatever.
Then the new lead pastor, Andrew Masters, got up to speak. I asked him if was nervous. He answered something to the effect that he had just moved across the country and was expecting a baby any moment. He had other things to be nervous about.
Andrew & Michelle Masters |
After a summer long search process , which I was a part of, Andrew floated to the top of the pile. Originally from nearby Brantford, he had gone to school in Eston, SK and started his ministry in Manning, AB a few hours north of Grande Prairie. He spent the last 7 years at a church in Surrey, BC where he was far and away the youngest on staff. Now, at Lift, he is one of the old guys on the block.
During the interviewing process, what captured us about Andrew was his strong emphasis on community and the track record he had on reaching out to the surrounding community. We found him eager to learn and fired up about finding fresh, creative ways to reach out to the surrounding community, whether on or off of the campus.
He and Michelle are expecting any moment. I am sure that by the time we go to press, the baby girl will have been born and they will be back home.
Andrew with baby Calli born Nov 15. |
Anyway, Andrew started by offering a smattering of facts about himself, including his likes and dislikes and areas of expertise and incompetence. It made for good listening.
Things became focused when he underlined the difference that Jesus made in his life and his desire for people to know and experience Him. He presented an encounter with Jesus in a way that was disarming and compelling. It was real without cliché. I have every confidence that people will be able to come to Lift, or bring their friends, and they will be offered a clear contact point with the One who makes all of this possible and worthwhile.
On the back tables, there is something for the body and the soul. There is a book table with titles ranging from Bondage Breaker by Neil Anderson, Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller to Simply Christian by N.T. Wright. For the body there was simple fare. Hot water for Hot Chocolate or Tea, Pop and coffee along with chips and hotdogs. There are periodic veggies to boot.
At the end of the month, Community Church ( the mother church of Lift, in nearby Waterdown )is providing a Chili feast, with all of the trimmings for the hungry student population.
There is an outreach to the mean streets of Hamilton. They do student tutoring where upper classmen help those behind them.
There is a lot going on at Lift. There are some really sharp young adults that have made it their home. It is going to be exciting over the following months to see just what God is going to do in and through them.
Monday, November 1, 2010
Peduli Merapi
Sabtu, 30 Oktober 2010, Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan (HMJ) Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip secara swadaya dan sukarela menyalurkan bantuan secara langsung kepada korban bencana Merapi. Tim berangkat dari Semarang sekitar pukul 06.30 dan tiba di Posko Gulon, Desa Gulon, Kecamatan Salam, Magelang, sekitar pukul 09.00 WIB. Di posko yang berada di SD Negeri 1 Gulon ini, tim menyerahkan bantuan berupa masker dan obat tetes mata kepada Tim FK Undip untuk dikelola lebih lanjut. Sementara bantuan lain diserahkan di Posko II di SMP Negeri 1 Salam, Desa Gulon, Kecamatan Salam, Magelang yang menampung sekitar 2.626 orang pengungsi.
Tim yang terdiri dari 14 orang ini menyumbangkan beberapa kebutuhan para pengungsi, seperti popok bayi, pembalut, pakaian dalam wanita, perlengkapan mandi, air mineral, susu cair, biscuit, masker, tetes mata, serta pakaian pantas pakai dari Indosat dan Hotel Dafam Semarang. Total bantuan yang diberikan senilai Rp 1.397.000,00 merupakan hasil sumbangan dari mahasiswa FISIP Undip dan komunitas online Semarang, antara lain Loenpia, Samtug (Semarang Twitter User Group), dan Indonesia Bertindak untuk publikasi dan donasi. HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi menjadi pusat sumbangan dari seluruh social media di Semarang dan sejak dibukanya posko sumbangan di Kampus FISIP Undip Tembalang maupun rekening di BNI pada Rabu, 27 Oktober 2010 lalu, telah terkumpul dana sebanyak sekitar Rp 3.900.000,00. Sumbangan ini dialokasikan untuk korban bencana Merapi sebanyak Rp 1.397.000,00 dan sisanya akan dikirimkan untuk korban tsunami di Kepulauan Mentawai, Sumatera Barat.
Hingga saat ini, HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi masih membuka dompet amal untuk korban bencana di Indonesia melalui rekening BNI atas nama Ika Rizki Yustisia dengan nomor rekening 0132548810.
Driving with James...
James Perraux |
The following morning, I travelled down to Langley, BC with James Perraux. James, who was previously on staff with Arthur Howard and the staff team at UCM at UBC, is now merging beautifully with Matt and the gang at UBCO. It is pretty clear that he and Matt complement each other in their gifting and skills sets.
The time whizzed by as we covered how he began ministry at UCM, having graduated from Regent College, and just how God had been shaping and preparing him to take the leap into full time campus ministry. There is no doubt that the challenge of fundraising is real, but James has found that God has been faithful to provide for him all the way along.
Having been a key player at UBC which is amongst the strongest campus ministries of any type in the country, James has a lot to bring to the table in Kelowna. He is a people person who also has a strong administrative side. It is a great combination. I am really looking forward to some great things.
Kelowna Bound
I landed in Kelowna on Sunday, October 3, and spent the afternoon hanging out with Matt and Sandra Duffie. Matt is the chaplain at the University of British Columbia at the Okanagan ( UBCO). Matt and Sandra are a team and it is great to see how she weighs in with the ministry on campus.
As mentioned in a previous blog last year around this time, Matt is both the director of University Christian Ministry (UCM) at UBCO and the chaplain to the university. He has a strong ministry of presence within the university, among students, faculty and administration. He also works at equipping student leaders and developing reproductive community. I once wore both hats myself, at UBC. Most of my time was with UCM which was student run, although it was strongly ‘staff led’ or guided. The level of connection and engagement with the university community in general and with students in particular simply cannot be matched by a church luring students offsite.
They are both excited and pleased about the addition of James Perraux from the UCM at UBC to their staff. Matt , with tongue in cheek, said that because they were the “lowliest of the low”, they were able to “get the top draft pick”. There is no denying that James ( who I will write about in the next blog) brings a lot to the table. He will make a strong ministry even stronger.
The student ministry, this fall, is off to a solid start. Not only did UCM have a good initial response ( they fed hundreds of students in the first week ) but there was a large group who signed for the retreat occurring on the second weekend. Normally, interrupting your second gathering of the year for a retreat could be momentum killing. However, this was not the case, here. It was , by all reports, a strong time of bonding – even if it was in the rain…
Setting Up in the Atrium |
Pre-Meeting Buzz |
When I hung out before the evening meeting, I found that there were many things that I appreciated, even before the event officially started. The atrium is a particularly nice venue for a service. It is a high, multi-level room complete with tropical plants. The acoustics are well suited for the ‘unplugged’ band – which by the way led worship simply and powerfully. I also enjoyed meeting the students who were friendly and engaged. I was surprised to find out how many of the group were engineering students.
Solid Worship |
The room quickly filled up and buzzed with expectancy. Students were putting icing on cupcakes and opening boxes of Timbits. Sandra brought kettles to boil water and prepare coffee and tea.
I had an opportunity to speak to the group for their Sunday evening service. It may come as no surprise to those familiar with my past year that I took the opportunity to introduce them to my son, David, and the last words he posted up on Facebook. They present a challenge to live our lives for Christ.. now. The immediacy and the power of the challenge is hard to describe. It is a message that speaks right to the heart of the student. I had the satisfaction of seeing God work through pain and brokenness in the way that only He can do.
Matt facilitated a question and answer period afterward. The questions were honest and perceptive. The students were sharp and engaged.
There is a strong work, here. It has been well led and it will only get stronger in the coming year.
Friday, October 22, 2010
KOMUSIKASI OSPEK “Opera Spesial Komunikasi”
Kreativitas merupakan kalimat yang tidak dapat dilepaskan dari mahasiswa. Kemampuan mengembangkan ide-ide kreatif merupakan salah satu hal yang mudah bagi mahasiswa. Dari ide yang berbau seni hingga keilmuan kerap kita jumpai. Maka tidak ada salahnya jika mahasiswa menampilkan kreativitasnya dibidang seni dan keilmuannya secara bersamaan. Oleh karena itu, Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip akan mengadakan acara Komusikasi pada Sabtu, 23 Oktober 2010 mulai pukul 19.00 s/d 23.00 WIB. Acara yang akan melibatkan seluruh Keluarga Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi khususnya dan seluruh tamu lainnya ini terbuka untuk umum dan tidak memungut biaya apapun.
Acara yang akan diselenggarakan di Halaman Tengah Gedung B-C Kampus FISIP Tembalang ini mengundang band lokal Lipstick Lipsing dari Semarang. Dan tak kalah menarik, para dosen Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip pun akan menampilkan bakat-bakat seni yang mereka punya. Penampilan dari kawan-kawan Komunikasi Undip mulai dari angkatan 2005 sampai 2010 pun akan turut memeriahkan pentas musik ini.
Komusikasi memiliki konsep untuk mengajak mahasiswa mengembangan ide-ide kreatifnya dibidang seni. Selain itu acara komusikasi kali ini bertujuan untuk meningkatkan keakraban civitas akademika komunikasi. Diharapkan dari acara ini mahasiswa dapat saling bertukar dan mengembangkan ide-ide menarik mereka dan diekspresikan dalam komusikasi.
Contact Person:
PR Eksternal HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip
Sita (085640322866)
Acara yang akan diselenggarakan di Halaman Tengah Gedung B-C Kampus FISIP Tembalang ini mengundang band lokal Lipstick Lipsing dari Semarang. Dan tak kalah menarik, para dosen Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip pun akan menampilkan bakat-bakat seni yang mereka punya. Penampilan dari kawan-kawan Komunikasi Undip mulai dari angkatan 2005 sampai 2010 pun akan turut memeriahkan pentas musik ini.
Komusikasi memiliki konsep untuk mengajak mahasiswa mengembangan ide-ide kreatifnya dibidang seni. Selain itu acara komusikasi kali ini bertujuan untuk meningkatkan keakraban civitas akademika komunikasi. Diharapkan dari acara ini mahasiswa dapat saling bertukar dan mengembangkan ide-ide menarik mereka dan diekspresikan dalam komusikasi.
Contact Person:
PR Eksternal HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip
Sita (085640322866)
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Launch 2010 Humber Embassy
September 20th was the Fall Launch of The Embassy at Humber College http://www.embassyhumber.com/. Trevor and the leadership teams' hard work paid off with a great gathering of students for worship and teaching.
Trevor was straightforward and humorous. Referring to The Embassy's strategy of giving away thousands of bags of popcorn, he talked to the group about being people of generosity. Generosity is far more than a growth strategy. It actually reflects the nature of the One they follow.
He mentioned that there were many people who had difficulty getting their minds around the notion of something being given for free. They simply didn't know how to receive a free gift. One of the reasons was due to the modern belief that 'there must be a catch'. For good reason ( Trevor gave some funny personal examples ) there is a general air of suspicion that nobody could be giving things away without an agenda.
Another key point, Trevor raised was the old adage..."Actions speak louder than words…". He gave numerous examples of how people will give more substance to nonverbal or paraverbal communcation than they will to the actual words.
It was good food for thought. Once he finished, the group broke up for discussion in smaller groups with refreshments.
It was a good evening....
Trevor was straightforward and humorous. Referring to The Embassy's strategy of giving away thousands of bags of popcorn, he talked to the group about being people of generosity. Generosity is far more than a growth strategy. It actually reflects the nature of the One they follow.
He mentioned that there were many people who had difficulty getting their minds around the notion of something being given for free. They simply didn't know how to receive a free gift. One of the reasons was due to the modern belief that 'there must be a catch'. For good reason ( Trevor gave some funny personal examples ) there is a general air of suspicion that nobody could be giving things away without an agenda.
Another key point, Trevor raised was the old adage..."Actions speak louder than words…". He gave numerous examples of how people will give more substance to nonverbal or paraverbal communcation than they will to the actual words.
It was good food for thought. Once he finished, the group broke up for discussion in smaller groups with refreshments.
It was a good evening....
Thursday, September 16, 2010
CFA President Kathy Oberdeck's speech to the General Meeting of September 13, 2010
Welcome
Thank all of you for attending today’s membership meeting and for supporting CFA. It’s an honor to serve this organization because Campus Faculty Association brings together teachers and scholars from all over campus, and I get to know the people who really make this place work
Reviewing the Past Year
For this meeting in particular we come together at a historical moment when these questions are more critical than ever. The University of Illinois has been through a year of crises and changes—crises over the integrity of leadership and the arrival of a new president, crises of academic labor relations in the form of the GEO strike, crises in budgetary shortfalls accompanied by rapid-fire administrative fixes. This made for a very busy year for the Campus Faculty Association. Over the last twelve months, our members helped draw attention to the need for new administrative leadership and for more democratic processes of decision making on campus. We have marched with the GEO to maintain the salary and tuition waiver support that compensate our excellent graduate students and make graduate degrees accessible to the wide diversity of students—from across a range of ethnic, gender and class backgrounds—whom a great public university should serve. We have responded to mandatory furloughs with teach ins, Senate resolutions, research, rallies and mass lobbying in Springfield. These actions demanded more transparency in budgetary decision making, and speaking out to the Legislature on what kind of funding is needed to keep quality education accessible to the citizens of Illinois. As importantly, they were aimed at enlarging our own membership to include more faculty from across our campus who are concerned about the conditions of their teaching, research, and service. They see the Campus Faculty Association as an important vehicle for making faculty voices heard in decisions that affect those conditions. Our membership grew by 40% through these important initiatives, through the work of members with academic organizing experience who helped some of us think more strategically about how to talk to members about organizing, and because many of you went out and talked to your colleagues, cross-disciplinary associates, friends and neighbors about your concerns about the University and how the CFA can help.
Toward the Future: Collective Bargaining and the CFA
For this year, it is our top priority to make the Campus Faculty Association visible and available to an ever wider circle of University of Illinois faculty of all descriptions—full and untenured, faculty from the sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities, faculty of color, women faculty, single and partnered parents, senior faculty on the verge of retirement, to name just a few. As you’ll be hearing a little later from our organizing committee, we welcome and urge more and more members to have these conversations with colleagues, friends, neighbors and acquaintances about the CFA’s purposes. CFA will grow only through your efforts and it is vital that CFA grow.
We’re also here to discuss a revision of the statement of purpose contained in our Constitution, and also to be featured in our website and recruiting literature, that will help convey to more of our colleagues what we’re about. That statement of purpose restates principles the CFA has been committed to for decades: a democratic University in which faculty have a meaningful voice through shared governance; the defense especially of those who might experience discrimination because of race, gender, disability or sexual orientation bias, among others. It also poses an open process of collective bargaining to ensure our ability to defend faculty’s individual and collective welfare in the areas of economic compensation, academic freedom, the integrity of our teaching and research, the fairness of University policies as they apply to diverse faculty and students, and the capacity of this university to offer the quality higher education that we consider the foundation of a democratic society. This revised statement of purpose will signal to potential members our commitment to a strong faculty voice in University decision making, but can only be meaningful if we expand our membership to a proportion of the faculty that would make CFA representation of faculty interests a reasonable claim.
In addition to getting on your radar a number of events planned to expand our membership and familiarize faculty with some of the benefits of collective bargaining, we wanted to start the semester off with this meeting to talk face to face about what many of us might hope and fear about collective bargaining and why we need it. What do we mean by “an open process of collective bargaining”? To some, collective bargaining conjures unsavory images of self-serving union bureaucrats meeting in inaccessible chambers with top-level administrators to hammer out decisions on pay and conditions to which union members will be asked to conform. Certainly, this is hardly an attractive model for an organization that takes as its main rallying cry the democratization of university structures that make decision on increasingly corporate, hierarchical, and opaque models. But this image of collective bargaining it is not born out by the examples of collective bargaining closest to home—examples like the GEO, where a large negotiating committee represented union members in bargaining sessions with University administrators. It’s also an image of collective bargaining that’s inconsistent with our own view of the range of issues that could be bargainable—not just salaries and benefits, important as they are, but also issues of academic freedom, working conditions, and transparency.
Others worry that collective bargaining will commit them to a strike on questionable pretexts, potentially imperiling their sense of duty to their students. These are understandable concerns, fully congruent with our statement of purpose’s declarations of commitment to the quality education we believe this University should offer. But the collective actions that provide teeth to collective bargaining can take a variety of forms, and none of them would be approved without a vote of the membership.
Another pressing question is, WHY collective bargaining? Don’t we have shared governance? What about the Academic Senate, the stewarding excellence teams that involved faculty and administrators in reviewing possible budget streamlining, and our individual contributions to a host of departmental, college and campus level committees where we look after the curricular, research and service missions of the university, often at the expense of our own research and writing agendas? As a current or recent participant in all of them, I have great respect for these various venues for faculty involvement in making and executing University policies. But we can find a lot of evidence that they are not sufficient to secure University of Illinois faculty a voice in the decisions that affect our conditions of work and our commitment to the University’s core missions of teaching, research, and public service. I want to give a few examples from recent and ongoing CFA activities to illustrate this.
Much of our growth last year came because faculty were upset about a sudden and, upon inspection, rather ungrounded decision on mandatory furloughs. CFA actions on common Furlough days helped to raise important questions about what sort of funding the University has and where it is being spent. These efforts have matured into a report, currently on our website and reported to the press, of remarkable rises in the numbers of administrative positions and the salary figures devoted to them over the last six years. This is an important context for many recent concerns. The general trend toward administrative top-heaviness affects the way the university responds to problems like the budget crisis. They turn to furloughs instead of caps on runaway academic salaries. They offer a system of project teams to identify plans for streamlining that was overwhelmingly staffed by administrators rather than regular faculty. The University maintains structures of funding through the University of Illinois Foundation that can allow the continued financial connection between an off-campus academy ungoverned by ethics of open research and academic review AFTER the university had agreed with the Academic Senate to sever such ties. And Administration has also been able to pressure the Senate, with a few critical questions from CFA members, endorse the growing corporatization of the university by granting the President the title of CEO. Collective bargaining at other universities has managed to fight at least some initiatives that compromise faculty governance in these ways, and grievance procedures to address not only salary issues (many of us are not getting raises, which compounds the economic effect of fuurloughs while administrative salaries go up) but issues of academic freedom, governance, and working conditions.
In April many of us got on the bus to join more than ten thousand educators at all levels to lobby our legislative representatives in Springfield with respect to the funding that’s needed to provide quality public education at an affordable price. We invited administrators to join with us, but they seemed to prefer other channels of correspondence with legislators that they tell us are active but the substance of which we never hear. Faculty governance in a truly public university demands that FACULTY represent to the public the faculty missions of teaching and research we spend our days, and nights, undertaking, and their importance to the public. Collective bargaining agreements elsewhere have included effective legislative relations programs.
The GEO has for many of us been a model of effective and democratic academic organization, and also of the community outreach to make good on our institutional promise of teaching, research and service. Many CFA members walked with the GEO last November and learned a lot from their determination to maintain tuition waivers that enable many grad students from minority and working-class background to contribute to the mission of higher education and, as we know, enable us to attract the most talented and exciting graduate students from these and other backgrounds to maintain the fine reputation of both our graduate programs and the undergraduate teaching to which these students contribute. But now the waivers that were at the center of the GEO’s strike are under threat again, as cashed-strapped departments especially in the arts and humanities have resorted, with higher administration approval, to lowered base-rate waivers in order to keep their graduate programs afloat at all. This is a complex issue with many dimensions. It raises questions about the commitment of the University to attracting and keeping quality graduate students in the humanities and arts, it exposes the pressures on quality education in a variety of departments that find their teaching assistant budgets slashed while a variety of inticements to profit-generating graduate degrees and department funding tied to on-line course development are dangled before them. We also have growing numbers of non-tenure track faculty often entailed in these shifts, and their interests need attention and voice as well. Faculty need an independent organization that can assess and address these many transformations of the education we offer, and sustain the opportunity for education in the all-too-quickly disappearing capacities for critical thinking, civil discussion, and reasoned argument, made available to a wide public. We need the strength in numbers to be that organization.
JOIN US
We can do this with a purpose that invigorates our colleagues and a commitment to engaging them in that purposes that brings more members in. Before we break for some small group discussions about your views of how effectively our new statement of purpose supports those goals, I want to mention briefly some upcoming plans for this semester that are intended to help us move forward on this agenda, and some specific ways for some of you who want to get more involved. THIS FRIDAY, Sept. 17, our organizing committee is meeting to make plans for a fall organizing campaign, discuss communities of faculty to which we can most effectively direct our efforts. As Siobhan Somerville and Clarence Lang from the organizing committee are going to explain shortly—WE ARE ALL ORGANIZERS AND EVERYONE IS INVITED TO COME TO THIS MEETING. It will be held at noon, Friday Sept 17 in 210 Illini Union.
Organizing IS our main priority—but while I’m on the topic of things your CFA could use help with—we also have an communications committee, currently very snazzily headed up by Harriet Murav, that needs more help to get our messages out. And we have an open position of Equal Opportunity Officer for someone who wants to help organize our initiatives on issues of minority, gender, and sexual orientation discrimination and bias.
The next week, the BOT will be meeting on the Urbana campus at the I Hotel. The GEO is already planning a rally to tell them about our concerns about tuition waivers, salaries, and other issues they will be addressing. EVERYONE IS URGED TO ATTEND THIS RALLY, and let the BOT –to which the CFA continues its fight for faculty representation—know that the CFA is watching and listening.
OCTOBER 7 is a NATIONAL DAY of ACTION for education. The labor coalition of this campus is planning a public action for that day that you should keep your eyes out for our announcements of those events.
Finally, in NOVEMBER we will be having another CFA members event—to which interested potential members will also be welcome---on the benefits of collective bargaining, where we plan to have speakers from already organized Illinois campuses like SIU and EIU. We’re working on scheduling that around the schedules of the speakers we’re seeking, but we hope it will be an opportunity to further the discussions we come up with today about our new statement of purpose and its focus on collective bargaining.
So I’m going to turn things over for a few minutes to Siobhan and Clarence to talk about organizing, and then to small groups of you to talk about our statement of purpose. We’ll come back to have a presentation on the dues issue that you were notified about—obviously all this organizing and expansion takes resources, and you’ll hear about our own budgetary crisis in providing those. For now, though, let me turn things to Siobhan and Clarence. Thank you.
,
Pasted from
Thank all of you for attending today’s membership meeting and for supporting CFA. It’s an honor to serve this organization because Campus Faculty Association brings together teachers and scholars from all over campus, and I get to know the people who really make this place work
Reviewing the Past Year
For this meeting in particular we come together at a historical moment when these questions are more critical than ever. The University of Illinois has been through a year of crises and changes—crises over the integrity of leadership and the arrival of a new president, crises of academic labor relations in the form of the GEO strike, crises in budgetary shortfalls accompanied by rapid-fire administrative fixes. This made for a very busy year for the Campus Faculty Association. Over the last twelve months, our members helped draw attention to the need for new administrative leadership and for more democratic processes of decision making on campus. We have marched with the GEO to maintain the salary and tuition waiver support that compensate our excellent graduate students and make graduate degrees accessible to the wide diversity of students—from across a range of ethnic, gender and class backgrounds—whom a great public university should serve. We have responded to mandatory furloughs with teach ins, Senate resolutions, research, rallies and mass lobbying in Springfield. These actions demanded more transparency in budgetary decision making, and speaking out to the Legislature on what kind of funding is needed to keep quality education accessible to the citizens of Illinois. As importantly, they were aimed at enlarging our own membership to include more faculty from across our campus who are concerned about the conditions of their teaching, research, and service. They see the Campus Faculty Association as an important vehicle for making faculty voices heard in decisions that affect those conditions. Our membership grew by 40% through these important initiatives, through the work of members with academic organizing experience who helped some of us think more strategically about how to talk to members about organizing, and because many of you went out and talked to your colleagues, cross-disciplinary associates, friends and neighbors about your concerns about the University and how the CFA can help.
Toward the Future: Collective Bargaining and the CFA
For this year, it is our top priority to make the Campus Faculty Association visible and available to an ever wider circle of University of Illinois faculty of all descriptions—full and untenured, faculty from the sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities, faculty of color, women faculty, single and partnered parents, senior faculty on the verge of retirement, to name just a few. As you’ll be hearing a little later from our organizing committee, we welcome and urge more and more members to have these conversations with colleagues, friends, neighbors and acquaintances about the CFA’s purposes. CFA will grow only through your efforts and it is vital that CFA grow.
We’re also here to discuss a revision of the statement of purpose contained in our Constitution, and also to be featured in our website and recruiting literature, that will help convey to more of our colleagues what we’re about. That statement of purpose restates principles the CFA has been committed to for decades: a democratic University in which faculty have a meaningful voice through shared governance; the defense especially of those who might experience discrimination because of race, gender, disability or sexual orientation bias, among others. It also poses an open process of collective bargaining to ensure our ability to defend faculty’s individual and collective welfare in the areas of economic compensation, academic freedom, the integrity of our teaching and research, the fairness of University policies as they apply to diverse faculty and students, and the capacity of this university to offer the quality higher education that we consider the foundation of a democratic society. This revised statement of purpose will signal to potential members our commitment to a strong faculty voice in University decision making, but can only be meaningful if we expand our membership to a proportion of the faculty that would make CFA representation of faculty interests a reasonable claim.
In addition to getting on your radar a number of events planned to expand our membership and familiarize faculty with some of the benefits of collective bargaining, we wanted to start the semester off with this meeting to talk face to face about what many of us might hope and fear about collective bargaining and why we need it. What do we mean by “an open process of collective bargaining”? To some, collective bargaining conjures unsavory images of self-serving union bureaucrats meeting in inaccessible chambers with top-level administrators to hammer out decisions on pay and conditions to which union members will be asked to conform. Certainly, this is hardly an attractive model for an organization that takes as its main rallying cry the democratization of university structures that make decision on increasingly corporate, hierarchical, and opaque models. But this image of collective bargaining it is not born out by the examples of collective bargaining closest to home—examples like the GEO, where a large negotiating committee represented union members in bargaining sessions with University administrators. It’s also an image of collective bargaining that’s inconsistent with our own view of the range of issues that could be bargainable—not just salaries and benefits, important as they are, but also issues of academic freedom, working conditions, and transparency.
Others worry that collective bargaining will commit them to a strike on questionable pretexts, potentially imperiling their sense of duty to their students. These are understandable concerns, fully congruent with our statement of purpose’s declarations of commitment to the quality education we believe this University should offer. But the collective actions that provide teeth to collective bargaining can take a variety of forms, and none of them would be approved without a vote of the membership.
Another pressing question is, WHY collective bargaining? Don’t we have shared governance? What about the Academic Senate, the stewarding excellence teams that involved faculty and administrators in reviewing possible budget streamlining, and our individual contributions to a host of departmental, college and campus level committees where we look after the curricular, research and service missions of the university, often at the expense of our own research and writing agendas? As a current or recent participant in all of them, I have great respect for these various venues for faculty involvement in making and executing University policies. But we can find a lot of evidence that they are not sufficient to secure University of Illinois faculty a voice in the decisions that affect our conditions of work and our commitment to the University’s core missions of teaching, research, and public service. I want to give a few examples from recent and ongoing CFA activities to illustrate this.
Much of our growth last year came because faculty were upset about a sudden and, upon inspection, rather ungrounded decision on mandatory furloughs. CFA actions on common Furlough days helped to raise important questions about what sort of funding the University has and where it is being spent. These efforts have matured into a report, currently on our website and reported to the press, of remarkable rises in the numbers of administrative positions and the salary figures devoted to them over the last six years. This is an important context for many recent concerns. The general trend toward administrative top-heaviness affects the way the university responds to problems like the budget crisis. They turn to furloughs instead of caps on runaway academic salaries. They offer a system of project teams to identify plans for streamlining that was overwhelmingly staffed by administrators rather than regular faculty. The University maintains structures of funding through the University of Illinois Foundation that can allow the continued financial connection between an off-campus academy ungoverned by ethics of open research and academic review AFTER the university had agreed with the Academic Senate to sever such ties. And Administration has also been able to pressure the Senate, with a few critical questions from CFA members, endorse the growing corporatization of the university by granting the President the title of CEO. Collective bargaining at other universities has managed to fight at least some initiatives that compromise faculty governance in these ways, and grievance procedures to address not only salary issues (many of us are not getting raises, which compounds the economic effect of fuurloughs while administrative salaries go up) but issues of academic freedom, governance, and working conditions.
In April many of us got on the bus to join more than ten thousand educators at all levels to lobby our legislative representatives in Springfield with respect to the funding that’s needed to provide quality public education at an affordable price. We invited administrators to join with us, but they seemed to prefer other channels of correspondence with legislators that they tell us are active but the substance of which we never hear. Faculty governance in a truly public university demands that FACULTY represent to the public the faculty missions of teaching and research we spend our days, and nights, undertaking, and their importance to the public. Collective bargaining agreements elsewhere have included effective legislative relations programs.
The GEO has for many of us been a model of effective and democratic academic organization, and also of the community outreach to make good on our institutional promise of teaching, research and service. Many CFA members walked with the GEO last November and learned a lot from their determination to maintain tuition waivers that enable many grad students from minority and working-class background to contribute to the mission of higher education and, as we know, enable us to attract the most talented and exciting graduate students from these and other backgrounds to maintain the fine reputation of both our graduate programs and the undergraduate teaching to which these students contribute. But now the waivers that were at the center of the GEO’s strike are under threat again, as cashed-strapped departments especially in the arts and humanities have resorted, with higher administration approval, to lowered base-rate waivers in order to keep their graduate programs afloat at all. This is a complex issue with many dimensions. It raises questions about the commitment of the University to attracting and keeping quality graduate students in the humanities and arts, it exposes the pressures on quality education in a variety of departments that find their teaching assistant budgets slashed while a variety of inticements to profit-generating graduate degrees and department funding tied to on-line course development are dangled before them. We also have growing numbers of non-tenure track faculty often entailed in these shifts, and their interests need attention and voice as well. Faculty need an independent organization that can assess and address these many transformations of the education we offer, and sustain the opportunity for education in the all-too-quickly disappearing capacities for critical thinking, civil discussion, and reasoned argument, made available to a wide public. We need the strength in numbers to be that organization.
JOIN US
We can do this with a purpose that invigorates our colleagues and a commitment to engaging them in that purposes that brings more members in. Before we break for some small group discussions about your views of how effectively our new statement of purpose supports those goals, I want to mention briefly some upcoming plans for this semester that are intended to help us move forward on this agenda, and some specific ways for some of you who want to get more involved. THIS FRIDAY, Sept. 17, our organizing committee is meeting to make plans for a fall organizing campaign, discuss communities of faculty to which we can most effectively direct our efforts. As Siobhan Somerville and Clarence Lang from the organizing committee are going to explain shortly—WE ARE ALL ORGANIZERS AND EVERYONE IS INVITED TO COME TO THIS MEETING. It will be held at noon, Friday Sept 17 in 210 Illini Union.
Organizing IS our main priority—but while I’m on the topic of things your CFA could use help with—we also have an communications committee, currently very snazzily headed up by Harriet Murav, that needs more help to get our messages out. And we have an open position of Equal Opportunity Officer for someone who wants to help organize our initiatives on issues of minority, gender, and sexual orientation discrimination and bias.
The next week, the BOT will be meeting on the Urbana campus at the I Hotel. The GEO is already planning a rally to tell them about our concerns about tuition waivers, salaries, and other issues they will be addressing. EVERYONE IS URGED TO ATTEND THIS RALLY, and let the BOT –to which the CFA continues its fight for faculty representation—know that the CFA is watching and listening.
OCTOBER 7 is a NATIONAL DAY of ACTION for education. The labor coalition of this campus is planning a public action for that day that you should keep your eyes out for our announcements of those events.
Finally, in NOVEMBER we will be having another CFA members event—to which interested potential members will also be welcome---on the benefits of collective bargaining, where we plan to have speakers from already organized Illinois campuses like SIU and EIU. We’re working on scheduling that around the schedules of the speakers we’re seeking, but we hope it will be an opportunity to further the discussions we come up with today about our new statement of purpose and its focus on collective bargaining.
So I’m going to turn things over for a few minutes to Siobhan and Clarence to talk about organizing, and then to small groups of you to talk about our statement of purpose. We’ll come back to have a presentation on the dues issue that you were notified about—obviously all this organizing and expansion takes resources, and you’ll hear about our own budgetary crisis in providing those. For now, though, let me turn things to Siobhan and Clarence. Thank you.
,
Pasted from
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
CFA Response to Ikenberry's Work Group Report
The CFA applauds efforts to streamline administration and procurement costs in order to commit shrinking university resources to core missions of teaching and research. But we also see much to give faculty pause in recent announcements about the report of President Ikenberry’s Administrative Review and Restructuring Work Group and impending plans to implement its recommendations.
• The centralizing of “human capital” strategic plans and monitoring procedures according to new business models engineered from above are of particular concern, especially as they will affect all academic personnel and staff and the vital educational missions they support.
• The focus of IT investment in on-line learning environments while classroom technologies in a number of sectors of the university continue to lag also needs faculty input.
• The coordination of Foundation and alumni fundraising relations with little mention of the importance of key faculty research objectives and departmental connections threatens to strangle communications to potential funding sources of the most important, ground-level activities of teachers and researchers.
• The spectre of new “consulting” firms coming in to advise the process raises further concerns about the voice faculty will have in shaping these important changes; not to mention the extra expenses to be incurred in implementing them.
The Working Group is right that communications programs provide a broad range of services to connect with and inform the many and varied stakeholders of the University…” Put in a more education-friendly form, it is vital that transformations of university procedures actually facilitate the free exchange of ideas among faculty, students, staff, administrators, alumni, fundraisers and the larger communities we serve.
Observing that President Ikenberry has been charged by incoming President Hogan to move forward quickly in implementing the Working Group’s recommendations, the CFA looks forward to substantial faculty input on the implementation process, which seems, from the list of working-group members, to have been lacking in the formation of the Working Group itself. As a voice for faculty communication throughout this process, the CFA stands ready to investigate and address the faculty’s many vital interests. Please join us.
Kathryn Oberdeck
President, Campus Faculty Association
June 25, 2010
• The centralizing of “human capital” strategic plans and monitoring procedures according to new business models engineered from above are of particular concern, especially as they will affect all academic personnel and staff and the vital educational missions they support.
• The focus of IT investment in on-line learning environments while classroom technologies in a number of sectors of the university continue to lag also needs faculty input.
• The coordination of Foundation and alumni fundraising relations with little mention of the importance of key faculty research objectives and departmental connections threatens to strangle communications to potential funding sources of the most important, ground-level activities of teachers and researchers.
• The spectre of new “consulting” firms coming in to advise the process raises further concerns about the voice faculty will have in shaping these important changes; not to mention the extra expenses to be incurred in implementing them.
The Working Group is right that communications programs provide a broad range of services to connect with and inform the many and varied stakeholders of the University…” Put in a more education-friendly form, it is vital that transformations of university procedures actually facilitate the free exchange of ideas among faculty, students, staff, administrators, alumni, fundraisers and the larger communities we serve.
Observing that President Ikenberry has been charged by incoming President Hogan to move forward quickly in implementing the Working Group’s recommendations, the CFA looks forward to substantial faculty input on the implementation process, which seems, from the list of working-group members, to have been lacking in the formation of the Working Group itself. As a voice for faculty communication throughout this process, the CFA stands ready to investigate and address the faculty’s many vital interests. Please join us.
Kathryn Oberdeck
President, Campus Faculty Association
June 25, 2010
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
WORKSHOP ICEMA “MUSIC & SOCIAL NETWORKING”
WORKSHOP ICEMA
(INDONESIAN CUTTING EDGE MUSIC AWARDS):
“MUSIC & SOCIAL NETWORKING”
Social Networking merupakan semacam portal atau situs tempat berkumpulnya para member yang ingin menjalin dan menambah relasi agar pertemanan di Dunia Maya ini lebih erat dan tentu saja lebih banyak. Seiring perkembangannya, Social Networking tidak hanya sebagai ajang berkumpul, namun juga ajang berbagi dan promosi. Banyak banget Social Networking yang menawarkan fitur “Rangking/Peringkat” dimana penilaian yang diberikan terhadap situs/blog/profile kita yang terdaftar tergantung dari masing-masing kebijakan si-penyelenggara. Dunia musik Indonesia pun saat ini sering menggunakan sarana social networking ini sebagai ajang pencarian bakat para muda. Guna memberikan pengetahuan/edukasi kepada anak muda tentang dunia maya (jejaring social) bagi perkembangan musik di Indonesia maka Windows Live dan Trax FM bekerjasama dengan HMJ Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip mengadakan workshop Indonesian Cutting Edge Music Awards (ICEMA) yang bertemakan “Music and Social Networking”.
Workshop yang diadakan pada Selasa, 25 Mei 2010 di Gedung Prof. Soenardi Jalan Hayam Wuruk ini dimulai pada pukul 9.30WIB. Pada pukul 09.00WIB peserta workshop sudah berada di dalam ruangan dan sangat antusias untuk mengikuti jalannya workshop karena dalam workshop ini dihadirkan M. Bayu Widagdo, S.Sos (Dosen Marketing Komunikasi), Garna Raditya (Wartawan Suara Merdeka dan aktivis musik indie & cutting edge), serta Endah & Rhesa (Artis dari Jakarta dan finalis ICEMA 2010) sebagai pembicara.
Pada awal dibukanya acara workshop ini ditampilkan salah satu new comer dari finalis ICEMA. Setelah sang new comer selesai menyanyikan satu lagu maka dimulailah acara workshop ini. Pembicara pertama yaitu Garna Raditya menjelaskan perihal cutting edge dan perkembangan musik di Indonesia. Suasana saat itu hening karena para peserta terlihat menikmati uraian yang diberikan oleh Garna Raditya. Tambahan uraian pun diberikan oleh M. Bayu Widagdo. Bayu menjelaskan perihal social network yang sekarang mulai diramaikan juga oleh Windows Live. Selesai dengan uraian yang diberikan oleh dua pakar tersebut, Endah & Rhesa melanjutkan acara workshop ini dengan sharing pengalaman yang mereka dapatkan setelah beberapa tahun terjun ke dunia permusikan Indonesia.
Endah & Rhesa merupakan pasangan suami-istri yang sering berkolaborasi bersama dalam satu panggung. Mereka sering membawakan lagu-lagu mereka secara akustik. Dulu, saat pertama-tama mereka meniti karir, banyak kafe-kafe yang menolak pengajuan Endah & Rhesa untuk tampil di kafe tersebut karena pada saat itu sedang trend dengan musik “DJ”; bukan acustic musical. Namun, suatu waktu ada 1 kafe yang menyetujui Endah & Rhesa untuk tampil mengisis life music di kafe mereka. Dengan kegigihan mereka, lambat laun musik mereka pun diterima oleh khalayak. Mereka kemudian menyambangi dunia social networking guna mempermudah akses mereka dalam berpromosi. Endah & Rhesa percaya bahwasanya being different is good.
Sharing yang diberikan oleh Endah & Rhesa ini menyita banyak perhatian dari para peserta workshop. Terlihat pada saat sesi tanya jawab banyak peserta yang berlomba-lomba untuk bertanya kepada Endah & Rhesa. Namun pertanyaan-pertanyaan tersebut tidak semata-mata ditujukan pada Endah & Rhesa, Bayu dan Garna pun menjadi sasaran dilontarkannya beberapa pertanyaan yang berhubungan dengan social networking.
Selesai dengan sesi tanya jawab maka masuk ke acara terakhir yang paling dinanti oleh para peserta yaitu life performance dari Endah & Rhesa. Hampir seluruh peserta ikut bernyanyi bersama dengan Endah & Rhesa. Terpukau dengan aksi yang ditunjukkan oleh pasangan suami-istri ini, tepuk tangan dari para peserta pun mulai mengudara dengan begitu nyaringnya.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Indonesia Cutting Edge Music Awards 2010
Friday, May 14, 2010
Peter Brown on adjuncts
Check out this post by Peter Brown on adjunctification of higher ed and why adjuncts deserve a living wage and job security (among other things -- I'm not doing the article justice).
Labels:
adjuncts,
coalition,
equity,
higher education,
labor,
solidarity,
union,
wages
FreePass to Backstage KARNAVAL SCTV
5 teman-teman peserta Workshop SCTV GOES TO CAMPUS yang diselenggarakan oleh SCTV bekerjasama dengan HMJ KOMUNIKASI UNDIP, mendapatkan tiket freepass ke backstage Karnaval SCTV..
Mulai dari ngobrol banyak soal produksi studio sampai nonton langsung Karnaval SCTV di stage terdepan. Tidak ketinggalan jumpa dan foto bareng dengan artis-artis ibu kota pengisi acara Karnaval SCTV...
Mau dapat kesempatan yang sama?? makanya jgn pernah lewatin event2 serunya HMJ berikutnya!!!!!!!
Sunday, May 9, 2010
WORKSHOP CARNAVAL SCTV 2010 “KREATIF PRODUKSI TV DAN PRESENTER”
WORKSHOP CARNAVAL SCTV 2010
“KREATIF PRODUKSI TV DAN PRESENTER”
SCTV bekerjasama dengan Himpunan Mahasiswa Jurusan (HMJ) Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip menyelenggarakan Workshop Carnaval SCTV: Kreatif Produksi TV dan Presenter. Para peserta telah memasuki ruang seminar yang berada di Gedung Pasca Sarjana Undip Pleburan pada pukul 09.00 WIB. Acara Workshop ini dibuka oleh Adi Nugroho selaku dosen pembimbing Jurusan Ilmu Komunikasi FISIP Undip dan Agung S selaku Humas SCTV.
Ronny Kusuma selaku Kepala Departemen Operasional SCTV memulai workshop dengan tema pertama yaitu bagaimana kita mensegmentasi acara-acara yang kita buat sesuai dengan target audiences. Sebagai contoh acara INBOX SCTV yang hadir setiap hari pada pukul 07.30 WIB, di sini pihak SCTV membidik anak muda sebagai audiencenya oleh karena itu format acara dibuat dengan tema “alay”. Mengapa? Karena budaya masyarakat Indonesia mayoritasnya banci tampil atau biasa dikenal dengan istilah “narsis”. Tema kedua yang Ronny sampaikan adalah mengenai kekreatifan kita dalam merakit sebuah acara agar tidak terkesan monotone. Contoh dari penjelasan ini adalah acara musik yang saat ini sedang digarap SCTV yaitu Harmoni. Di sini Harmoni tampil berbeda dengan acara-acara musik yang lain, karena Harmoni hanya ditayangkan sebulan sekali yaitu pada tanggal 20. Acara musik yang disuguhkan di sini dikemas secara eksklusif karena diiringi dengan Orchestra Musical, penyanyi-penyanyi yang tampil di acara ini pun tampil dengan busana serba rapi sehingga terlihat mewah.
Artis yang memeriahkan seminar kali ini adalah Jeniffer Arnelita. Jeniffer berbagi pengalaman kepada peserta seminar tentang bagaimana awal mula ia terjun di dunia presenting. Ia mengaku bahwa dulu ia merupakan orang yang pemalu; tidak suka untuk berbicara di depan umum. Namun, ia dibujuk oleh teman-temannya untuk casting presenter di salah satu stasiun televisi. Tidak mudah ternyata untuk menjadi presenter, ia sempat beberapa kali ditolak dari beberapa casting yang ia lakukan. Putus asa sempat dilanda olehnya. Suatu ketika, ia diterima casting di sebuah acara reality show yang ditayangkan oleh SCTV. Dari situ, ia mulai mendapat “kesenangan” tersendiri di dalam dunia presenting. Jeniffer menambahkan bahwa ia sering membaca-baca buku untuk menambah pengetahuannya agar mempermudah dirinya ketika menjadi presenter di acara formal sekalipun.
Acara workshop tersebut juga memberi kesempatan kepada 5 peserta yang beruntung untuk “mengintip” back stage acara Konser Karnaval SCTV yang akan diadakan Jumat malam di lapangan Simpang Lima Semarang. Pemilihan 5 peserta beruntung ini langsung dilakukan oleh Jennifer sendiri.
Telah kita ketahui bersama bahwa dunia pertelevisian dan juga dunia presenting sekarang ini sangat diminati oleh banyak orang. Untuk itu maka diperlukan ilmu, taktik, dan juga trik yang harus dimiliki orang-orang tersebut agar nantinya mereka dapat meningkatkan kualitas dunia pertelevisian dan juga dunia presenting di Indonesia. Ketua panitia, Erva Maulita, mengatakan “Workshop ini telah terselenggara dengan lancar tanpa ada suatu kendala apa pun. Peserta yang datang adalah berkisar 300 orang. Ada pun tujuan diselenggarakannya workshop ini adalah memberikan pengetahuan dan memberikan gambaran bagi para mahasiswa tentang bagaimana menjadi kreatif produksi TV dan presenter yang handal dan kompeten.”
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